Lawmakers struggle to make headway on Homeland Security funding
[March 19, 2026]
By KEVIN FREKING
WASHINGTON (AP) — Lawmakers appear far from ending a funding lapse at
the Department of Homeland Security even as the president's nominee to
run the department, Republican Sen. Markwayne Mullin of Oklahoma,
pleaded with colleagues Wednesday to resolve the impasse.
Democrats, for more than a month, have been refusing to fund certain
agencies within the department, saying there must be accountability
after the deaths of Alex Pretti and Renee Good in Minneapolis. Two key
enforcement agencies, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and U.S.
Customs and Border Protection, are part of Homeland Security.
Meanwhile, Transportation and Security Administration officials warned
that delays at some airports could get worse as more screeners working
without pay call out or, in some cases, quit.
The DHS shutdown entered Day 33 on Wednesday.
Democrats turn again to the discharge petition
House Democrats are signing a petition that would force the House to
take up a bill from Rep. Rosa DeLauro, D-Conn., to fund the TSA and
other DHS agencies. But the bill would not fund Immigration and Customs
Enforcement, Customs and Border Protection, and the office of the
secretary.
Most such petition efforts are unsuccessful, but Democrats recently used
a discharge petition to force a vote on requiring the Department of
Justice to release the Jeffrey Epstein files. Once a vote was triggered,
resistance in Congress to releasing the files crumbled.
Now, Democrats say they want to use the same tool to pass DeLauro's
bill.

“Discharge petitions are difficult, some say impossible,” Democratic
leader Hakeem Jeffries said as Democrats gathered on the Capitol steps.
“But for us, difficult takes a day, impossible takes a week.”
Republicans said that Homeland Security needs to be fully operational
during a heightened level of security and that Democrats can't fund it
using a piecemeal approach.
“It was created in the wake of 9/11. Democrats are acting like it's
September 10th, before 9/11 happened,” said House Majority Leader Steve
Scalise, R-La.
If all of the Democrats in the House sign the petition, then they would
need just four Republicans to sign on to force a vote. But even if that
were to occur and DeLauro's bill managed to pass the House, it would
face an uphill climb in the Senate, where support from 60 senators is
needed to advance any spending measure.
Trading offers but little movement
President Donald Trump’s nominee to lead DHS, in his testimony, praised
the more than 100,000 DHS employees working without pay as he urged
colleagues to fund the department.
“We have to realize that we’re putting our homeland and the peace of
mind at risk for the American people,” Mullin told the panel considering
his nomination.
Behind the scenes, Democrats sent the White House their latest offer for
a funding bill, which Republicans said was essentially unchanged from
what they submitted nearly three weeks ago.
Meanwhile, the administration highlighted in a letter to Republican
Sens. Susan Collins of Maine and Katie Britt of Alabama what changes to
immigration enforcement that it has already agreed to, including:
— Expanded use of body-worn cameras, with an exception for undercover
operations.

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A Homeland Security vehicle is parked outside the Eldon B. Mahon
U.S. Courthouse during a trial for nine people connected to a 2025
shooting outside an ICE detention facility, in Fort Worth, Texas,
Thursday, March 12, 2026. (AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez)

— Limited civil enforcement activities at certain sensitive
locations, subject to a narrow exception for immediate needs like
national security. Sensitive locations include places like hospitals
and schools.
— Increased oversight through the creation of mandatory reviews and
compliance reporting from the inspector general for DHS.
— Officer identification will be clearly displayed for personnel
carrying out immigration enforcement activities. Moreover, officers
will have to clearly verbalize their agency and identification upon
request when engaging in official duties. Undercover officers would
not be subject to these requirements.
But Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer said Wednesday that the
White House isn't going far enough.
“The White House is still refusing to engage on some of the most
pressing demands Democrats have called for since day one,” Schumer
said.
Sen. Raphael Warnock, D-Ga., offered a bill on the Senate floor to
fund the Transportation Security Administration through September.
But Republicans objected to its passage. Sen. James Lankford, R-Okla.,
countered with a proposal to fund all of DHS for two weeks, but
Warnock declined to modify his request.
It was a familiar back-and-forth as Democrats have made repeated
efforts to fund just parts of DHS through September. Republicans,
however, have pushed to fund the entire department on a short-term
basis while the two sides try to work out their differences.
Lankford said, “This is silly to break this up into aspects of who’s
going to get funding and who’s not going to get funding.” While
Warnock said that ICE, is “an unaccountable paramilitary force
wreaking havoc on the streets of our country.”
White House highlights airport delays
The Trump administration, on various social media accounts,
highlighted some of the fallout from the shutdown, which it blamed
on Democrats.

“Right now, our heroic TSA officers are not being paid, and many
cannot pay their rent, buy food, or afford to put gas in their
cars,” the Department of Homeland Security said on X. “Some are even
staying in airports overnight because they can’t afford their
commute.”
Adam Stahl, TSA's acting deputy administrator, cited the
Philadelphia airport as one of the airports experiencing longer
screening times for some passengers because more workers were
calling out.
“The reality of the situation is this is going to get worse before
it gets better if we don't see any sort of action in Congress,” he
told CNN.
In a separate post, the department said more than 366 TSA agents
have left the force as a result of the shutdown, which is leaving
critical gaps in staffing as each new recruit requires four to six
months of training.
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