Senate adopts $70 billion budget blueprint for ICE funding

The US Senate has approved a Republican budget resolution to fund immigration enforcement agencies with about $70 billion through President Trump's term, using the reconciliation process to bypass Democratic support. The measure passed 50-48 after an overnight vote-a-rama, with two GOP senators joining Democrats in opposition. It now moves to the House of Representatives.

Senate Republicans advanced their plan late Wednesday into early Thursday, adopting the blueprint in a 50-48 vote. Senators Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Rand Paul of Kentucky sided with Democrats against it, while two senators were absent for personal reasons. A spokesperson for Senate Majority Leader John Thune of South Dakota confirmed the expected total cost at $70 billion, covering 3.5 years for agencies like ICE under the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). The resolution directs the Judiciary and Homeland Security committees to draft legislation that could increase the deficit by up to $70 billion combined. This action follows a record partial shutdown of DHS, which Democrats linked to demands for immigration policy changes after two US citizens died at the hands of federal agents earlier this year. Reconciliation allows passage with a simple majority, avoiding the 60-vote filibuster threshold that Republicans, holding 53 seats, cannot meet without bipartisan help. The budget measure heads to the House, where some Republicans want to broaden its scope, potentially requiring further Senate negotiations and another vote-a-rama. President Trump set a June 1 deadline for the bill's passage. The process, rooted in the 1974 Congressional Budget Act, has been used for major partisan priorities, such as tax cuts in 2017 and Biden's Inflation Reduction Act.

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Republican senators debating a $72 billion border enforcement funding bill in the Senate chamber.
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Senate Republicans start debate on $72 billion ICE and border-enforcement funding package

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The Senate voted to proceed with a Republican reconciliation bill that would provide about $72 billion for immigration enforcement agencies through fiscal year 2029, after a mid-May delay tied to controversy over a proposed Justice Department “anti-weaponization” fund.

The Senate approved a 70 billion dollar bill early Friday morning to fund immigration enforcement agencies for the next three years. The measure passed after an 18-hour overnight session by a 52-47 vote.

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The House on Tuesday approved a Republican-backed reconciliation bill directing roughly $70 billion to immigration enforcement, providing multi-year funding for Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the Border Patrol through the end of fiscal year 2029.

Rep. Bennie Thompson of Mississippi, the top Democrat on the House Homeland Security Committee, said Democrats could be “absolutely” willing to risk another Department of Homeland Security funding lapse at the end of September if Republicans do not accept changes to immigration enforcement, including limits on mask-wearing and a judicial-warrant requirement for certain arrests.

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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.

As the partial Department of Homeland Security shutdown—now in its second month since starting February 14—affects unpaid TSA workers and causes airport chaos, President Trump threatens to deploy ICE agents unless Democrats fund the agency. Elon Musk offers to cover TSA salaries amid the impasse.

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