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Senate Republicans on June 3 moved forward with a budget reconciliation package to fund immigration enforcement agencies after weeks of disruption caused by White House proposals that alarmed GOP senators.
The Senate voted 53-46 to begin debate on a roughly $70â72 billion package designed to fund ICE, Customs and Border Protection and related Department of Homeland Security immigration functions through fiscal 2029.
Leaders removed a controversial nearly $1 billion provision for security upgrades tied to President Trumpâs planned White House ballroom and pared back Justice Department language after acting Attorney General Todd Blanche told lawmakers the White House was ânot moving forwardâ with an $1.7â1.8 billion âanti-weaponizationâ or settlement fund.
Trump later gave mixed signals about whether the fund was dead.
Republicans plan to use reconciliation to avoid a 60-vote threshold but face a marathon âvote-a-ramaâ of amendment votes that could expose fractures in their conference.
If the Senate passes the measure it will still need House approval before reaching the White House.
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Key takeaway: a procedural ruling by the nonpartisan Senate parliamentarian â not only intra-party politics â removed the ballroom funding, underscoring that reconciliationâs strict rules limit what can be included and shaping how lawmakers must craft contentious funding requests.


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