Reconciliation Law’s $75 Billion Windfall Shields ICE From Shutdown Pressure
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NPR reports that President Trump’s 2025 "One Big Beautiful Bill Act" quietly handed Immigration and Customs Enforcement about $75 billion in extra funding — roughly seven times its usual annual budget — with few strings attached, making ICE the highest‑funded federal law‑enforcement agency and insulating it from today’s record‑long DHS shutdown. Passed via party‑line budget reconciliation and packaged with tax cuts, Medicaid reductions and clean‑energy rollback, the law created a vast reserve that has allowed most ICE and Border Patrol operations to continue largely unaffected even as Democrats try to tie new funding to reforms such as warrant requirements for home raids and bans on masked officers after ICE shootings of U.S. citizens in Minneapolis. Former Biden OMB general counsel Sam Bagenstos calls the appropriation "a massive shoveling of cash" and effectively a blank check that undercuts Congress’s constitutional power of the purse, since ICE can now tell lawmakers it doesn’t need their annual appropriations to keep running. The shutdown contrast — unpaid TSA workers and stalled DHS programs on one side, a well‑funded enforcement arm on the other — is fueling criticism from civil‑rights advocates and budget watchdogs online that Republicans used reconciliation to lock in an aggressive enforcement apparatus while stripping Congress of meaningful leverage to demand oversight or policy changes. The article also notes that top Republicans are already planning to again sidestep Democrats to guarantee ICE and CBP funding through the end of Trump’s term, extending this insulated posture well beyond the current budget fight.