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Trump Orders ICE Agents to 14 Airports Amid DHS Shutdown as Fetterman Breaks With Democrats Over TSA Pay Lapse

President Trump ordered ICE agents to assist TSA at 14 U.S. airports as the partial DHS shutdown stretched into its sixth week, leaving thousands of unpaid TSA officers to call out or quit and fueling multi‑hour security lines at major hubs including Houston, Atlanta and New York. The move—ICE agents are paid from a separate appropriation—has drawn sharp Democratic warnings about public‑safety risks even as some senators weigh funding TSA and most DHS components without covering ICE, and Sen. John Fetterman publicly broke with fellow Democrats over the handling of TSA pay while Trump presses to tie DHS funding to his SAVE America Act.

Air Travel and Consumer Costs Homeland Security and TSA Iran War and Global Oil Markets DHS Shutdown and Air Travel Iran War Economic Fallout

📌 Key Facts

  • President Trump ordered ICE agents to assist TSA at 14 U.S. airports; deployments were reported on March 23–24 with agents observed at JFK, Hartsfield‑Jackson (Atlanta) and Houston’s Bush Intercontinental, and DHS declined to publish a full list of locations.
  • ICE personnel at airports are being used for crowd management and non‑screening duties (directing passengers at choke points, line management and crowd control); local officials and DHS say they are not performing immigration enforcement in that role.
  • TSA officers have been unpaid since mid‑February amid the partial DHS shutdown, producing widespread callouts and resignations—roughly 3,200–3,400 officers (about 11–12% of scheduled staff) called out on peak days and more than 450 have quit—leading to multi‑hour security waits (reports up to 6 hours, with some local claims higher) and closed PreCheck/CLEAR lanes.
  • The administration says ICE agents continue to be paid because their salaries come from a separate multi‑year appropriation in the 2025 'One Big Beautiful Bill' act, while most TSA workers are classified as 'essential' and must work without pay until Congress funds DHS (statutory back pay would be owed later).
  • Trump publicly tied DHS funding to his SAVE America Act (including proof‑of‑citizenship voter‑ID provisions), urging Republicans not to approve DHS funding without it; he also said agents should not wear masks at airports and floated sending the National Guard if needed.
  • Senate negotiators were reported to be crafting a bipartisan deal to restore pay and funding for TSA and most DHS components while excluding ICE enforcement operations, with possible statutory guardrails (body cameras, ID mandates, limits on roles) being discussed; GOP senators have circulated offers and some Republicans (e.g., Thune, Kennedy) are exploring funding TSA without ICE.
  • Sen. John Fetterman publicly broke with many Democrats, criticizing his party’s handling of the shutdown after speaking with unpaid TSA workers and vowing not to participate in future shutdowns; the emerging funding framework remains contentious, with Democrats pressing policy reforms at ICE that are not in the GOP proposal.
  • On‑the‑ground reporting and video documented severe airport congestion—lines stretching outside terminals, through subway corridors and multiple floors, instances of passengers missing flights, closed specialty services for lawmakers by Delta, and social‑media footage of ICE agents handing out water—while officials and partisans traded sharply different framings of the deployment (administration: action to ease delays; Democrats: public‑safety and political concerns).

📊 Relevant Data

In 2023, 28% of Black voting-age U.S. citizens did not have a driver's license with their current name and/or address, compared to 27% of Hispanic citizens, 21% of Asian/Pacific Islander citizens, and 18% of White citizens.

Who Lacks ID in America Today? An Exploration of Voter ID Access and Awareness — Center for Democracy and Civic Engagement, University of Maryland

In 2023, 18% of Black voting-age U.S. citizens lacked any driver's license, compared to 15% of Hispanic citizens, 13% of Asian/Pacific Islander citizens, and 5% of White citizens.

Who Lacks ID in America Today? An Exploration of Voter ID Access and Awareness — Center for Democracy and Civic Engagement, University of Maryland

From 2018 to 2023, immigrants were responsible for 42.1% of U.S. population growth, building on the long-term effects of the 1965 Immigration and Nationality Act, which shifted immigration patterns and contributed to 55% of population growth from 1965 to 2015 through new immigrants and their descendants.

How Immigration is Shaping US Cities — American Immigration Council

In 2022, the racial turnout gap between White and non-White voters reached 12 percentage points nationally, up from 10 points in 2012, with White turnout exceeding non-White turnout in every state except Hawaii.

Growing Racial Disparities in Voter Turnout, 2008–2022 — Brennan Center for Justice

📊 Analysis & Commentary (1)

Democrats broke airport security. Now they're calling the solution dangerous
Fox News March 25, 2026

"The opinion defends the Trump administration’s deployment of ICE agents to airports during a DHS shutdown as lawful and necessary, and criticizes Democrats for politicizing TSA funding and opposing the move for partisan reasons."

📰 Source Timeline (15)

Follow how coverage of this story developed over time

March 25, 2026
9:00 AM
A deal to end the DHS shutdown takes shape — but leaves both parties uneasy
MS NOW by Jack Fitzpatrick
New information:
  • The article confirms that congressional negotiators are now coalescing around a specific framework that could restore pay and funding to TSA and most of DHS while leaving ICE enforcement and removal operations unresolved.
  • It provides fresh detail on how the emerging funding structure interacts with Democrats’ insistence on policy reforms at ICE, including limitations on administrative warrants and use of masked agents, which are not addressed in the GOP proposal.
  • The piece gives updated on‑record reactions from Senate leaders and key swing votes that will determine whether TSA relief and broader DHS funding can pass despite the contentious ICE carveout.
March 24, 2026
8:16 PM
Fetterman slams Democratic 'mess' as TSA workers miss paychecks during DHS shutdown
Fox News
New information:
  • Adds explicit on‑camera comments from Sen. John Fetterman criticizing his fellow Democrats’ role in the DHS funding standoff and vowing not to participate in future shutdowns.
  • Clarifies that Democrats are seeking DHS carve‑outs to fund TSA and other components without fully funding ICE, which Republicans are rejecting, sharpening the partisan contours behind the airport deployment decision.
  • Provides Fetterman’s on‑the‑ground detail that he has been speaking regularly with unpaid TSA agents and that they rely on roughly $50,000‑a‑year salaries now halted by the shutdown.
6:59 PM
Delta suspends special services for lawmakers amid government shutdown
https://www.facebook.com/CBSMoneyWatch/
New information:
  • Delta Air Lines says it is suspending specialty services for members of Congress because the prolonged shutdown and TSA staffing issues are straining its resources.
  • The article documents passenger accounts from Houston’s George Bush Intercontinental Airport describing hours‑long TSA lines with poor access to water and air conditioning.
  • It underscores that lawmakers will now experience the same degraded airport conditions as regular passengers when flying Delta unless they have elite SkyMiles status.
  • The piece notes travelers’ explicit calls for Congress to pass a DHS funding measure and reopen the government.
  • It adds that Senate Republicans have sent Democrats a formal DHS offer and are signaling they "have" a solution, suggesting possible movement toward ending the shutdown.
6:33 PM
TSA callouts hit Houston, Atlanta, New Orleans hardest, 450 officers have quit nationwide
Fox News
New information:
  • DHS says more than 3,200 TSA workers called out from their Monday shifts, with the Sunday national callout rate peaking at 11.6% during the shutdown.
  • DHS reports that more than 450 TSA officers have quit during the shutdown, citing inability to afford gas, childcare, food, or rent.
  • DHS callout‑rate rankings show Houston’s Hobby (HOU) at 40.3%, Atlanta (ATL) at 37.4%, Houston’s Bush Intercontinental (IAH) at 36.1% and New Orleans (MSY) at 34.9%, with JFK, BWI, PIT, LGA, PHL and PHX also listed.
  • Acting Assistant Secretary Lauren Bis issues a partisan statement calling it 'Day 38 of the Democrats’ shutdown' and credits Trump’s deployment of ICE agents with easing security delays, including reported waits of up to nine hours in Atlanta.
  • Article notes social‑media videos showing ICE agents in Houston handing out water to travelers in long lines and reports that lines in Atlanta appeared lighter on Tuesday than during the prior spring‑break weekend peak.
6:01 PM
Why do ICE agents get paid during the partial government shutdown, but not TSA?
PBS News by Maria Ramirez Uribe, PolitiFact
New information:
  • Explains that ICE agents assisting at airports are being paid because their salaries come from a separate four‑year appropriation in Trump’s 2025 One Big Beautiful Bill Act, not the shuttered DHS operating budget.
  • Details that about 95% of TSA’s 60,000 workers are classified as 'essential' and must report without pay until Congress passes DHS funding, with statutory back pay owed later under a 2019 law.
  • Provides historical context that after the previous 43‑day shutdown in fall 2025, outgoing DHS Secretary Kristi Noem handed out $10,000 bonuses to some TSA staff, highlighting how shutdowns have become recurring labor flashpoints at the agency.
  • Clarifies that Trump has publicly floated deploying the National Guard to airports if ICE and TSA cannot keep up with security lines, underscoring the administration’s willingness to use uniformed forces in civilian aviation settings.
3:44 PM
WATCH LIVE: Senate meets as lawmakers consider deal to fund Homeland Security
PBS News by Joey Cappelletti, Associated Press
New information:
  • Provides a Senate‑focused view that Trump’s move to order ICE into airport security roles is viewed by lawmakers as 'extraordinary' and potentially escalating tensions, rather than just a stopgap.
  • Connects that deployment to an emerging bipartisan Senate deal to restore TSA and broader DHS funding while specifically excluding ICE deportation operations.
  • Details that negotiators are considering statutory guardrails on ICE and CBP roles plus body‑camera and ID mandates as conditions for funding.
12:33 PM
Some travelers navigate TSA wait times as long as 6 hours as ICE agents are sent to airports
https://www.facebook.com/CBSMornings/
New information:
  • CBS video piece provides on‑the‑ground accounts from travelers at Houston’s George Bush Intercontinental Airport experiencing TSA wait times of up to six hours.
  • It visually documents security lines at Atlanta’s airport stretching all the way outside the terminal, reinforcing the scale of the disruption.
  • Confirms that the ICE and other DHS agents deployed to 14 airports are now physically present on site as those delays play out.
12:04 PM
TSA wait times up to 6 hours as ICE, other agents deployed to 14 airports
https://www.facebook.com/CBSMornings/
New information:
  • Reports that some travelers at Houston’s George Bush Intercontinental Airport faced security wait times of up to six hours, with lines snaking through a subway corridor, baggage claim and three floors.
  • Updated sick‑out figure: more than 3,400 TSA officers — nearly 12% of those scheduled — called out on Sunday, the highest level since the start of the partial shutdown.
  • On‑the‑ground description that ICE and other DHS agents are being used to 'shuttle passengers through overcrowded TSA checkpoints,' with a union rep saying he has mainly seen them 'standing around' and questioning whether they are properly trained.
  • Disclosure that President Trump has told federal agents not to wear masks while working at airports and has said they may soon be joined by National Guard troops if there is no deal to end the shutdown.
  • Note that Senate talks to end the shutdown hit a new roadblock after Trump publicly urged Republicans to hold out for passage of an elections bill Democrats strongly oppose, even as some senators still see a path to fund parts of DHS.
9:00 AM
ICE arrives at clogged airports. But security lines, DHS shutdown persist.
The Christian Science Monitor by Sarah Matusek
New information:
  • Christian Science Monitor confirms ICE personnel arrived or were expected at more than a dozen airports on Monday, including Phoenix, Chicago, Atlanta, Philadelphia, Houston, New York City and New Orleans, while DHS declines to list locations citing operational security.
  • Atlanta’s Hartsfield‑Jackson International Airport urged travelers to arrive at least four hours early because of "TSA staffing constraints," and Mayor Andre Dickens detailed that ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations and Homeland Security Investigations staff will assist with line management and crowd control, not immigration enforcement.
  • Acting assistant DHS secretary Lauren Bis issued a statement blaming Democrats for risking "safety, dependability, and ease of our air travel" and framing the ICE deployment as the president "taking action" to keep airports running during the shutdown.
  • The article notes that expected DHS funding negotiations did not happen Monday because President Trump chose to wait for confirmation of a new DHS secretary; Markwayne Mullin was confirmed Monday night, meaning the shutdown has now stretched to roughly six weeks and could easily run into mid‑April as Congress heads into a two‑week Easter recess.
  • Political‑communications expert Cayce Myers is quoted saying the move will amplify talking points on both sides—Democrats critical of ICE, and Trump arguing he had to "resort to alternative means" to keep TSA functioning—highlighting the deployment’s role as a political symbol as well as an operational patch.
March 23, 2026
9:50 PM
TSA lines at Houston airport a 3-floor nightmare amid staffing shortage
https://www.facebook.com/CBSNews/
New information:
  • At Houston’s George Bush Intercontinental Airport, nearly 40% of TSA employees called out on Monday, leaving only two of the airport’s five terminals staffed by TSA officers.
  • Security lines in Terminal A became a three‑floor queue stretching into the airport’s underground train system, with announced TSA wait times exceeding four hours and some travelers reporting three‑plus‑hour waits in both staffed terminals.
  • CBS News directly observed roughly two dozen armed ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations agents at Bush Intercontinental stationed along security lines, directing passengers at choke points while TSA officers continued to handle ID checks and screening.
  • Houston airport announcements are warning passengers that, because of the federal shutdown, they may not clear security in time for departing flights and should contact airlines to rebook; some travelers have missed flights, with one gate agent telling a passenger that about 40 people missed a single leg the day before.
  • PreCheck and CLEAR lanes at Houston were closed, forcing all passengers through standard lines with no access to food while waiting; the route is not ADA‑compliant, requiring separate handling for wheelchair users.
9:37 PM
Top Dems assert there's risk ICE agents could ‘kill’ travelers under Trump airport plan
Fox News
New information:
  • Confirms that ICE agents actually arrived at JFK and Hartsfield-Jackson on March 23, 2026, as part of deployments to 14 airports.
  • Provides direct Democratic leadership reactions framing the ICE deployment as a public-safety threat, not just an operational stopgap.
  • Adds specific rhetoric about potential shootings and killings, indicating how far opposition leaders are willing to go in characterizing the risk to travelers.
8:25 PM
DHS funding talks in limbo after Trump insists GOP pass SAVE America Act
https://www.facebook.com/CBSNews/
New information:
  • Advances the shutdown timeline from 36 days in earlier coverage to 38 days, indicating no resolution and worsening conditions.
  • Documents Trump’s Memphis speech where he demands SAVE America be 'welded in' to DHS funding and tells Republicans to 'make this one for Jesus,' adding color and specificity to his linkage of the two issues.
  • Introduces new intra‑GOP dynamics, with Thune and Kennedy both publicly mulling a path to fund TSA and other DHS components without ICE as a potential off‑ramp.
6:51 PM
Trump demands SAVE America Act be tied to DHS funding amid airport chaos
Fox News
New information:
  • Trump used a Memphis law‑enforcement roundtable to insist that Republicans "don’t make any deal on anything" regarding DHS funding unless it includes the SAVE America Act requiring proof of citizenship to vote.
  • He described his goal as merging DHS funding with the SAVE America Act into "the great, big, beautiful bill" and said voter ID and proof of citizenship are parts of homeland security.
  • Fox reiterates that ICE agents were deployed to airports Monday to assist TSA in managing crowds and non‑screening duties amid unpaid TSA staff and long security lines.
5:30 PM
ICE agents start assisting TSA at U.S. airports as partial government shutdown continues
https://www.facebook.com/CBSNews/
New information:
  • Confirms that the administration’s plan to send ICE agents to assist TSA at airports has moved from proposal to active implementation.
  • Reinforces that TSA officers have been unpaid since mid‑February, leading to resignations and call‑outs that necessitated ICE support.
  • Provides a mainstream network TV verification that ICE is now part of the stopgap for maintaining airport security throughput during the shutdown.
2:27 PM
Welcome to the spring of travel hell
Axios by Alex Fitzpatrick