Thelikelihood of a partial government shutdown has increased, as Senate Democrats face pressure to blockDepartment of Homeland Security funding following the fatal shootings ofU.S. citizensAlex Pretti and Renee Goodbyfederal immigration officersinMinneapolis this month.Congress has until January 30 to pass a spending resolution, to avoid shutting downlarge portionsof the government.
On January 22, the House sent the$1.2 trillionappropriations package to the Senate, which includedroughly$10 billionfor ICE(full details are in thepreviousblog post).The DHS funding bill received a separate votein the House, narrowly passing by a vote of 220-207. Only seven Democrats voted in favor, aspublic pressure mounts torein in ICE following large-scale protests in Minnesota.
Thepackageseemed poised to passthe Senate with at least 60 votes,but following theshooting ofAlex Prettion January 24, Senate Democrats havevowedthey will not fund DHS without new guardrails.
Weather-relateddisruptionsfrom the winter storm have complicatedmatters;the Senate vote scheduled forJanuary 26has beenrescheduleduntil at leastJanuary 27.Senate Minority Leader ChuckSchumer hopes to separate the DHSbillfrom the rest of the measures, which have overwhelming bipartisan support. However, even if Senate Democrats can convinceRepublicans toseparateit, the legislation would need approval again in the House, which is on recess until February 2.Allthispoints towards alikely shutdownbeginning Friday.
Unlike the last government shutdown, many government operations would remain operational.Congress has already passed six out of the 12 full-year appropriations bills, which have been signed into law by President Trump.This includes funding for the Departments of Justice, Commerce, Agriculture, Interior, Veterans Affairs, and the Legislative Branch.
More details to come.