Illustration of congressional Republicans leaving Washington without passing ICE funding bill.
Illustration of congressional Republicans leaving Washington without passing ICE funding bill.
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Republicans leave washington without ice funding vote

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Congressional Republicans are departing Washington for a weeklong recess without passing a bill to fund immigration enforcement for three years. The plan stalled over disagreements with President Trump regarding a nearly $2 billion Anti-Weaponization Fund and other demands. Lawmakers will not return until after the June 1 deadline.

Republicans had aimed to approve $72 billion for Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Border Patrol through the end of Trump's term using budget reconciliation. The measure was intended to remove the agencies from political battles following an earlier shutdown. However, internal party divisions prevented a vote before the recess.

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X users discussed the stalled ICE funding vote due to Republican disagreements with Trump over the $1.8B anti-weaponization fund and related spending, noting the missed June 1 deadline and recess; reactions included criticism of the fund as a 'slush fund', skepticism about its purpose, and observations of GOP internal tensions.

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Illustration of Senate Republicans delaying immigration funding amid opposition to a compensation fund
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Senate delays immigration-enforcement funding as GOP balks at Trump administration’s $1.8 billion compensation fund

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Senate Republicans left Washington without final action on a package aimed at boosting funding for U.S. immigration enforcement agencies ahead of a June 1 target date tied to President Donald Trump’s request. The delay comes amid internal GOP resistance and Democratic criticism of a new roughly $1.776 billion “Anti-Weaponization Fund” announced by the Justice Department as part of a settlement involving Trump’s lawsuit over leaked tax information.

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.

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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.

U.S. Congress members returned to Washington this week after a two-week recess, facing a packed agenda including a high-profile Democrat's scandal, an ongoing war with Iran, expiring spy powers, and a prolonged Department of Homeland Security shutdown. Lawmakers must address calls to expel Representative Eric Swalwell, conduct show votes on the Iran conflict, renew FISA Section 702 authority, and resolve funding for the shuttered agency. These issues highlight tensions between parties and constitutional questions over executive actions.

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