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House Speaker Mike Johnson and Senate Majority Leader John Thune announced a joint plan on April 1–2 to end a record-long partial shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) by advancing a two-track funding approach.
Republicans said they would move to fund most DHS components through the regular appropriations process — potentially taking up a Senate-passed bill as soon as this week — while deferring funding for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Customs and Border Protection (CBP) to a separate, party-line budget reconciliation bill.
The GOP leaders said the reconciliation route would secure immigration enforcement and border security funding for up to three years and bypass the Senate filibuster.
The announcement follows weeks of GOP infighting after House Republicans initially rejected the Senate plan; it comes amid pressure from President Donald Trump, who publicly urged a reconciliation bill by June 1.
Democrats have insisted on reforms to immigration enforcement — including warrant and mask restrictions — after high-profile deadly enforcement incidents; those policy demands are not included in the Republican statement.
The shutdown has disrupted airport security and left many DHS workers without pay during the 47-day funding lapse.
🔗 Based On
France 24 - International breaking news, top stories and headlinesUS Republicans announce deal to end partial government shutdown
Latest Political News on Fox NewsBehind the scenes of Congress' eleventh-hour rush to fund the DHS
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The discussion is mainly partisan reaction and interpretation of the announced two-track funding plan; commenters echo existing reporting and offer opinions rather than new, verifiable facts or corrections.







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