
Senate Republicans unveil $72 billion budget package to fund ICE, CBP
Republicans are forging ahead with legislation to fund Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Customs and U.S. Border Patrol along party lines.
The two Senate committees tasked with constructing a filibuster-proof budget reconciliation bill both unveiled the text of their proposals late Monday night. Taken together, the bills allocate a grand total of $72 billion for federal immigration enforcement operations over the next three years.
Senate Judiciary Chairman Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, said the advance funding will โhelp provide certainty for federal law enforcementโ and prevent the country from being โdragged backwards by Democratsโ radical, anti-law enforcement agenda.โ
The package includes over $38 billion for ICE and roughly $26 billion for CBP, of which $3.5 is for investment in border security improvements, located in the Senate Homeland Security and Government Affairs Committeeโs portion.
Republicans also ensured that the Department of Homeland Security as a whole โ which houses ICE and CBP โ would receive an extra $5 billion, while the Department of Justice would receive $1.5 billion and the Secret Service $1 billion.
The $1 billion for Secret Service is allocated within the Senate Judiciary Committeeโs portion of the package and is meant to fund โsecurity adjustments and upgradesโ to the East Wing Modernization Project, which the Trump administration is replacing with a ballroom.
The committee added a limitation in the bill, however, specifying that โ[n]one of the funds made availableโฆ may be used for non-security elementsโ of the project, referring to the construction of the ballroom itself.
Republicans have argued that the recent shooting at the White House Correspondentsโ Dinner, which took place in the banquet hall of the Washington, D.C. Hilton, proves the security need for a White House venue.
Trump initially pitched the ballroom project as being privately financed through donations and not tax dollars.
Committee markups of the bills are expected in May, followed by floor debate before final votes. President Donald Trump wants the budget reconciliation package on his desk by June 1.
Using the budget reconciliation process to provide annual appropriations for government agencies is unprecedented. But congressional Republicans felt it their only option after Senate Democrats blockaded immigration enforcement funding, causing a 76-day shutdown of DHS.
House Appropriations Committee Chairman Tom Cole, R-Okla., said the use of reconciliation โwas not my preferred path. Yet, this is the reality before us.โ
โI thoroughly regret the erosion of the appropriations process Senate Democrats have instigated, and the consequences that were paid by everyday Americans,โ Cole added. โItโs not a standard I accept.โ