Saturday, March 28, 2026

House Republicans are ‘the only thing standing’ in the way of ending DHS shutdown, Hakeem Jeffries says – as it happened

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Closing summary

This brings our live coverage of the second Trump administration to a close. Thanks for reading, and here are some of the latest developments:

  • Donald Trump signed an executive order Friday instructing the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to immediately pay Transportation Security Administration agents as the partial shutdown drags on. Negotiations on Capitol Hill remain stalled after House Republicans rejected a Senate‑passed deal to fund key DHS subagencies, including the TSA. More here.

  • House Republicans have rejected legislation, passed by the Senate, that would finance most of DHS but withhold funds from Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and part of Customs and Border Protection (CBP). The move imperils efforts to end a 42‑day partial government shutdown that has seen thousands of DHS employees miss paychecks and furious travelers miss flights due to long airport security lines. More here.

  • House minority leader Hakeem Jeffries, joined by Democratic whip Katherine Clark and Democratic caucus chair Pete Aguilar, told reporters that he and his colleagues back the bill passed by the Senate to fund most of the department of homeland security, noting that House Republicans are “the only thing standing” in the way of ending the chaos at airports nationwide. “House Democrats are prepared to support the bill to end the Trump Republican shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security,” said Jeffries.

  • Iran-linked hackers have broken into the personal email inbox of Kash Patel, FBI’s director, publishing photographs of him and other documents on the internet, the hackers and the bureau said on Friday. More here.

  • Washington expects its operation against Iran to conclude in “weeks, not months”, the US secretary of state has said, despite continuing violence across the region and a threat from Israel to “escalate and expand” its attacks against the Islamic republic. “When we are done with them here in the next couple weeks, they will be weaker than they’ve been in recent history,” Marco Rubio told reporters on Friday after meeting G7 foreign ministers in France. More here.

Key events

David Smith

David Smith

The actor Jane Fonda joined journalists, musicians and writers outside Washington’s John F Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in urging US citizens to “break your silence” and “stand tall against authoritarianism”.

At a damp but defiant rally hosted by Fonda’s Committee for the First Amendment on Friday, around a hundred invited guests gathered to hear speakers and singers rail against book bans, political censorship and other threats to free speech under Donald Trump.

“Today, books are being banned, plaques and monuments depicting historical events this administration wants to forget are being removed,” Fonda said from a stage under a grey, rainy sky. “Museums, the National Endowment for the Arts, state arts councils, public broadcasting – they’re all being defunded.”

Jane Fonda speaks onstage at the Committee for the First Amendment on 27 March 2026 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images for Committee for the First Amendment)

The choice of the Kennedy Center as a backdrop was pointed: the US president has seized control of the national arts complex, targeted so-called “woke” programming, had his name added to its marble facade and announced that it will close for two years of renovations. Dozens of layoffs began this week.

Fonda observed: “This beloved citadel of the arts has become a symbol of what is happening. The centre has been effectively silenced after artists refused to bow to ideological demands and the racist erasure of history.

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