Democrats aren’t budging on DHS demands amid shutdown


Summary

DHS shutdown

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is shut down and with Congress in recess until next Monday, it's likely to be at least a week until lawmakers pass a bill to fund the agency.

Democrats not budging

Democrats remain staunch on their demand for sweeping reforms within ICE and CBP in the wake of the deadly immigration officer-involved shootings of two American citizens in Minneapolis before they sign off on funding for DHS.

Impacts of the shutdown

The DHS' independent watchdog is warning that the funding lapse could impact ongoing investigations. However, experts say it'll likely still take a couple weeks before American citizens start feeling the impacts, like air travel delays.


Full story

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is shut down, and with Congress in recess until next Monday, it’s likely to be at least a week until lawmakers pass a bill to fund the agency.

While the Trump administration’s controversial immigration enforcement efforts will continue because Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has its own separate funding under this past summer’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act, the DHS’s independent watchdog warns that the funding lapse could affect ongoing investigations.

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The One Big Beautiful Bill Act gives ICE $75 billion in supplemental funding over four years.

The inspector general said the department is currently conducting eight investigations. They include reviews of the use of facial recognition and allegations of ICE agents using excessive force, according to Politico.

Experts said it’ll likely take a couple of weeks before American citizens begin to feel the effects of the DHS shutdown, such as air travel delays.

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Democrats refuse to budge

Meanwhile, congressional Democrats remain staunch on their demand for sweeping reforms within ICE and Customs and Border Protection (CBP) in the wake of the deadly immigration officer-involved shootings of two American citizens in Minneapolis before they sign off on funding for DHS.

One of the key sticking points is agents’ ability to mask their identities when conducting operations, a sticking point Border Czar Tom Homan says he doesn’t fully agree with either.

“Look, you know, I don’t like the masks either, but because threats against ICE officers, you know, are up over 1,500%, actual assaults, and threats are up over 8,000%, these men and women have to protect themselves,” Homan said in an interview Sunday. “As far as identifying themselves, they all have placards identifying themselves as ICE, ERO, HSI, DEA, FBI. So, they all have placards on them. So, I will let the white house and members of congress, you know, fight that out.”

Other demands include wearing body cameras, waiting for judicial warrants before entering private property and stopping racial profiling, which Homan asserts is already not happening.

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries said in an interview on the same program that Democrats are not budging on their demands.

“We’re willing to have a good faith conversation about everything, but, fundamentally, we need change that is dramatic, that is bold, that is meaningful and that is transformational,” Jeffries said. “And these are commonsense things.”

Crackdown in Minnesota ends

Homan also said more than a thousand immigration agents have left Minnesota since he announced the end of Operation Metro Surge in Minneapolis last week. More are expected to follow this week.

Homan said there will still be a “small force” that will remain “for a short period of time” to “respond to when our agents are out and they get surrounded by agitators and things got out of control.”

The White House said the operation has led to the arrests of 4,000 “criminal illegal aliens” since it began in December.

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Why this story matters

The Department of Homeland Security shutdown halts oversight investigations and will soon cause air travel delays, while congressional gridlock over immigration enforcement rules prevents funding from resuming.

Air travel disruptions expected within weeks

Experts say travelers will experience delays at airports as the DHS shutdown continues for at least another week with Congress in recess.

Oversight of immigration enforcement paused

Eight active investigations, including reviews of facial recognition use and excessive force allegations against ICE agents, are affected by the funding lapse.

Congressional standoff blocks agency funding

Democrats require reforms to ICE and CBP, including body cameras, judicial warrants for property searches and identity disclosure, before approving DHS funding.

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Don’t just take our word for it.


Certified balanced reporting

According to media bias experts at AllSides

AllSides Certified Balanced May 2025

Transparent and credible

Awarded a perfect reliability rating from NewsGuard

100/100

Welcome back to trustworthy journalism.

Find out more

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