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Trump Deploys ICE to 14+ Airports Amid DHS Shutdown as He Rejects Thune Funding Plan and Ties Deal to SAVE America Act

President Trump ordered ICE agents to deploy to at least 14 major U.S. airports beginning Monday to shore up TSA operations amid a partial DHS shutdown — Tom Homan said agents would primarily cover exits, ID checks and guard duties (not operate X‑ray machines) — and Trump rejected Sen. John Thune’s proposal to fund DHS except ICE, instead tying any deal to passage of the SAVE America Act. The rapid, mask‑directive deployment and compressed training has drawn warning from Democrats, unions and security experts about untrained personnel and possible immigration enforcement at checkpoints as long TSA lines, mass call‑outs, and even private offers to pay TSA salaries highlight the operational strain.

Donald Trump Immigration & Demographic Change Somalian Immigrants DHS Shutdown and TSA Operations Elon Musk

📌 Key Facts

  • President Trump ordered ICE agents to deploy to U.S. airports beginning Monday via Truth Social—saying "GET READY"—and framed the move as leverage to force Democrats to fund DHS, rejecting a proposal to fund DHS except ICE and insisting a deal be tied to the SAVE America Act.
  • The deployment began Monday with ICE agents reported at 14+ airports and directly observed at hubs including Hartsfield‑Jackson Atlanta, JFK/Newark, O'Hare (Chicago), Houston and New Orleans; the administration described the force as "hundreds" of agents.
  • White House border czar Tom Homan and administration officials said ICE would support TSA by guarding exits, checking IDs and monitoring entry/exit points to free TSA for specialized screening, and they denied ICE would operate X‑ray machines; Homan said plans, numbers, priorities and timelines were still being crafted on short notice.
  • TSA is experiencing a staffing crisis tied to the partial DHS shutdown that began Feb. 14: hundreds of TSA officers (reported figures range roughly 300–376/366) have quit, call‑out rates spiked (more than 11% called out on one recent day), and travelers faced wait times of several hours—some reports cited up to six hours—prompting the administration to seek temporary help.
  • Observers and former officials warned of legal, training and operational gaps: DHS/TSA certification for screeners normally takes months, many ICE officers lack that training, some agents received only brief or compressed instruction, and unions and former TSA leaders cautioned untrained, armed agents could increase security risks, cause confrontations and demoralize unpaid TSA staff.
  • The directive surprised some ICE and DHS officials who scrambled to draw up plans; messaging inside the administration was inconsistent (e.g., Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said ICE "knows how to run the X‑ray machines" while others said ICE would not operate them), and some ICE personnel require SIDA credentials to perform certain airport duties.
  • Political and public reactions were sharply divided: Senate and House Democrats (including Schumer and Jeffries) condemned the deployment as dangerous and likely to lead to wrongful detentions or violence, unions criticized using "untrained, armed agents," while some travelers called for paying TSA; Sen. John Thune and others were involved in funding talks and Senate leaders described closed‑door negotiations as ongoing and "productive."
  • Additional elements reported: Trump urged ICE not to wear masks while working at airports (saying masks are acceptable for operations against "hardened criminals"), floated bringing in the National Guard if ICE proved insufficient, and Elon Musk offered privately on X to pay TSA salaries (an estimate suggested covering TSA could cost more than $40 million per week), though legal limits exist on private pay for federal employees.

📊 Relevant Data

Black immigrants are disproportionately represented among detained immigrants facing deportation on criminal grounds, with 76 percent of Black immigrants in removal proceedings having criminal convictions compared to lower rates for the overall immigrant population.

Uncovering the Truth — Freedom for Immigrants — Freedom for Immigrants

Latinos accounted for nine out of ten ICE arrests during the first six months of the Trump administration's second term in 2025, showing a sharp rise in targeting of this group.

UCLA Report Finds Latino Arrests by ICE Have Skyrocketed Under the Trump Administration's Second Term — UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs

There has been a sharp rise in ICE detention of immigrants with no criminal convictions, with nearly 9 in 10 noncriminal detainees being Latino, and detention lengths increasing to a median of over 25 days for this group.

UCLA report shows sharp rise in ICE detention of immigrants with no criminal convictions — UCLA Newsroom

U.S. foreign policy has contributed to inequality and violence in Central America, driving migration flows, through interventions that have destabilized the region.

Fleeing a hell the US helped create: why Central Americans journey north — The Guardian

The DHS workforce in 2025 includes 51.7% White (Non-Hispanic or Latino) employees, with other groups making up the remainder, reflecting overrepresentation of Hispanics at 22.3% compared to 19.1% in the U.S. population.

EEO Management Section | Homeland Security — U.S. Department of Homeland Security

📰 Source Timeline (27)

Follow how coverage of this story developed over time

March 23, 2026
5:30 PM
ICE agents start assisting TSA at U.S. airports as partial government shutdown continues
https://www.facebook.com/CBSNews/
New information:
  • CBS confirms that ICE agents have already begun assisting TSA officers at unspecified U.S. airports during the ongoing partial DHS shutdown.
  • The piece underscores that TSA officers have been working without pay since mid‑February and that some have resigned or are calling out, directly tying those actions to the need for ICE support.
  • Identifies this as an active operational shift — not just a planned deployment — with on‑the‑ground confirmation from a CBS reporter.
5:23 PM
ICE deploys to airports to back TSA as DHS funding fight drags on
MS NOW by Laura Barrón-López
New information:
  • Confirms that ICE officers have been deployed to at least 14 airports, with video evidence from airports in Houston, New York City, New Orleans, Atlanta and Newark.
  • Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson says about 75 ICE officers will be deployed to O’Hare across multiple shifts and pledges to monitor for harassment of travelers regardless of immigration status.
  • White House border czar Tom Homan says most deployed ICE officers are Enforcement and Removal Operations agents handling security for most passengers, with some Homeland Security Investigations agents on a 'different mission' he would not specify.
  • DHS acting assistant secretary Lauren Bis issues a statement blaming Democrats for the shutdown and describing the ICE deployment as necessary to bolster TSA and minimize disruptions.
  • New sourcing on a call in which President Trump rejected a plan floated by Sen. John Thune and others to fund all of DHS except ICE via regular appropriations and handle ICE separately via reconciliation, with Trump instead wanting to force Democrats to vote for the SAVE America Act before making a deal.
4:11 PM
Mask-free ICE agents begin patrolling US airports; Trump floats National Guard
Fox News
New information:
  • Fox reports Trump told reporters on the tarmac in West Palm Beach that if ICE agents are 'not enough' at airports, he will 'bring in the National Guard.'
  • The article confirms ICE agents were physically observed working at airports in New York, Atlanta and Houston on Monday, in addition to previously reported deployments in Newark and other hubs.
  • Trump elaborated on his mask directive, saying he is a 'BIG proponent' of ICE wearing masks when dealing with 'hardened criminals' but wants 'NO MASKS' when they are helping with the 'Democrat caused MESS at the airports.'
  • The piece quotes Trump claiming credit for the ICE deployment ('ICE was my idea') and saying Tom Homan endorsed the concept after Trump asked whether agents could remove masks in that role.
4:02 PM
ICE Agents Fan Out at Airports Across the U.S. Amid TSA Staffing Issues
Nytimes by Jacey Fortin, Hamed Aleaziz and Gabe Castro-Root
New information:
  • Article provides on‑the‑ground detail about how ICE deployments are being implemented at specific airports, including which checkpoints or exits they are covering and how quickly agents were rushed into position.
  • Reports how passengers and frontline TSA workers are reacting to ICE agents’ presence at airport checkpoints, including concerns about mission creep into immigration enforcement and racial profiling.
  • Adds operational specifics on training gaps — for example, that many ICE agents received only brief or improvised instruction on airport procedures and are explicitly not operating X‑ray machines or performing standard TSA screening.
  • Details any internal DHS or TSA memos, if described, outlining limits on ICE authorities in the airport context and clarifying whether they can initiate immigration arrests away from their assigned posts.
3:16 PM
ICE Agents Deploy to Airports
The Wall Street Journal by Rachel Wolfe
New information:
  • President Trump posted on social media urging ICE agents not to wear masks when helping with airport security lines, while saying he supports masks when they are searching for hardened criminals.
  • Trump explicitly framed the airport situation as a “Democrat caused MESS” in his statement.
  • White House Border Czar Tom Homan confirmed on CNN that ICE agents are being sent to airports, reinforcing earlier reporting on the deployment.
2:51 PM
Why ICE agents are being deployed to TSA areas at major U.S. airports
https://www.facebook.com/CBSNews/
New information:
  • CBS piece is a short explainer video confirming that President Trump personally ordered ICE agents to assist TSA officers at U.S. airports.
  • It characterizes the deployment as specifically to 'help TSA officers' in screening areas, underscoring that the move is framed by the White House as operational support rather than a replacement of TSA functions.
2:11 PM
Federal immigration agents deployed to Atlanta airport during partial shutdown
PBS News by Wyatte Grantham-Philips, Associated Press
New information:
  • Associated Press reporters directly observed a handful of federal immigration agents on Monday morning near long TSA lines at Hartsfield–Jackson Atlanta International Airport.
  • The article underscores that while federal immigration agents are a routine presence at international airports, their visibility at TSA security checkpoints in support roles is unusual.
  • The piece notes that Trump on Monday directed ICE officers not to wear face coverings while working at airports, distinguishing that from situations where they deal with 'hardened criminals.'
  • The story reiterates that funding for DHS lapsed Feb. 14 after Democrats refused to fund ICE and CBP without operational changes, including requiring judicial warrants before forced home entries and banning masks and anonymous uniforms.
1:55 PM
ICE agents deployed to some U.S. airports as TSA lines stretch for hours
https://www.facebook.com/CBSNews/
New information:
  • Confirms ICE agents physically deployed on Monday to Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, JFK in New York, O'Hare in Chicago, and expected at Pittsburgh International Airport.
  • Reports that more than 11.5% of TSA officers nationwide called out on Saturday after missing another paycheck, the highest share since the shutdown began.
  • Details that some travelers at Atlanta’s Hartsfield-Jackson faced wait times of up to six hours over the weekend and were told to arrive four hours before flights, with some still missing flights.
  • Includes on-the-ground reaction from travelers and notes mixed public response to ICE’s presence at airports.
  • Quotes AFGE president Everett Kelly criticizing the use of “untrained, armed agents” and stressing TSA’s specialized training; notes concern that ICE lacks SIDA badges limiting how much they can actually help.
  • Notes Trump posted on Truth Social that he would 'greatly appreciate' ICE agents not wearing masks at airports.
12:17 PM
Sen Kennedy says he would accept Democrats' offer to 'open up everything' but ICE
Fox News
New information:
  • Kennedy explicitly ties the unpaid status and stress on TSA workers during the shutdown to the political standoff over ICE funding, saying current tactics are harming frontline DHS employees.
  • He argues that Democrats are refusing to support any legislation involving ICE because, in his words, their party base wants the agency abolished.
  • Kennedy claims the shutdown could be ended "in seven days" if his reconciliation strategy were adopted.
12:02 PM
Trump delays strikes on Iran's power plants for 5 days. And, ICE deploys to airports
NPR by Brittney Melton
New information:
  • NPR specifies that Trump publicly framed the ICE deployment as sending 'hundreds' of agents to airports nationwide as of March 23 to support TSA amid staffing shortages.
  • Tom Homan tells CNN he is still 'crafting a plan' for how the ICE deployment will work, underscoring the lack of finalized operational detail even as the deployment begins.
  • Homan adds that ICE agents will 'monitor entry and exit points' at the nation’s busiest airports but will not be involved in 'specialized airport security,' reinforcing the claim that they will not operate X‑ray machines or other TSA‑specific gear.
  • The article adds further DHS shutdown context: it reiterates that the department ran out of funds on Feb. 14 and stresses that long lines and TSA call‑outs are worsening, with Congress only now returning from recess to try to address it.
10:00 AM
Homan fires back at CNN host over 'how well-thought-out' ICE airport deployment plan is
Fox News
New information:
  • Tom Homan told CNN he is working with ICE and TSA directors to construct a 'well‑thought‑out plan' for ICE officers by the afternoon following Trump’s order.
  • Homan specified that ICE agents are expected to guard exits and handle identification/security tasks they already perform at airports, rather than conduct X‑ray screening.
  • He emphasized that ICE agents will likely not operate X‑ray machines because they are not trained for that function, but will free TSA officers for specialized screening work.
1:04 AM
Trump calling in ICE agents for airport security as DHS shutdown continues
https://www.facebook.com/CBSEveningNews/
New information:
  • CBS frames the move as the Trump administration saying ICE officers will be 'stationed at hotspot U.S. airports starting Monday' to assist with TSA screenings.
  • The piece notes ICE officers 'will undergo some training before then,' emphasizing that training is being compressed into the few days before deployment.
  • It reinforces that the White House is publicly presenting the step as a way to help ease TSA bottlenecks during the shutdown, rather than as a long‑term policy shift.
March 22, 2026
7:12 PM
Officials scramble to carry out Trump's directive on ICE agents at airports
https://www.facebook.com/CBSNews/
New information:
  • CBS reports that Trump’s weekend Truth Social directive to send ICE agents to airports caught ICE officials by surprise, with one DHS source saying, "I have no idea what we're doing."
  • Internal deliberations are underway to figure out how ICE agents could be used for airport security, with officials scrambling ahead of a promised Monday deployment.
  • A former senior ICE official tells CBS that ICE agents are not trained to operate screening machines and that Customs and Border Protection officers would make more sense to augment airport security.
  • CBS notes that Trump’s public posts explicitly floated using ICE at airports both to "help" TSA and to arrest people in the U.S. illegally if Democrats do not agree to fund DHS.
  • The article reiterates that TSA lines have lengthened because hundreds of TSA workers have resigned or called out sick while working without pay during the shutdown, sharpening the context for the ICE deployment.
6:30 PM
Schumer knocks Trump on Iran, plan to send ICE to airports: 'Asking for trouble'
Fox News
New information:
  • Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer used a Sunday Senate floor speech to condemn Trump’s plan to deploy ICE agents to U.S. airports, calling it 'asking for trouble' and 'another impulsive action by Donald Trump.'
  • Schumer argued ICE agents are 'untrained' for TSA duties, have 'caused problems everywhere they've gone,' and that sending them to airports on less than a day’s notice with no clear plan will worsen chaos at security checkpoints.
  • The Fox piece quotes Schumer asserting that 'no one has any faith in ICE agents' to perform TSA work and criticizing Tom Homan for still 'drawing up plans' while Trump is already announcing the move.
  • The article reiterates Trump’s Truth Social post that ICE will go to airports Monday to 'help our wonderful TSA Agents' and frames the move as leverage in his standoff with Democrats over DHS funding.
5:30 PM
ICE officers set to deploy to airports as delays mount, border czar Homan confirms
NPR by Luke Garrett
New information:
  • NPR provides direct quotes from Tom Homan calling the airport operation 'a work in progress' and saying ICE agents will likely relieve TSA of guard duty at terminal entries and exits rather than operate X-ray machines.
  • Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy, in contrast, tells ABC he believes ICE agents 'know how to run the X-ray machines' because they are under Homeland Security with TSA, revealing an internal messaging discrepancy.
  • House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries sharply criticizes the plan on CNN, saying 'the last thing that the American people need are for untrained ICE agents to be deployed at airports all across the country, potentially to brutalize or in some instances kill them.'
  • The piece specifies that the DHS shutdown has entered its sixth week, notes more than 300 TSA officers have quit, and that ICE remains well funded due to last summer’s 'One Big Beautiful Bill Act.'
  • The article ties the origin of the DHS shutdown to the killings of two U.S. citizens by federal immigration agents in Minnesota and details Democrats’ reform demands, including a judicial warrant requirement and restrictions on ICE masks.
5:08 PM
Federal immigration agents sent to U.S. airports to support security during budget impasse
PBS News by Seung Min Kim, Associated Press
New information:
  • AP/PBS piece confirms Trump has definitively decided to 'go ahead' with the plan after using it as a threat the previous day, rather than merely floating the idea.
  • Tom Homan specifies two main contemplated ICE roles at airports: guarding exit lanes now staffed by TSA and checking IDs before passengers enter screening areas, with an explicit denial that ICE officers will operate X‑ray machines.
  • Homan says he expects to have 'a plan by the end of today' identifying which airports will get ICE agents first and indicates priority will be 'large airports where there's a long wait, like three hours.'
  • The article notes that ICE agents are already present at many airports doing smuggling investigations and frames the new role as redeploying existing personnel rather than an entirely new footprint.
  • The piece ties the move and Homan’s role directly to ongoing bipartisan Senate talks over the partial DHS shutdown and notes the Senate is using a rare weekend session to advance Markwayne Mullin’s nomination as DHS secretary, with a full confirmation vote possible as early as late Monday.
4:57 PM
Trump to deploy ICE agents to airports Monday
Axios by Andrew Pantazi
New information:
  • Axios provides detailed description from Tom Homan’s CNN interview that ICE agents will not operate X‑ray machines but could guard exit lanes and check IDs to free up TSA officers.
  • Article notes that DHS says it takes four to six months to train and certify TSA officers, and that ICE agents have not undergone this process.
  • Former TSA Administrator John Pistole tells Axios the acting TSA administrator could legally designate ICE agents as screeners but calls it a bad idea and warns that untrained screeners increase the risk of a terrorist exploiting security gaps.
  • The DHS figure of 366 transportation security officers quitting so far during the shutdown is cited, quantifying attrition.
  • Trump’s Truth Social post is quoted as saying ICE agents would arrest undocumented immigrants at airports with a 'heavy emphasis on those from Somalia,' and Homan acknowledges immigration enforcement at airports 'all the time.'
  • Sen. Patty Murray publicly criticizes the plan on X, warning Americans do not want to be 'wrongfully detained, beat up, and harassed by ICE' at TSA checkpoints.
  • A TSA union steward in Atlanta tells CNN that bringing in ICE agents will not solve the underlying problem and warns untrained personnel at checkpoints 'could be a problem.'
  • Pistole also flags the risk of confrontations between ICE agents and travelers hostile to the agency and potential demoralization of already unpaid TSA staff.
2:45 PM
Trump and his border czar say ICE will arrive at airports on Monday
MS NOW by Erum Salam
New information:
  • Confirms on‑the‑record that ICE agents will begin arriving at U.S. airports on Monday, not just 'as soon as next week.'
  • Provides a direct Trump Truth Social quote ordering ICE to 'GET READY' and declaring 'NO MORE WAITING, NO MORE GAMES!'
  • Adds Tom Homan’s CNN explanation that 'a highly‑trained ICE law enforcement officer can cover an exit, that relieves TSA to go to screening,' clarifying the intended division of labor.
  • Includes Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy’s ABC warning that security lines will 'get much worse' this week and that more TSA agents are likely to quit by Friday if pay is not restored.
  • Restates Trump’s claim that ICE will conduct 'immediate arrest of all Illegal Immigrants who have come into our Country, with heavy emphasis on those from Somalia,' underscoring the explicitly targeted enforcement rhetoric.
  • Details that Democrats’ demands for ICE reforms are tied to the fatal shooting of two U.S. citizens, Renee Good and Alex Pretti, in Minneapolis, adding context to the funding standoff.
2:35 PM
ICE Will Deploy to Airports to Ease Long Lines, Border Czar Confirms
Nytimes by Erica L. Green
New information:
  • Tom Homan, now White House border czar, confirmed on CNN’s 'State of the Union' that ICE agents will be deployed to U.S. airports starting Monday and said plans are still being drawn up.
  • Homan framed the move primarily as an effort to ease long TSA lines during the busy travel season and said agents would focus on airports with roughly three‑hour waits, supporting TSA by covering exits and non‑specialized functions.
  • Homan acknowledged that key details — including how many agents, which airports, and deployment timelines — had not yet been finalized and would be decided later Sunday.
  • House Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries sharply criticized the plan, warning that 'untrained ICE agents' at airports could 'brutalize or kill' travelers, referencing the killings of two U.S. citizens in Minneapolis in January.
12:35 PM
Trump says ICE will deploy to airports Monday to assist TSA amid funding standoff
Fox News
New information:
  • Trump states on Truth Social that 'On Monday, ICE will be going to airports to help our wonderful TSA Agents,' indicating a specific date and an asserted operational plan rather than a vague threat.
  • He explicitly frames the move as a response to Democrats 'holding back the money' for DHS, reinforcing that this deployment is part of the ongoing DHS funding confrontation.
  • Trump says 'The great Tom Homan is in charge!' suggesting that former ICE acting director Tom Homan is overseeing or coordinating the planned ICE role at airports.
March 21, 2026
10:57 PM
Trump says he will order federal immigration officers to help with airport security unless Democrats end shutdown
PBS News by Collin Binkley, Associated Press
New information:
  • Trump’s new social‑media posts from Florida say he will order ICE officers into airport security 'on Monday' unless Democrats agree to fund DHS, and that he has already told ICE to 'GET READY.'
  • He explicitly promises that ICE at airports would arrest 'all Illegal Immigrants' and says they will focus on arresting immigrants from Somalia who are in the U.S. illegally, repeating his claim that Somalis 'totally destroyed' Minnesota.
  • The article ties Democrats’ refusal to fund DHS to demands for reforms after a Minnesota immigration crackdown that led to the fatal shootings of two protesters, including calls for better identification for federal officers, a new code of conduct and greater use of judicial warrants.
  • PBS/AP updates TSA operational fallout: at least 376 TSA workers have quit since the Feb. 14 partial shutdown began, call‑out rates are climbing, and Senate Democrats’ attempt to pass a TSA‑only funding bill was blocked Saturday.
  • The piece notes that bipartisan Senate talks with White House officials have restarted and that Senate Majority Leader John Thune and Democratic leader Chuck Schumer both describe closed‑door negotiations as 'productive,' signaling some movement even as the threat hangs.
9:40 PM
Airport security lines are long. Here's what to know if you're flying
NPR by Shannon Bond
New information:
  • Reports specific current wait times: up to two hours at major hubs in Houston and Atlanta on Friday, and a three-hour early-arrival advisory from New Orleans’ Louis Armstrong International Airport.
  • Details operational impacts, including Philadelphia International Airport closing three security checkpoints entirely this week because of short staffing.
  • Provides DHS figures that more than 300 TSA officers have quit since the shutdown began and that more than half of TSA staff in Houston and nearly a third in Atlanta and New Orleans called out sick last week.
  • Quotes Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy warning that if a deal is not reached, current disruption will look like 'child's play' and that smaller airports may have to temporarily close.
  • Adds that U.K. Foreign Office officials are warning their citizens of 'longer than usual queues' at some U.S. airports due to the shutdown-linked delays.
  • Introduces Elon Musk’s offer on X to personally pay TSA salaries during the funding impasse, and notes that U.S. law generally bars government employees from receiving outside compensation for their work.
8:32 PM
Trump threatens to deploy ICE to run airport security during shutdown
MS NOW by Clarissa-Jan Lim
New information:
  • Clarifies Trump’s conditional framing that ICE will take over airport security 'if the Democrats do not allow for Just and Proper Security at our Airports,' tying the move explicitly to passage of the GOP funding bill.
  • Quotes Trump saying ICE will perform security 'far better than ever done before' and that he looks forward to 'moving ICE in on Monday' and has already told them to 'GET READY.'
  • Adds Trump’s statement that ICE at airports would include 'the immediate arrest of all Illegal Immigrants who have come into our Country, with heavy emphasis on those from Somalia,' sharpening the targeting language.
  • Provides additional shutdown context: this comes after Senate Republicans blocked Schumer’s TSA‑only funding attempt and after a DHS funding bill failed in the Senate for the fifth time.
  • Includes warning from acting deputy TSA administrator Adam Stahl to CBS that TSA 'may have to shut down airports' if funding doesn’t resume, underscoring operational risk.
6:55 PM
Trump Says He Will Send ICE Agents to Airports on Monday
Nytimes by Erica L. Green and Michael Gold
New information:
  • Trump followed his initial threat with a second post hours later saying he has 'decided to go ahead with the move' and has told ICE to 'GET READY.'
  • He explicitly says he 'look[s] forward to moving ICE in on Monday,' providing a concrete date for the planned deployment.
  • The article ties these posts directly to ongoing bipartisan talks on Capitol Hill involving White House border czar Tom Homan, noting those negotiations continued Friday night and into Saturday as the shutdown enters its fifth week.
5:28 PM
For airline passengers, the shutdown answer is simple: Pay TSA officers
ABC News
New information:
  • On March 21 at Atlanta’s airport, passengers interviewed by AP/ABC overwhelmingly say TSA officers need to be paid and that funding them should be Congress’s top priority, with several explicitly blaming Democrats for prolonging the shutdown.
  • The article documents Hartsfield‑Jackson Atlanta International Airport’s operational strain in concrete terms: TSA wait times surged to about 90 minutes early Saturday before dropping later in the morning, and staffing shortages have at times forced checkpoint closures.
  • It adds contextual detail to Trump’s ICE‑at‑airports threat by noting he singled out immigrants from Somalia as a focus for potential arrests, though no concrete implementation plan has been announced.
  • Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer is quoted signaling a tactical shift by promising to offer a TSA‑only funding bill on Saturday, even as it is expected to fail in a rare weekend session.
4:37 PM
Musk offers to pay TSA salaries, as Trump floats ICE at airports
Axios by Ben Berkowitz
New information:
  • Axios timestamps that Musk’s X post offering to pay TSA personnel salaries came early Saturday, followed roughly five hours later by Trump’s Truth Social post threatening to deploy ICE agents to airports if Democrats did not agree to a funding deal.
  • It quantifies Musk’s potential commitment by tying it to TSA headcount, estimating that covering salaries could cost more than $40 million per week.
  • Axios highlights that it is unclear what prompted Musk’s offer a month into the shutdown and questions how either proposal—private funding of federal salaries or ICE substitution for TSA—would work in practice.
  • The article reiterates that Democrats have recently shifted to new procedural tactics in Congress to end the DHS shutdown but that there are still 'few signs of movement.'