Governor-elect Mike Braun announced his plans for a major restructuring of Indiana's executive branch, implementing a new cabinet model to drive efficiency, accountability, and communication in state government.
The cabinet will consist of the Governor, the Chief of Staff, the Lieutenant Governor, the superintendent of state police, the adjutant general of the Indiana National Guard, and secretaries over eight policy areas. Governor-elect Braun will elevate an agency head from each of the eight policy areas to serve as a cabinet secretary where they will oversee the entire vertical along with retaining the responsibility of running their agency.
Key elements of the new cabinet structure include:
- Clustering related agencies into eight separate verticals such as Commerce, Health and Family Services, and Education.
- Empowering each cabinet secretary to drive progress within their vertical.
- Holding cabinet members directly responsible for agency performance and continuous improvement.
- Enabling the cabinet to collaboratively implement cross-government initiatives.
- Assembling a lean, agile senior management team within the Governor's office to execute the administration's priorities.
"This new cabinet model will allow us to be laser-focused on delivering results for Hoosiers," said Governor-elect Braun. "By aligning agencies and reorganizing the executive branch, we can drive accountability for leaders and agencies, promote better coordination and communication between our administration and the Indiana General Assembly, and create efficiency across state government."
The restructured cabinet model will be assembled as follows:
Cabinet Position: Secretary of Management and Budget
- Role: Responsible for developing the budget to realize the Governor's vision, providing management of agencies in finance, technology, and shared services, and serving as operational oversight across secretary verticals
- Reporting Offices and Agencies: Department of Administration, Office of Technology, Archives and Records Administration, State Department of Personnel, Inspector General, Public Access Counselor, Office of Administrative Law Proceedings, Ethics Commission, and Management Performance Hub, Public Retirement System, State Budget Agency, State Employees’ Appeals Commission, Department of Local Government Finance, Board of Tax Review, State Board of Accounts, Distressed Unit Appeal Board, Department of Revenue, and Indiana Finance Authority
Cabinet Position: Secretary of Commerce
- Role: Responsible for driving economic opportunity for the state and for Hoosiers
- Reporting Offices and Agencies: (not including quasi-agencies) Indiana Economic Development Corporation (IEDC), Office of Entrepreneurship and Innovation, Indiana Destination Development Corporation, Department of Workforce Development, Governor’s Workforce Cabinet, Hoosier Lottery, Ports of Indiana, and Indiana Housing and Community Development Authority
Cabinet Position: Secretary of Health and Family Services
- Role: Responsible for improving coordination across constituent-facing health and well-being services, addressing public health policy holistically
- Reporting Offices and Agencies: Department of Health, Family and Social Services Administration, Department of Child Services, and Department of Veteran Affairs
Cabinet Position: Secretary of Public Safety
- Role: Responsible for ensuring the safety and security of residents by overseeing law enforcement, emergency preparedness, and public safety policy development
- Reporting Offices and Agencies: Department of Corrections, Indiana Criminal Justice Institute, Law Enforcement Academy, Homeland Security, Office of School Safety, Integrated Public Safety Commission, Parole Board, and Department of Toxicology
Cabinet Position: Secretary of Energy and Natural Resources
- Role: Responsible for driving energy and recreation policy to protect the needs of Hoosiers while pursuing sustainable economic development
- Reporting Offices and Agencies: Department of Natural Resources, Office of Water Quality, White River State Park, Indiana Department of Environmental Management, Office of Energy Development, Utility Consumer Counselor, and Utility Regulatory Commission
Cabinet Position: Secretary of Education
- Role: Responsible for programming across the full spectrum of education, from Pre-K to college, as aligned with Senator Braun’s agenda
- Reporting Offices and Agencies: Board of Education, Charter School Board, Education Employment Relations Board, Commission for Higher Education, Department of Education, Dolly Parton Library, School for the Blind and Visually Impaired, and School for the Deaf
Cabinet Position: Secretary of Transportation and Infrastructure
- Role: Responsible for maintaining state’s transportation, infrastructure, and broadband systems to support Indiana’s economic growth and quality of life for Hoosiers
- Reporting Offices and Agencies: Department of Transportation, Northwest IN Regional Development Authority, Bureau of Motor Vehicles, and Broadband Office
Cabinet Position: Secretary of Business Affairs
- Role: Responsible for managing the state's regulatory framework, ensuring that businesses and industries operate safely, ethically, and efficiently
- Reporting Offices and Agencies: Department of Insurance, Department of Financial Institutions, Department of Labor, Civil Rights Commission and Commission for Women, Workers Compensation Board, Professional Licensing Agency, Gaming Commission, Alcohol and Tobacco Commission, Horse Racing Commission, Office of Indiana State Chemist and Seed Commissioner, and Board of Animal Health
Cabinet Position: Lieutenant Governor
- Role: Serves as president of the Indiana Senate and assumes the role of Governor, should the sitting Governor be unable to fulfill the duties of office or if the office falls vacant due to death
- Reporting Offices and Agencies: Indiana State Department of Agriculture and the Office of Community and Rural Affairs
Cabinet Position: Superintendent of the State Police
- Role: Serves as executive head of the Indiana State Police (ISP) and handles oversight of the ISP and its operations
- Reporting Offices and Agencies: The Indiana State Police
Cabinet Position: Adjutant General of the Indiana National Guard
- Role: Serves as commander of the Indiana National Guard and provides essential administrative functions related to legislative and legal affairs, contracting, purchasing and accounting, facilities management, human resources and youth education.
- Reporting Offices and Agencies: Indiana Guard Reserve, the Ceremonial Unit, Hoosier Youth Challenge Academy, Readiness Centers, State Armory Board and the state’s relationship with Camp Atterbury, Muscatatuck Training Center and the Ivy Tech Cyber Academy at Muscatatuck.
The Secretary of Management and Budget will oversee the overall transformation of state government and will work with cabinet secretaries to identify future opportunities for consolidation within and across agencies to improve service delivery and drive cost savings. This functional, results-oriented structure is designed to ensure the Freedom and Opportunity agenda is executed with discipline and excellence.
Further integration will be informed by dedicated analytical efforts, stakeholder inputs, and lessons that emerge from the initial reorganization. The cabinet will meet frequently to coordinate efforts and address challenges. The Governor's Chief of Staff will set the agenda and may include other senior leaders as needed.
To access the Transition Team website, please visit: https://www.brauntransition.com/team/
Congresswoman Erin Houchin (IN-09) has been elected by her colleagues to serve as the House Republican Conference Secretary for the 119th Congress, making her the second highest ranking woman among House Republicans. Her election represents a historic achievement for Indiana’s congressional delegation, amplifying their values and priorities at the highest levels of House leadership.
As Conference Secretary, Congresswoman Houchin will play a key role in supporting the leadership team while advancing President Trump’s America First agenda.
"The Republican Party is moving forward as a unified team, committed to working together to deliver results for the American people," said Congresswoman Houchin. "I am honored by the trust my colleagues have placed in me to serve in this leadership role and look forward to working alongside them and President Trump."
Amid reported concerns about a largescale influx of illegal aliens and “legal migrants” into local communities, Indiana Attorney General Todd Rokita announced today that his office has sent a civil investigative demand (CID) to the Tyson Foods in Logansport seeking information related to human labor trafficking.
The CID states Attorney General Rokita’s office has reasonable cause to believe that Tyson Foods may be in possession, custody, or control of documentary materials or may have knowledge of facts that are relevant to an investigation being conducted concerning human labor trafficking and indecent nuisances.
“The vast number of additional people coming into our communities is alarming, and that’s just from the standpoint of seeing the staggering number of resources being put towards this fight – Every. Single. Day,” Attorney General Rokita said. “When you have an open border and an influx of people coming over illegally by the millions, we can’t have companies incentivizing this criminal behavior by offering jobs for cheap labor. It’s not fair to those looking for employment or to our law enforcement, local hospitals and healthcare facilities, taxpayers that fund these services, and our housing and labor markets. We will continue looking into this growing issue.”
Attorney General Rokita said his investigation is focused on the coordinated efforts among international and local nonprofit “refugee resettlement” organizations and employers, like Tyson Foods, to bring large numbers of migrants to Indiana.
On November 9, 2024, Attorney General Rokita announced he sent CIDs to Cass County Health Department, Logansport Community School Corp., Berry Global Group Inc., Tent Partnership for Refugees, God is Good, and Jackson County Industrial Development Corp. over this same growing issue.
Attorney General Rokita’s office is conducting these investigations pursuant to its authority under Indiana’s Deceptive Consumer Sales Act and indecent nuisance statute.
According to the CID, Tyson Foods must respond in writing by December 4, 2024.
Sen. Mike Braun, Sen. Jon Tester, and Sen. Sherrod Brown celebrated the House passage of their bipartisan Mark Our Place Act, which is now headed to President Biden’s desk to be signed into law.
The bill amends current law to allow the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) to provide a headstone, marker, or medallion for Medal of Honor recipients, regardless of their date of death. Currently, this is only available to Medal of Honor recipients that served after 1917.
Rep. Morgan Luttrell introduced the companion legislation in the House of Representatives.
“Our Medal of Honor recipients represent the best America has to offer. They should be honored regardless of when they served. I am proud to see this bill that will memorialize the valor of these American heroes be signed into law.” – Senator Mike Braun
“I’d like to thank everybody involved in the Mark Our Place Act. This is a great bill to recognize the recipients of America’s highest medal for valor, the Medal of Honor, and I fully support it.” – Sergeant First Class Sammy Davis, Medal of Honor recipient 1968
By Jerry Curry, Staff Writer
An election night watch party was held in Seymour at the Jackson Live and Event Center for United States Congresswoman Erin Houchin. It started at 6:30 p.m. and ended at 10 p.m.
The night started off with appetizers and a dinner.
Graham Houchin was the early entertainment, singing and playing the guitar. After his performance, Congresswoman Houchin announced she would be back later and thanked everyone for coming.
A very large television kept indexing the national results, while a small tv kept up with the local results. The incumbent never trailed her opponents, Democrat Timothy Peck and Russel Brookbank from the Libertarian Party.
Just before 8 p.m., Houchin took the stage again and announced that the race had been called in her favor.
Mike Braun was also announced as the winner in his race for Governor of Indiana, defeating Democrat Jennifer McCormick and Donald Rainwater from the Libertarian Party. At that time Houchin had 71% of the votes. Later this was adjusted to 65% of the votes, almost double the votes that her opponent Timothy Peck received.
In her home of Washington County, she received an astonishing 76.3% of the vote. The only county in the Ninth District that Peck won was Monroe County (Bloomington), where he received 60.3 % of the vote. Peck is an emergency physician who lives in New Washington in rural Clark County.
When asked about her aspirations in the future, considering her resounding victory, she replied, “My goal is to serve the people in southeast Indiana.” When asked about where she would be in two years she said probably in the House of Representatives. Her policy stances are similar to those of U.S. President-Elect Donald Trump—strong U.S./Mexico border, strong economy and personal protection, to name a few.
In closing, Houchin mentioned that the hard-working people of Indiana had been forgotten. She also recognized her supporters and family.
Also attending the election watch party was one of the newly-elected Washington County Council Members At-Large, Todd Armstrong. He is the father of Parker Armstrong, who is the press secretary for Houchin.
Staff photos by Jerry Curry
From left: Mason, Todd and Parker Armstrong. Todd was elected Washington County Council Member At-Large Tuesday evening.
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