Saturday, 04 Apr 2026

Shutdown averted for now, but Senate warns DHS fight could trigger another in days

Senate Republicans fear that the Trump-Schumer deal, which included a two-week extension to DHS funding, won't allow enough time to prevent the agency from shutting down in the coming days.


Shutdown averted for now, but Senate warns DHS fight could trigger another in days

As the House crushed Republican resistance to a Trump-backed funding package to end the latest partial government shutdown, lawmakers in the upper chamber weren't confident that Congress could avoid being in the same position in the coming weeks.

The House's passage of the package, which funds 11 out of 12 government agencies under Congress' purview, sets the stage for tense negotiations between the White House and Senate Democrats over reforms to DHS.

But several Senate Republicans are questioning whether two weeks, which had shrunk to just nine days as of Wednesday, would be enough time to avert another partial shutdown - this time only for DHS.

Scott was one of a handful of Republicans in the upper chamber that rejected the compromise plan and the underlying original package because of bloated spending on earmarks and concerns that Senate Democrats would effectively try to kneecap Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) operations across the country.

"We're going to be in a worse spot," Scott said. "I mean… all their earmarks got done, and then now they're going to want to, you know, they want to [get] busy de-fanging and defunding ICE."

Congressional Democrats wanted to relitigate the bipartisan DHS bill after the fatal shooting of Alex Pretti during an immigration enforcement operation in Minneapolis. The demand forced Trump to intervene and thrust the government into a partial shutdown on Friday.

Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., noted that once negotiations began, Congress had a "very short timeframe in which to do this, which I am against."

"But the Democrats insisted on, you know, a two-week window, which, again, I don't understand the rationale for that," Thune said. "Anybody who knows this place knows that's an impossibility."

Senate Appropriations Chair Susan Collins, R-Maine, struck a more positive tone. 

She told Fox News Digital that Congress would be in a much better position, considering that lawmakers will have passed 11 out of the 12 bills needed to fund the federal government. 

"We'll now start the negotiations on DHS, and I hope we'll be successful, but I don't see how you can compare where we are today," Collins said.

Thune believed that Noem's announcement that ICE agents in Minneapolis would begin wearing body-worn cameras could act as a sweetener for Democrats. There is already $20 million baked into the current bipartisan DHS funding bill for body cameras. 

Schumer rejected that olive branch from Noem, arguing that it didn't come nearly close enough to the portfolio of reforms Democrats wanted for the agency. And he reaffirmed that Senate Democrats wanted actual legislative action on DHS reforms, not an executive order. 

"We know how whimsical Donald Trump is," Schumer said. "He'll say one thing one day and retract it the next. Same with Secretary Noem."

"So, we don't trust some executive order, some pronouncement from some Cabinet secretary. We need it enshrined into law."

When asked if lawmakers would need to turn to another short-term funding patch, Schumer argued that "if Leader Thune negotiates in good faith, we can get it done. We expect to present to the Republicans a very serious, detailed proposal very shortly."

But Thune has said for several days that it would be the White House in the driver's seat, and ultimately it would be Trump who could broker a new deal. 

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