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Key economic staff members confer during a budget session in the White House Roosevelt Room on Friday, Feb. 6, 2009. From left, Gene Sperling, advisor to the Secretary of the Treasury, confers with Office of Management and Budget director Peter Orszag and Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner talks with L
Photo: White House photo by Pete Souza / Photo de la Maison Blanche par Pete Souza | Public domain | Wikimedia Commons

Senate Republicans Advance Plan To Fully Fund DHS During Ongoing Shutdown

The fight began in mid-February after federal immigration agents killed two protesters in Minneapolis. Senate Democrats responded by blocking funding for ICE and Customs and Border Protection. That blockade left much of the Department of Homeland Security without normal appropriations and prompted a partial DHS shutdown that began Feb. 14, even as the president temporarily paid many department employees.

In response, Senate Republicans unveiled a 58-page budget resolution crafted by Sen. Lindsey Graham as the vehicle to move funding. The measure gives the Judiciary and Homeland Security committees authority to increase spending by up to $70 billion each, though leaders expect roughly a $70 billion final package rather than $140 billion. Republicans plan to use the budget fast-track process so the enforcement bill can pass on a simple majority without Democratic votes. Senate GOP leaders moved quickly: a 52-46 vote launched the fast-track process, the chamber held an all-night vote-a-rama of amendments, and the GOP adopted the budget blueprint after overnight votes.

Coverage of the effort shifted as it moved forward. Early reporting framed the move as a narrowly targeted plan to fund ICE and Border Patrol while the rest of DHS remained stalled. Later coverage, including newer CBS accounts, described the Republican push as an effort to fully fund DHS during the shutdown. Confusion about a $140 billion figure also eased, with the official target settling near $70 billion and structured as multi-year authority to cover through the remainder of the Trump presidency.

The immediate outcome is that Senate Republicans advanced a plan to lock in ICE and Border Patrol funding through the end of President Trump's term by front-loading roughly $70 billion in multiyear authority. The chamber voted along party lines to begin the fast-track process and then approved the budget blueprint after the vote-a-rama, with Sens. Rand Paul and Lisa Murkowski joining Democrats in opposition. Democrats warned the partisan maneuver sets a dangerous precedent and pressed amendments on affordability and health care that failed on party-line votes. Next steps include committee drafting under reconciliation instructions, a parliamentarian review, and eventual House action before the package can become law.

Immigration & Demographic Change Congressional Budget And Spending Border Security And Enforcement Congressional Budget And Appropriations Fights Congress and Federal Budget
This story is compiled from 16 sources using AI-assisted curation and analysis. Original reporting is attributed below. Learn about our methodology.

📌 Key Facts

  • Senate Republicans released a 58‑page budget resolution authored by Sen. Lindsey Graham to serve as the vehicle for funding immigration enforcement and advancing a budget reconciliation process.
  • The resolution gives the Judiciary and Homeland Security committees authority to increase deficit spending by up to $70 billion each on paper, but GOP leaders say they expect a roughly $70 billion, multi‑year enforcement package intended to fund ICE and portions of CBP through the remainder of President Trump's term (roughly the next 3–4 years).
  • Republicans are using budget reconciliation — a fast‑track process that allows passage with a simple majority — specifically to try to pass immigration‑enforcement funding without Democratic votes; the move requires parliamentarian sign‑off and sets a precedent that both parties acknowledge and debate.
  • The Senate voted 52‑46 to launch reconciliation and then held an all‑night 'vote‑a‑rama' of rapid amendment votes; the GOP blueprint was ultimately adopted overnight, though Sens. Rand Paul and Lisa Murkowski opposed the final budget blueprint and Sen. John Kennedy briefly threatened to derail the process over nongermane amendment demands.
  • House GOP leaders have said they will not advance a broader, bipartisan DHS funding bill until the Senate shows progress toward funding ICE and Border Patrol via this reconciliation framework; Senate Majority Leader John Thune and Speaker Mike Johnson reached an understanding to fund most DHS by regular appropriations while moving ICE/CBP to reconciliation.
  • The Department of Homeland Security has been operating without normal appropriations since Feb. 14, with the White House temporarily paying some DHS employees; Democrats initially blocked ICE and CBP funding after federal immigration agents fatally shot two protesters, prompting the standoff.
  • Democrats used the reconciliation process to force politically difficult, messaging amendments (on affordability, health care, tariffs, the Iran war, etc.), while Republicans faced internal pressure to attach priorities such as the SAVE America Act, farm aid, anti‑shutdown provisions and other policy riders.
  • Political and procedural deadlines are now in play: leaders set a June 1 target for passing enforcement funding, and the reconciliation package must clear technical review by the Senate parliamentarian before final legislation can move to the House and the president.

đź“° Source Timeline (16)

Follow how coverage of this story developed over time

April 23, 2026
5:04 PM
Senate Republicans make moves to fund DHS as shutdown drags on
https://www.facebook.com/CBSNews/
New information:
  • CBS report explicitly characterizes current Senate Republican action as a move to 'fully fund the Department of Homeland Security' during the shutdown.
  • Confirms that the shutdown is still in effect and describes it as 'dragging on,' reinforcing the continuing nature of the standoff.
  • Attributes on-the-ground congressional coverage to CBS correspondent Caitlin Huey-Burns, indicating active floor and hallway reporting.
11:37 AM
Tensions rise in two ceasefires in the Middle East. And, the Navy secretary ousted
NPR by Brittney Melton
New information:
  • Senate Republicans introduced a budget resolution Tuesday to fund immigration enforcement agencies and end the partial DHS shutdown.
  • The article specifies that Republicans intend to use the budget fast-track process commonly known as reconciliation to move the funding bill along party lines.
  • It adds political context: Democrats cut off ICE and CBP funding after federal immigration agents killed two U.S. citizens in Minneapolis earlier this year.
  • NPR links to an explainer on how the reconciliation-like process works in this context, underscoring that the path is lengthy and complex.
9:00 AM
Senate GOP is kickstarting budget reconciliation to fund ICE. Here's how that works.
NPR by Barbara Sprunt
New information:
  • Explains in detail what budget reconciliation is, why 60 votes are usually needed in the Senate, and how reconciliation allows passage with a simple majority.
  • Clarifies that the budget resolution gives the Judiciary and Homeland Security Committees instructions to write legislation that can increase the deficit by up to $70 billion each, though leaders expect a $70 billion total package.
  • Notes that President Trump has set a June 1 deadline for passage of the enforcement funding bill.
  • Provides historical context on reconciliation, including its origin in the 1974 Congressional Budget Act, and recent uses for the 2017 tax cuts, Biden-era COVID relief and Inflation Reduction Act, and Trump's One Big Beautiful Bill.
  • Quotes strategist Liam Donovan on the limits of a bare Senate majority without 60 votes and why reconciliation has become a preferred partisan tool.
9:00 AM
Democrats warn GOP that partisan funding plan will come back to bite them
MS NOW by Jack Fitzpatrick
New information:
  • Adds direct quotes from Sens. Patty Murray, Chris Murphy, and Chris Van Hollen explicitly warning that using reconciliation for multi-year ICE and CBP appropriations will set a precedent Democrats 'can and should and will use' when in power.
  • Clarifies Republican leaders' own recognition of precedent, with Sen. Shelley Moore Capito conceding that once used, it becomes precedent and 'off to the races.'
  • Reiterates the GOP budget resolution structure: up to $140 billion over 10 years, split $70 billion each for the Homeland Security and Judiciary committees, aimed at a roughly $70 billion enforcement bill through the rest of Trump's term.
  • Places the move in a longer evolution of reconciliation usage, noting Democrats' earlier IRS funding through reconciliation and last year's GOP use for hundreds of billions for DHS and the military.
  • Frames the current ICE-focused reconciliation push as a 'second round' specifically to avoid stalled bipartisan talks, with Democrats warning it normalizes partisan agency funding bills that bypass the 60-vote Senate norm.
8:21 AM
Senate passes budget plan for ICE and Border Patrol in bid to reopen Homeland Security
ABC News
New information:
  • The article frames the vote explicitly as 'the first steps in a new effort to reopen the Department of Homeland Security' after a shutdown since mid-February over fatal shootings of two protesters by federal agents.
  • It reiterates that Republicans are using budget reconciliation, tying it to last year's Trump tax-and-spending package, and details the overnight vote-a-rama with Democrats offering amendments on health care and affordability.
  • It quotes Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer criticizing 'pumping hundreds of billions of dollars into ICE and Border Patrol' instead of lowering out-of-pocket costs.
  • It notes that the House must now approve the framework and that Senate parliamentarian sign-off is required before a final enforcement bill can move.
  • It adds direct quotes from Senate Majority Leader John Thune describing a 'multistep process' and claiming Republicans will 'have helped ensure that America's borders are secure' and prevented Democrats from 'defunding' ICE and Border Patrol.
  • It confirms GOP internal pressure to bolt other priorities onto the bill, highlighting Sen. John Kennedy calling it 'the last train leaving the station' and briefly holding up the vote over the SAVE America Act and other items.
7:55 AM
Senate passes budget plan for ICE and Border Patrol in bid to reopen Homeland Security
MS NOW by The Associated Press
New information:
  • Confirms the Senate vote happened overnight Wednesday into early Thursday, described as the first step in a new effort to reopen the Department of Homeland Security.
  • Specifies the budget resolution total at $70 billion and that it funds ICE and Border Patrol for three years, through the rest of Trump's term.
  • Clarifies Republicans are using the budget reconciliation process, explicitly tying it to the same maneuver used for Trump's prior tax-and-spending package.
  • Details House Republican leaders’ position: they will not take up the bipartisan DHS reopening bill until the Senate shows progress toward funding ICE and Border Patrol via this framework.
  • Reports internal GOP pressure to attach additional priorities, including money for farmers and Trump's proof-of-citizenship voting bill, the SAVE America Act.
  • Notes Sen. John Kennedy briefly held up votes seeking inclusion of SAVE America Act provisions before withdrawing his objection, calling the bill the "last train leaving the station."
  • Includes fresh Democratic quotes framing the plan as pumping "hundreds of billions" into ICE and Border Patrol instead of lowering household costs.
  • Reiterates Democrats’ demands that any DHS funding bill include restraints on federal immigration authorities, such as better identification for officers and more use of judicial warrants, after fatal protester shootings in Minneapolis.
7:50 AM
Senate GOP rams through blueprint to bankroll ICE, Border Patrol through end of Trump era
Fox News
New information:
  • Confirms that Senate Republicans have now adopted the budget resolution after an all-night vote-a-rama, moving the reconciliation process to the next stage.
  • Notes that Sens. Rand Paul and Lisa Murkowski were the only Republicans voting against the budget blueprint.
  • Adds GOP leaders' stated strategy to front-load more than $70 billion so ICE and Border Patrol are funded for the remainder of Trump's term because they fear Democrats will not agree to future appropriations.
  • Describes Democrats offering a slate of amendments focused on affordability and economic issues, all of which failed on party-line votes.
  • Details internal GOP tension as Sen. John Kennedy threatened to derail the process by insisting on nongermane amendments, including a version of the Safeguarding American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) America Act.
4:24 AM
Senate Plunges Into Vote Marathon as G.O.P. Advances ICE Funding Boost
Nytimes by Michael Gold
New information:
  • Confirms the Senate settled into an extended overnight vote marathon with dozens of rapid-fire amendment votes attached to the ICE and Border Patrol funding vehicle.
  • Adds detail on how Democrats are using the vote-a-rama procedurally to force Republicans into politically difficult votes on non-immigration issues while still lacking the numbers to block the underlying enforcement bill.
  • Describes leadership tactics and floor dynamics that show the GOP measure maintaining momentum through the night despite Democratic messaging amendments and criticism.
1:38 AM
Senate begins "vote-a-rama" as GOP moves forward with funding ICE without Democrats
https://www.facebook.com/CBSNews/
New information:
  • Confirms that the vote-a-rama began shortly after 9:30 p.m. Eastern on Wednesday with Democrats offering amendments.
  • Specifies that the reconciliation resolution authorizes Judiciary and Homeland Security committees each to increase spending authority by up to $70 billion, with Republicans expecting a final bill around $70 billion total.
  • Clarifies that House Republicans are holding off on passing the broader DHS funding bill until the Senate advances the ICE and CBP package via reconciliation.
  • Adds that the plan briefly hit a procedural speed bump when Sen. John Kennedy pushed changes before ultimately relenting.
  • Reiterates Schumer's latest framing of the fight as a "reconciliation of contrasts" focused on affordability amendments to put Republicans on the record.
1:36 AM
Senate GOP launches all-night vote-a-rama to fund ICE, Border Patrol through end of Trump's term
Fox News
New information:
  • Senate has formally launched an all-night 'vote-a-rama' on the GOP budget resolution funding ICE and Border Patrol through the end of President Trump's term.
  • John Thune says he will not block Republican amendments, including those targeting economic issues and Medicaid abortion-provider funding.
  • Chuck Schumer outlines Democrats' amendment strategy to highlight contrasts on the Iran war, affordability, and what he calls a 'rogue police force' in ICE.
  • Democrats are preparing amendments on small-business tariff rebates, grocery costs, and renewed Obamacare enhanced premium tax credits.
April 22, 2026
6:28 PM
Republicans eye ending government shutdowns forever over fears Dems will do it again
Fox News
New information:
  • Senate Republicans, led by Majority Leader John Thune, are actively discussing adding a provision to the reconciliation package to prevent future government shutdowns.
  • Thune says Republicans previously tried and failed during last year's shutdown to pass anti-shutdown legislation and calls renewed efforts a 'great idea' if it can survive reconciliation rules.
  • Sen. Josh Hawley, who backs shutdown-prevention legislation, is skeptical that such a measure can actually be included in the reconciliation package, saying the bill text is largely 'baked.'
  • Democrats, led by Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, plan to use the reconciliation process to force votes on affordability-focused amendments and argue Republicans are 'twisting themselves in a pretzel.'
  • Republicans frame the move as a response to Democrats' refusal for more than 60 days to fund ICE and CBP without stricter warrant and unmasking requirements for immigration enforcement.
2:13 PM
WATCH LIVE: Senate meets as Republicans try to secure DHS funding through budget reconciliation
PBS News by Mary Clare Jalonick, Associated Press
New information:
  • Confirms the Senate held a 52-46 vote Tuesday to launch the reconciliation process aimed at reopening DHS and funding ICE and Border Patrol.
  • Specifies that Senate Democrats have blocked ICE and Border Patrol money since mid-February over fatal shootings of two protesters by federal agents.
  • Notes that Republicans intend to use reconciliation as they did for Trump's prior tax and spending package, again without needing Democratic votes.
  • Details that the Budget Committee released an estimated $70 billion, three-year resolution to fund ICE and Border Patrol through the rest of Trump's term.
  • Describes internal GOP debate over adding amendments such as parts of Trump's SAVE America Act and farmer aid, with Sen. John Kennedy preparing amendments and Sen. Ron Johnson stressing speed.
  • Quotes Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer calling the workaround a 'partisan sideshow' that pours money into 'rogue agencies' without restraints.
April 21, 2026
9:01 PM
Senate takes first step to fund ICE, Border Patrol in bid to cut Dems out of the funding process
Fox News
New information:
  • Senate Republicans have taken the first party-line vote to launch the budget reconciliation process to fund ICE and Border Patrol.
  • The budget resolution formally sets instructions for the Judiciary and Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committees to each have authority up to $70 billion, with Republicans targeting $70–$80 billion in final enforcement funding.
  • Sen. Lindsey Graham is identified as the architect of the resolution, framing it as a move to fully fund ICE and Border Patrol amid a 'great threat' to the U.S.
  • Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer explicitly criticizes the plan as '140 billion for ICE, $0 to lower your costs,' tying it to gas prices and affordability concerns.
  • Senate Majority Leader John Thune publicly acknowledges worries about the precedent of using reconciliation to fund specific agencies and says Republicans turned to this route because he sees no way Democrats will agree to fund ICE and CBP under Trump.
5:40 PM
Senate Republicans Release Budget Measure to Fund ICE Through 2029
Nytimes by Michael Gold
New information:
  • New York Times piece emphasizes that the Republican budget measure is designed to lock in ICE funding through about 2029, covering nearly the remainder of President Trump's term.
  • Article provides additional procedural detail on how the fast-track resolution would interact with stalled DHS appropriations and the specific committees that would receive reconciliation instructions.
  • Reporting adds quotes and framing from Democratic senators and possibly budget experts criticizing the maneuver as an end‑run around regular appropriations and warning about precedent for single‑agency fast‑track funding.
  • The story further clarifies that earlier confusion over a $140 billion figure has been resolved, with the official target closer to $70 billion but structured as multi‑year authority.
3:38 PM
Senate GOP unveils budget resolution, kickstarting process to fund ICE
https://www.facebook.com/CBSNews/
New information:
  • Confirms a 58-page budget resolution has been formally released by Senate Budget Chair Lindsey Graham as the vehicle for the plan.
  • Clarifies that the resolution authorizes up to $70 billion in new spending authority for Judiciary and Homeland Security, with aides expecting the final bill to total about $70 billion, not $140 billion.
  • States Republicans intend to use the budget reconciliation process so they can pass immigration enforcement funding without Democratic votes.
  • Says the plan would fund ICE and parts of CBP for 3.5 years, effectively locking in enforcement funding for the remainder of the Trump presidency.
  • Notes DHS has been shut down since Feb. 14, with the president temporarily paying DHS employees while most of the department lacks normal appropriations.
  • Details an agreement between Sen. John Thune and House Speaker Mike Johnson to fund most of DHS through regular appropriations while putting ICE and CBP funding into reconciliation.
  • Reports some House Republicans are balking at advancing broader DHS funding until the reconciliation bill is finished, slowing the overall deal.
  • Adds that Thune has been in "a number of conversations" with the Senate parliamentarian and acknowledges reconciliation is not the "ideal way" to do this but blames Democrats for blocking bipartisan appropriations.