U.S. Capitol during partial government shutdown, with barricades, debating lawmakers, and news crews amid funding dispute.
U.S. Capitol during partial government shutdown, with barricades, debating lawmakers, and news crews amid funding dispute.
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Partial government shutdown begins despite Senate funding deal

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The U.S. Senate approved a spending package on Friday to fund most federal agencies through September, but the House's recess delayed approval, triggering a partial government shutdown. The measure isolates Department of Homeland Security funding for two weeks amid demands for immigration enforcement reforms following deadly shootings in Minneapolis. Lawmakers expect the brief lapse to have minimal impact if the House acts swiftly on Monday.

A partial government shutdown took effect at midnight on Friday after the Senate passed a funding deal, but the House, on recess until Monday, has yet to approve it. The legislation covers five key areas—defense, labor-health-education, transportation-housing, state, and financial services—extending their funding through the fiscal year ending in September. However, funding for the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), which includes Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), is limited to a two-week stopgap to allow negotiations on reforms.

The impasse stems from two fatal shootings of U.S. citizens by federal immigration officers in Minneapolis this month, including Alex Pretti last week. Democrats, emboldened by public outrage, refused to support the broader DHS funding without changes to curb aggressive tactics. Their demands include requiring judicial warrants for raids, mandating body cameras and unmasked agents, establishing use-of-force rules and a code of conduct, ending "roving patrols," clearer identification, easier legal action against officers, and independent investigations.

"I think people want us to fight. People want us to act in an urgent way," said Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., arguing the party aligns with public sentiment. Republicans show mixed reactions: Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., criticized ICE leadership as "amateurs" undermining the president's immigration message, while others like Sen. Markwayne Mullin, R-Okla., defended the agency. "We're not going to keep ICE from doing their job," Mullin said. Some Republicans support hearings and probes, and the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division is investigating Pretti's death.

President Trump has endorsed the package, but House passage is uncertain with Speaker Mike Johnson's slim majority and opposition from the Freedom Caucus. New ICE acting director Tom Homan promised "safer, more efficient" operations "by the book," though the White House's push for mass deportations, led by Stephen Miller, suggests limited shifts. Unlike the prolonged shutdown last fall, this one may last days, sparing most paychecks but furloughing some workers like TSA agents. Food assistance remains funded through September.

Hvad folk siger

X discussions reflect partisan divides on the partial U.S. government shutdown: conservatives criticize Democrats for delaying DHS funding to obstruct immigration enforcement amid backlash from Minneapolis shootings, portraying it as political leverage against Trump policies; journalists and neutral users note the shutdown's brevity until House vote on Monday and highlight Democratic demands for ICE reforms like body cameras and use-of-force standards; skeptics view it as typical Washington drama with more cliffs ahead.

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Dramatic illustration of U.S. Congress deadlock on DHS funding amid immigration reform disputes, depicting partial shutdown impacts on TSA and FEMA.
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DHS funding expires amid stalled immigration reform talks

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The Department of Homeland Security faces a partial shutdown starting Friday night as Congress failed to extend its funding amid disputes over immigration enforcement reforms. Democrats are demanding changes following recent incidents involving ICE and CBP agents, while Republicans criticize the proposals as excessive. Agencies like TSA and FEMA will be affected, though ICE remains funded separately.

A dispute in Congress over Department of Homeland Security funding, intensified by two fatal shootings by federal immigration agents in Minneapolis, has raised the likelihood of a partial government shutdown by the end of the week. Senate Democrats are refusing to support the funding without reforms to Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Customs and Border Protection. Republicans accuse Democrats of attempting to defund ICE amid ongoing protests in the city.

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The US House of Representatives voted 217-214 on February 3 to approve a spending package that ends a partial government shutdown, with President Donald Trump signing it into law shortly after. The legislation funds most federal departments through September but provides only a short-term extension for the Department of Homeland Security amid debates over immigration enforcement reforms. The shutdown, triggered by disputes following deadly shootings by federal agents in Minneapolis, lasted about four days.

The Senate passed a bipartisan bill early Friday to fund most Department of Homeland Security operations except ICE and Border Patrol, but House Republicans signaled they will reject it. President Donald Trump signed an executive order the same day to pay TSA agents affected by the ongoing partial shutdown. The move came as airport security lines lengthened due to unpaid workers calling out or quitting.

Rapporteret af AI Faktatjekket

A partial shutdown at the Department of Homeland Security that began on February 14 has pushed some workers, including many Transportation Security Administration screeners, toward missed or partial pay as the White House and Senate Democrats remain deadlocked over proposed limits on federal immigration-enforcement tactics.

Senator Bernie Sanders was seen boarding a first-class flight from Reagan National Airport on Friday afternoon, shortly after the Senate passed a partial Department of Homeland Security funding bill that the House later rejected. President Donald Trump criticized the Senate measure, calling it inappropriate, as the partial shutdown extended into its record-breaking phase. The Senate has adjourned for a two-week recess with no plans to reconvene before April 13.

Rapporteret af AI Faktatjekket

President Donald Trump is pressing House lawmakers to approve a Senate-amended spending package without changes to end a partial federal government shutdown that began early Saturday. The debate has also drawn in GOP demands tied to the SAVE Act, which would require documentary proof of U.S. citizenship to register to vote—an idea Democrats say would block any final deal.

 

 

 

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