Friday, March 27, 2026

House considers whether to approve Senate’s deal to fund TSA and most of DHS – live

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Bipartisan support in House is crucial for Senate’s DHS funding proposal

The Associated Press has some more details on the backdrop to the DHS funding deal:

Senators worked through the night on the deal that would fund much of the rest of the department, including the Federal Emergency Management Agency, the Coast Guard and TSA, but without funding for Immigration and Customs Enforcement as well as the Border Patrol.

The result was that the Democrats failed to win new limits on immigration enforcement, which has been all but unaffected by the department’s partial shutdown. That was because last year’s “big beautiful bill” that Donald Trump signed into law shoveled billions of dollars of extra funds to the DHS, including $75bn for ICE operations. As a result, immigration officers have been paid while staff at other subsidiary agencies like the TSA and Fema have not.

Bipartisan support is thought to be essential if the bill is to advance in the House, where conservative Republicans have criticized their own party’s proposals and are demanding full funding for ICE functions.

“We will fully fund ICE. That is what this fight is about,” said Eric Schmitt, a Republican senator for Missouri. “The border is closing. The next task is deportation.”

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Key events

The Department of Homeland Security has said that members of the TSA’s National Deployment Force and security officers from other Texas airports are being sent to Houston, where about 40% of scheduled TSA officers haven’t come to work this week.

DHS spokesperson Lauren Bis told the Associated Press in a statement late on Thursday that Houston travelers have been “experiencing some of the worst wait times in TSA history”.

The staffing shortage has hit especially hard at Houston’s George Bush intercontinental airport, where officials warned that waits in security lines could again top four hours on Friday.

An update on the airport’s website said 32 security officers from the National Deployment Force, which sends reinforcement to understaffed US airports, were already helping open additional security lanes at George Bush International.

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