Locked‑In Trump Funding Lets ICE, Border Patrol Operate Through DHS Shutdown
CBS reports that Senate Democrats, under pressure after Border Patrol agents killed 37‑year‑old Alex Pretti in Minneapolis—the second deadly federal‑agent shooting there this month—are threatening to block a six‑bill funding package unless the DHS title is stripped, a move that would likely cause a partial government shutdown. But because President Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act handed DHS an extra roughly $165 billion last year, including $75 billion for ICE and $65 billion for CBP, the article shows that immigration enforcement would continue uninterrupted for years even if annual DHS appropriations lapse. Internal summaries from Sen. Patty Murray and Rep. Rosa DeLauro concede that failure to pass a Homeland Security bill would instead shut or furlough other DHS components—FEMA, TSA, CISA, the Coast Guard—while ICE and CBP carried on using OBBBA money without the new policy constraints Congress is now debating. During the 43‑day shutdown last fall, DHS Secretary Kristi Noem already used that cushion to keep more than 70,000 law‑enforcement officers paid, and Sen. Rand Paul is now publicly pointing out that ICE effectively has nearly 87% more funding locked in than last year even if the current $10 billion add‑on fails. The story underscores that the real stakes in this week’s standoff are not whether the Trump administration’s mass‑deportation machinery keeps running—it will—but whether Congress leaves it operating on a huge, pre‑authorized pot of money with fewer strings while starving the rest of DHS.
📌 Key Facts
- The One Big Beautiful Bill Act gave DHS an estimated $165 billion supplemental infusion, including $75 billion for ICE and $65 billion for CBP, on top of normal annual funding.
- The current DHS appropriations bill would provide $64.4 billion in discretionary funding, including about $10 billion for ICE, but Democrats now oppose it after the Minneapolis killing of Alex Pretti.
- Sen. Patty Murray’s and Rep. Rosa DeLauro’s own bill summaries acknowledge that if DHS funding lapses, ICE and CBP can tap OBBBA funds to sustain operations for multiple years, while agencies like FEMA, TSA, CISA and the Coast Guard could face furloughs or unpaid work.
- Sen. Rand Paul notes that even if the new $10 billion for ICE fails, previously locked‑in money leaves the agency with roughly 87% more funding than last year.
📰 Source Timeline (1)
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