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House GOP poised to reject Senate-passed DHS funding bill — leaving no end in sight for airport chaos

house-gop-poised-to-reject-senate-passed-dhs-funding-bill-—-leaving-no-end-in-sight-for-airport-chaos
House GOP poised to reject Senate-passed DHS funding bill — leaving no end in sight for airport chaos

WASHINGTON — House Republicans are preparing to reject a Senate-passed funding bill to reopen most of the Department of Homeland Security, prolonging a more than 40-day shutdown. 

The impasse could mean more pain for hundreds of thousands of federal workers who are missing paychecks, and no permanent solution for long lines at airport security checkpoints.

“It’s not going to pass as it is,” Rep. Chip Roy (R-Texas) told The Post less than an hour after former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows posted on X that the DHS bill was “dead in the House.”

Donald Trump speaking at a microphone with a portrait of Ronald Reagan in the background.

President Trump said he would sign an executive order to fund TSA agents. REUTERS

U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson speaks to the media at the U.S. Capitol.

House Speaker Mike Johnson held a meeting with House Republicans on the Senate measure passed on Friday morning. REUTERS

House GOP lawmakers huddled for a conference call on Friday with Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) to deliberate over the funding bill approved by the Senate earlier this morning.

Johnson is weighing a stopgap measure to fund all DHS agencies — including ICE and CBP — for 60 days, but that would require the Senate to reconvene, three Republican aides said.

One House GOPer griped that the Senate “shouldn’t have left town” before the bill reached President Trump’s desk.

“PSA to senate schedulers: may want to book a return flight for your boss,” Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-Colo.) also posted on X. “Our work here isn’t finished.”

The Senate-passed measure would open DHS agencies except Immigration and Customs Enforcement as well as portions of Custom and Border Protection.

Republicans already secured funding for those agencies in President Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill last July, though several are hopeful that additional spending can be tucked into a second reconciliation bill in the near future.

Senate Democrats have held up the funding for 42 days in protest of ICE and CBP-involved fatal shootings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti in Minnesota earlier this year.

The U.S. Capitol building reflected in a puddle under a cloudy sky.

The US Capitol seen on March 27, 2026. The Senate passed a DHS funding measure early Friday. Getty Images

“They ended up getting no reforms but, you know, we’re going to have to fight some of those battles another day,” Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-SD) said of his Democratic colleagues.

Trump also threatened to free up funding via executive order and began placing ICE agents at airports to backfill missing Transportation Security Administration personnel. He announced Thursday that he’s planning an executive order to pay TSA agents through emergency powers.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) declared victory and said Democrats “held the line” to prevent a “blank check” from going to “lawless” ICE and CBP — before leaving town for a two-week recess during Easter and Passover.

Travelers waiting in long security lines at John F. Kennedy International Airport.

Travelers wait in long TSA lines at JFK Airport on Friday, March 27, 2026. Getty Images

More than 480 Transportation Security Officers (TSOs) quit and as many as 50% were calling out of work as the shutdown dragged on, a top TSA official testified to Congress on Monday. The lack of pay had some TSA agents selling their blood and sleeping in their cars to make ends meet.

Passengers have been suffering the highest wait times in TSA history, the official also told lawmakers, and if the funding fight continued, smaller US airports were under threat of having to close down.

Travelers wait in long lines at Atlanta Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport.

Airports are experiencing long TSA line waits due to shortage of staff. Getty Images

Even former Attorney General Bill Barr was photographed Wednesday waiting among thousands of others trying to catch flights out of George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston — which saw some of the worst delays at wait times of four hours or more.

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