Trump threatens ICE at airports as DHS shutdown drags into second month

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.

The partial DHS shutdown, which began February 14, 2026, over congressional disputes tying funding to immigration reforms, has now stretched into its second month as of March 21. This is the third such lapse in 15 months, following a prior 43-day shutdown.

Approximately 50,000 essential TSA officers continue working without pay, leading to staffing shortages, over 300 resignations (per CBS News), and surging security lines: 120 minutes in Houston, 70 in Atlanta, 46 at New York's LaGuardia (CNN data). Footage shows massive backups and temporary checkpoint closures at hubs like Philadelphia and Houston.

TSA workers face dire circumstances, including evictions, missed medical payments, sleeping in cars, gig work, food banks, and plasma donations (DHS/union reports). Airports have launched food drives and pantries in Atlanta, Seattle-Tacoma, and Dallas-Fort Worth. Officers risk discipline for not reporting.

From Palm Beach, Florida, President Trump posted on Truth Social: "If the Democrats do not allow for Just and Proper Security at our Airports... ICE will do the job far better than ever done before!" He threatened Monday deployment for arrests, targeting those from Somalia and blaming Rep. Ilhan Omar.

Billionaire Elon Musk posted on X: "I would like to offer to pay the salaries of TSA personnel during this funding impasse." The White House has not commented, amid legal questions on private federal payments.

Republicans seek straightforward DHS funding (including TSA), while Democrats demand immigration enforcement changes. ICE and CBP remain operational via separate funding.

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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.

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 House of Representatives on April 30 passed a measure funding most Department of Homeland Security operations, ending a 76-day agency shutdown—the longest in U.S. history—that began in mid-February. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Customs and Border Protection (CBP) remain unfunded amid ongoing partisan fights over immigration reforms.

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.

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