Senate Republicans are advancing a plan to reopen most of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) during the ongoing government shutdown by funding all components except ICE’s immigration enforcement, aiming to gain support from President Trump and Senate Democrats. The proposal includes passing election-related provisions from the SAVE America Act through a separate budget reconciliation bill, though experts doubt these measures will meet strict budgetary rules, raising questions about the plan’s political feasibility. While Democrats remain cautiously open but demand ICE restrictions, bipartisan negotiations continue amid optimism from some Senate leaders to end the shutdown and restore DHS operations.
Posts tagged as “Senate Appropriations Committee”
The U.S. Senate has failed for the fifth time to pass legislation funding the Department of Homeland Security, prolonging a shutdown that has severely disrupted airport security due to TSA staffing shortages. The deadlock stems from Democrats demanding immigration enforcement reforms before reopening the department, while Republicans and the White House have proposed measures that Democrats find insufficient. Despite ongoing bipartisan talks and a planned procedural vote to fund TSA separately, no resolution appears imminent as both sides remain entrenched in their positions.
The conflict between the United States, Israel, and Iran has led to significant military casualties, economic costs exceeding $11.3 billion in the first six days, and disruptions to global oil trade through the Strait of Hormuz. Democratic Senator John Fetterman supports the U.S.-Israel military campaign, citing Iran’s limited ability to inflict damage and emphasizing the threat posed by Iran’s nuclear ambitions despite intelligence reports indicating no active nuclear weapon development. Meanwhile, the war’s human toll includes thousands of deaths across the involved nations, and President Trump has expressed uncertainty about the conflict’s duration as the U.S. seeks additional funding to sustain military operations.
Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., appeared confused during a vote on a defense appropriations bill Thursday, prompting a fellow Democratic senator to step in. Feinstein, 90, had been away from Washington, D.C., for shingles and complications from shingles earlier this year, and the bill was passed by the Senate Appropriations Committee on Thursday. It provides $823 billion in funding for the Department of Defense and other national security programs, and will now move to the full Senate for consideration.



