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Senate Republicans on June 3 began formal consideration of a roughly $70–72 billion budget reconciliation package to fund U.S. immigration enforcement through fiscal 2029, after weeks of delay over White House proposals that alarmed GOP senators.
The Senate voted 53-46 to proceed and opened debate and a marathon vote-a-rama of amendments.
The package — pared back in revised text — drops language that would have provided up to $1 billion for security upgrades tied to President Trump’s planned White House ballroom and proceeds after Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche told Congress the administration would not move forward with a controversial $1.7–1.8 billion “anti-weaponization” or settlement fund.
Republican leaders say the changes cleared the way to get the base bill across the finish line, but holdouts including Sen.
Thom Tillis have signaled they may press amendments to permanently bar the fund.
The measure allocates funds across agencies (committee texts cited about $13 billion for Customs and Border Protection, roughly $31 billion for ICE and additional DHS funding) and faces further hurdles in floor votes and in the Republican-controlled House.






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