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Home»Politics»Senate Republicans Push Forward on Measure to Fund ICE Through 2029
Politics

Senate Republicans Push Forward on Measure to Fund ICE Through 2029

primereportsBy primereportsApril 22, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
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Senate Republicans Push Forward on Measure to Fund ICE Through 2029
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The Senate on Tuesday took its first step toward adopting a Republican budget blueprint that would clear the way for legislation to provide an additional $70 billion for immigration enforcement through the end of President Trump’s second term.

The plan, written by Senator Lindsey Graham, Republican of South Carolina, is a crucial piece of the G.O.P.’s strategy for ending the shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security, which has lasted more than nine weeks. It advanced to the floor on Tuesday on a party-line vote, clearing the way for the G.O.P. to push it through the Senate in a matter of days.

The measure would pave the way for passage of a separate, filibuster-proof bill that would allow Republicans to steer around Democratic opposition and provide money for Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the Border Patrol. Democrats have refused to fund those agencies through a regular spending bill without new limits on Mr. Trump’s immigration crackdown.

After a weekslong spending impasse with Democrats, Republican leaders agreed weeks ago on a two-track strategy to quickly reopen the Department of Homeland Security.

They would first pass a spending bill to cover everything but ICE and Border Patrol, allowing the department to resume operations. Then, they would write a separate piece of legislation to fund those agencies for the rest of Mr. Trump’s term, using a complex process known as reconciliation that shields budget-related bills from a filibuster, thus depriving Democrats of any chance to stop it.

But while Speaker Mike Johnson endorsed the two-track strategy, House Republicans balked. They have refused to take the first step to reopen the department until Congress makes meaningful progress toward the second step to guarantee a funding stream for immigration enforcement for years to come.

Mr. Graham’s budget resolution lays the groundwork for establishing that funding stream. It would allow the two Senate committees that oversee both agencies to write legislation that increases government spending by up to $70 billion each. A spokesman for Senator John Thune, Republican of South Dakota and the majority leader, said Republicans expect the total spending amount to be closer to $70 billion total.

Notably, the Senate’s budget resolution does not include spending cuts to offset the billions of dollars in new spending. Senate Republicans have said that such compensating cuts are unnecessary because their legislation is a last-ditch effort to fund agencies that would otherwise receive money through an annual appropriations bill, which is typically not paid for.

“We have been forced by the Democrats to use the reconciliation process to ensure that these two important agencies are funded,” Mr. Thune said.

Hard-line conservative Republicans worried about the federal deficit have typically demanded that lawmakers offset any new spending passed through reconciliation, and it is unclear whether they will support a budget measure without such cuts.

Other House Republicans have demanded that their party fund the entire Homeland Security Department through the reconciliation process. Some rank-and-file lawmakers have suggested they would like to see funding for defense and other G.O.P. priorities attached to this bill, but Mr. Johnson said on Tuesday that he wanted to keep it “targeted and narrow.”

Democrats criticized Republicans for using the reconciliation process to avoid imposing new guardrails on federal immigration agents, and they noted that both ICE and Border Patrol already received a large slush fund from Republicans last year as part of their major tax cut and domestic policy package.

“Republicans rejected the most basic accountability measures, and now they’re rushing to give ICE billions of dollars more.” Senator Patty Murray of Washington, the top Democrat on the Appropriations Committee, said in a statement.

Before a final vote on the measure, the Senate is expected to engage in a so-called vote-a-rama, a marathon of rapid-fire votes on a series of nonbinding amendments, often crafted to place lawmakers in politically tricky positions.

Democrats signaled that they would use the process to force votes on amendments related to the cost of living, an issue they have placed at the forefront of their attacks against Republicans as they push to take control of Congress.

Megan Mineiro contributed reporting.

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