House passes temporary funding bill to end Homeland Security shutdown

Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport, in Baltimore, Md., Friday. Despite the U.S. House rejecting a deal to fund the Department of Homeland Security, the department ordered payments to be made to 50,000 airport workers.

Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport, in Baltimore, Md., Friday. Despite the U.S. House rejecting a deal to fund the Department of Homeland Security, the department ordered payments to be made to 50,000 airport workers. (Daniel Heuer, Reuters)


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KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • The House of Representatives on Friday night passed a temporary funding bill for Homeland Security until May 22.
  • Democrats in the Senate are expected to oppose the bill, risking a longer shutdown.
  • Airport security officers continue to face unpaid work, causing chaos and long lines nationwide.

WASHINGTON — ​The House of ‌Representatives late ⁠on ​Friday ⁠passed ‌legislation ‌providing funding ⁠for the ⁠Department of Homeland Security through ‌May ​22.

It faces probable defeat in the Senate, ​however, ‌where ‌Democrats are ⁠expected to oppose ‌it.

This is a breaking news update. The prior story follows below.


WASHINGTON — Republican leaders in the U.S. House of Representatives on Friday rejected a bipartisan Senate compromise to end a six-week partial government shutdown, raising the prospect that ​travelers may continue to see long security lines at U.S. airports through the busy spring break season.

Instead, the House will vote on a temporary measure to extend funding for the Department of Homeland Security at current levels for two months, Republican Speaker Mike Johnson said, a move that is likely to prolong the ‌impasse.

Democrats in the Senate oppose a status quo extension without meaningful limits on President Donald Trump's aggressive approach to immigration enforcement, the dispute that prompted the shutdown. The Senate adjourned for a two-week recess after passing its bill ⁠in the early morning hours on Friday.

Johnson called the Senate bill a "gambit" and a "joke" ​and sought to blame Democrats for the impact on air travel. Earlier, Senate Democratic ⁠Leader Chuck Schumer said Johnson's 60-day extension was "dead on arrival" in the Senate.

"We've been clear from day one: Democrats will fund critical homeland security functions — but we will not give ‌a blank check to Trump's lawless and deadly ‌immigration militia without reforms," Schumer said in a statement.

The Senate measure would restore funding for most of the Department of Homeland Security, including airport ⁠security screeners, disaster-response workers and members of the Coast Guard, who have worked without pay since mid-February.

But ⁠the Senate solution does not address the underlying impasse over immigration. The bill lacked funding for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) or the Border Patrol, the two agencies responsible for immigration enforcement. It also omitted Democratic demands for new limits on immigration agents' tactics, such as barring agents from wearing masks and requiring body cameras.

In response, the department said on Friday it was taking emergency action to pay ​50,000 airport security officers who have gone unpaid since mid-February, after work absences brought chaos and long security lines of four hours or more at airports across the country, the worst in the agency's nearly ‌25-year history.

Airline officials told Reuters that absences and lines could worsen ​this weekend if there were no concrete details on how TSA officers would be paid. It is unclear how long the funding will last or whether Trump would tap funding for the Department of Homeland Security approved last year as part of a massive tax and spending bill.

Airports around the country on Friday were reporting very long lines, including in New York, Atlanta and New Orleans. Baltimore recommended travelers arrive at least three hours ahead of time, as ‌lines went out the door onto the sidewalk.

Democrats block DHS funds after citizens killed

Democrats, the minority party in both houses ​of the U.S. Congress, used what little leverage they have to block DHS funding after federal agents shot and killed two citizens in Minneapolis. Democratic lawmakers want to impose restraints on Trump's immigration-enforcement push that has resulted in more than half a million deportations and created chaos in some cities.

The partial government shutdown did not affect that activity, as both ICE and Customs and Border Patrol are able to draw on separate funding from the sweeping tax and spending bill Republicans passed last year.

Republicans are expected to try to secure new funding on their own through a cumbersome procedure that would allow them to bypass Democratic opposition, though it is unclear whether the party can maintain enough unity in an election year to do so.

Locked out of power in Washington, Democrats have forced two government shutdowns in the past six ​months. Neither delivered the results they sought, as they failed to secure expiring health subsidies last November and came out of the latest standoff without a deal on immigration enforcement.

Still, Trump's administration has backed off, at least ‌for now, from ‌the confrontational and at times violent ⁠tactics that sparked mass protests in Minneapolis, Chicago and other cities.

Trump fired Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem this month. Her successor, former Republican Sen. Markwayne Mullin, has signaled support for some Democratic proposals, such as limiting the ability of agents to forcibly enter homes without a judicial warrant.

Other Democratic proposals are likely dead in the water. Trump's border czar, Tom Homan, said their call for agents to operate without masks was a "nonstarter."

"It's not about reforming," Homan said at the Conservative Political Action Conference in Texas. "It's about crippling ICE. It's about taking away their ‌authorities."

Republican Sen. Susan Collins of Maine said Democrats ​had damaged Congress' annual funding process, weakened national security, and set a precedent that they may come ‌to regret.

"Democrats remained intransigent and unreasonable with their ⁠list of demands," she said in a ​statement.

Contributing: David Shepardson

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The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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