TSA workers anxious over missed pay amid DHS shutdown and stalled immigration talks.
TSA workers anxious over missed pay amid DHS shutdown and stalled immigration talks.
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DHS shutdown leaves TSA workers facing missed or partial pay as immigration-policy talks stall

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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.

The Department of Homeland Security has been operating under a funding lapse since February 14, 2026, after DHS funding was peeled away from a broader spending measure amid rising tensions over a federal immigration-enforcement incident in Minneapolis. The lapse has left large parts of the department functioning under shutdown rules, with many employees still reporting to work.

On the Senate floor Thursday, Senate Majority Whip John Barrasso (R-Wyo.) blamed Democrats for the impasse, saying they had presented “a laundry list of demands” tied to any agreement to restore DHS funding. Barrasso said “260,000” people were “working without pay,” argued that Democrats had “shut down” DHS by withholding support for funding, and said Republicans had offered “fair terms for a deal.”

A White House official, speaking on background Friday, said negotiations were continuing and that counteroffers had recently been exchanged. The official said the White House had made “another serious counteroffer” on Thursday and urged Democrats to act to end the shutdown, warning that longer delays could harm services such as disaster relief.

Democrats have sought changes to how federal immigration authorities operate, including limits on agents wearing masks and requirements tied to warrants, as conditions for supporting DHS funding. House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) said earlier this month that “ICE needs to be reined in,” while Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) criticized DHS’s decision to pause parts of the Global Entry program during the shutdown, calling it a “bullying tactic” and arguing the administration was “choosing to inflict pain on the public” rather than accept reforms.

The shutdown has also affected other DHS components, including the U.S. Coast Guard and the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said Thursday that “significant portions” of FEMA staff had been placed on administrative leave. In a post on X, Noem said the prolonged lapse would leave the country less prepared for security threats surrounding the 2026 FIFA World Cup and America 250, the planned commemoration of the nation’s 250th anniversary.

At airports, most TSA screeners are classified as essential personnel and must continue working during a shutdown, even if pay is delayed. The Associated Press has reported that TSA workers were working without pay as the DHS-only shutdown began, raising concerns that prolonged disruptions could lead to increased absenteeism and longer security lines.

While the funding fight centers on DHS appropriations, some immigration functions are supported by other funding streams. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act—signed into law on July 4, 2025 as Public Law 119-21—included major new border-enforcement and immigration-related funding, and DHS and outside reporting have described immigration agencies as less reliant than other DHS components on annual appropriations alone.

Mitä ihmiset sanovat

Discussions on X predominantly criticize Democrats for causing the partial DHS shutdown over stalled immigration enforcement reforms, highlighting unpaid TSA screeners risking airport delays while ICE remains funded; some users defend reforms to limit ICE tactics and note public support.

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Long lines of frustrated passengers at a TSA checkpoint amid DHS shutdown staffing shortages.
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DHS shutdown triggers airport delays amid stalled funding talks

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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.

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.

Raportoinut AI

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.

The Transportation Security Administration announced that its PreCheck program will continue operating despite an initial announcement suspending it amid a partial U.S. government shutdown. The shutdown, which began on February 14, 2026, stems from disputes over Department of Homeland Security funding and immigration policies. While Global Entry's status remains unclear, the decision aims to manage staffing constraints without fully halting expedited services.

Raportoinut AI

President Donald Trump announced on Thursday that he will sign an executive order directing the Department of Homeland Security to pay Transportation Security Administration agents despite an ongoing partial government shutdown. He accused Democrats of prioritizing immigrants over Americans and holding the country hostage. Negotiations over DHS funding remain stalled, with both parties rejecting each other's proposals.

The U.S. Senate postponed a vote on a bipartisan funding agreement Thursday night following objections from Sen. Lindsey Graham, potentially leading to a partial government shutdown at midnight Friday. The deal, endorsed by President Trump, would fund most government operations until September while extending Department of Homeland Security funding for two weeks to negotiate immigration enforcement reforms. Graham opposed separating DHS funding and the repeal of a provision allowing senators to sue over phone record access.

Raportoinut AI

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.

 

 

 

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