Airport security chaos with long TSA lines and political meeting between Trump and Senate Republicans on shutdown funding plan.
Airport security chaos with long TSA lines and political meeting between Trump and Senate Republicans on shutdown funding plan.
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Senate Republicans pitch plan to Trump to resolve TSA shutdown chaos

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Senate Republicans have proposed funding the Department of Homeland Security except for Immigration and Customs Enforcement, followed by a reconciliation bill to cover ICE and elements of the SAVE America Act. President Trump indicated openness to the idea on Tuesday. The partial shutdown, ongoing since mid-February, has caused long airport security lines and led Delta Airlines to suspend special services for members of Congress.

The Department of Homeland Security has been under a partial shutdown for nearly a month and a half since funding expired in mid-February, leaving Transportation Security Administration officers working without pay and causing widespread delays at airports nationwide. Travelers have faced hours-long lines, prompting airlines like Delta to pause specialty services such as airport escorts for members of Congress, treating lawmakers like other passengers based on SkyMiles status, as the airline stated to NPR due to resource constraints from the shutdown. Delta CEO Ed Bastian called the situation 'inexcusable,' noting TSA agents are being used as 'political chips.' Senate Majority Leader John Thune presented the funding plan to Trump over the weekend, which initially excluded ICE to quickly restore TSA operations. Trump rejected it at first, insisting on progress for the SAVE America Act, which requires photo ID and proof of citizenship for voting and lacks the 60 votes to pass normally. A group of GOP senators revised the proposal to include SAVE-like provisions in a later reconciliation bill, which bypasses the filibuster. Trump told reporters Tuesday afternoon, 'Well, I’m going to look at it... I want to support Republicans.' Democrats, led by Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, have pushed for ICE reforms amid concerns over enforcement, including after incidents involving immigration officers. Schumer said Saturday that talks on ICE are 'productive' but should not delay TSA funding: 'Let us end those long lines at the airport now.' Republicans need Democratic votes for the initial DHS funding bill, while skeptics like Sen. Mike Lee called passing SAVE via reconciliation 'essentially impossible.' ICE remains funded from prior legislation, and agents have been deployed to assist TSA checkpoints. Sen. John Cornyn's bill prohibiting preferential airport screening for Congress cleared the Senate last week.

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X discussions highlight partisan divide over Senate Republicans' proposal to fund DHS except ICE via reconciliation to resolve TSA shutdown; Democrats blame Trump for initial rejection amid airport chaos and Delta's service cuts for Congress, conservatives fault Democrats for blocking full DHS/SAVE Act funding, some express skepticism toward GOP compromise.

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Illustration of government shutdown impacts: long airport lines from unpaid TSA workers, Congress divided on DHS bill, Trump signing pay order.
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House Republicans oppose Senate DHS funding bill amid shutdown

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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.

A partial government shutdown affecting the Department of Homeland Security has stretched into its 40th day, causing severe staffing shortages at TSA checkpoints and long lines for travelers nationwide. Negotiations between Republicans and Democrats remain deadlocked over Immigration and Customs Enforcement reforms and a separate elections bill demanded by President Trump. Bipartisan lawmakers proposed funding most DHS agencies except ICE, conditioning its support on operational changes.

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A government shutdown affecting the Department of Homeland Security has led to hundreds of TSA workers quitting and longer airport lines, amid stalled negotiations in the Senate. Senator John Fetterman, the sole Democrat supporting current funding, criticized the impasse for punishing frontline workers without affecting immigration enforcement. A test vote to fund the department failed 51-46 on Thursday.

As the DHS partial shutdown drags on, Senator Mike Lee called on President Trump to use constitutional powers to force the Senate back from recess, following the House's passage of a continuing resolution and stalled talks on a prior Senate funding compromise. Airport disruptions continue despite Trump's executive order redirecting funds to TSA.

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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.

The U.S. House of Representatives approved a package of spending bills on Thursday to avert a partial government shutdown, though many Democrats opposed the funding for Immigration and Customs Enforcement amid concerns over its tactics. The measure now heads to the Senate for a vote ahead of a January 30 deadline. Objections stemmed from a recent fatal shooting by an ICE officer in Minneapolis and broader criticisms of the agency's enforcement practices.

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A limited shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security began early Saturday after Congress failed to extend DHS funding before a midnight deadline, a dispute driven by Democrats’ demands for new guardrails on federal immigration enforcement following two fatal shootings in Minneapolis. Most of the federal government remains funded through Sept. 30, but hundreds of thousands of DHS employees face delayed pay and disruptions to agencies such as TSA, FEMA and the Coast Guard.

 

 

 

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