Trump signs DHS funding bill, ending record shutdown

Biometric Facial Recognition Houston International

Summary

Trump signed a bipartisan bill funding most of Homeland Security, ending the agency’s longest shutdown while leaving immigration funding unresolved.

Why this matters

The bill restores funding for most Homeland Security operations and employee pay after weeks of disruption. It also leaves a separate fight ahead over immigration enforcement funding, a central issue in Trump’s agenda.

President Donald Trump on Thursday signed bipartisan legislation to fund much of the Department of Homeland Security, ending the agency’s longest shutdown after the House gave final approval.

The House passed it by voice vote earlier Thursday, after the Senate approved it a month ago.

The Department of Homeland Security had been without routine funding since Feb. 14, causing disruptions for workers. Many immigration enforcement operations continued with separate funding, but the White House said money Trump had used through executive action to pay Transportation Security Administration workers and other personnel would soon run out.

The department has about 260,000 employees, including staff at the Transportation Security Administration, Coast Guard, and Federal Emergency Management Agency. More than 1,000 TSA officers have quit since the shutdown began, according to Airlines for America, the U.S. airline trade group.

The funding dispute followed the fatal shootings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti, both U.S. citizens, by federal agents during protests over immigration actions in Minneapolis. Democrats refused to fund U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the Border Patrol without changes to those operations. Republicans opposed funding the rest of the department without money for those agencies.

To break the impasse, Republican leaders moved to pursue immigration enforcement funding separately through the budget reconciliation process. The House and Senate approved a budget resolution that would allow lawmakers to draft a bill providing $70 billion for immigration and deportation operations through the rest of Trump’s term, which ends in 2029. Votes on that legislation are expected in May.

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