Washington, D.C. is facing a partial government shutdown as Congress failed to pass six spending bills before the deadline, leaving many federal agencies without funding. The Senate voted late Friday to approve a five-bill package that would extend funding for the Department of Homeland Security for two weeks, while House Democrats had threatened to withhold their support unless the DHS bill was revised.
The Trump administration's approach to immigration enforcement has been at the center of this funding fight. Since the longest shutdown in U.S. history last fall, lawmakers have been working on individual spending bills to fund federal agencies through September 2026. Congress has already passed and signed six of these bills, but the remaining six are the focus of the current funding battle.
Bipartisan talks appeared to have yielded a deal in recent weeks, with the Senate releasing the text of the funding measures on January 20. However, the deadly shooting of Renee Good by an ICE officer in Minneapolis and then Alex Pretti by federal immigration agents last weekend changed the calculus for Senate Democrats, who came out fiercely against funding for DHS without further reforms.
In a last-minute move, Senate Democrats struck a deal with the White House, which would support the five non-DHS funding bills, while extending funding for DHS at current levels for two weeks. The deal still needs to be approved by the House, and the lower chamber isn't set to return to Washington until Monday.
The shutdown is not expected to affect the Trump administration's immigration enforcement campaign, as DHS received an infusion of roughly $165 billion in last year's One Big Beautiful Bill Act. However, many federal agencies are affected, including the Department of Defense, State Department, and Department of Labor.
In contrast, six appropriations bills have already been approved by both chambers, funding agencies such as the Department of Veterans Affairs, Department of Agriculture, and Food and Drug Administration through September 2026.
A government shutdown occurs when Congress fails to pass funding for some or all agencies, which are funded annually by a dozen appropriations bills. The law known as the Antideficiency Act prohibits federal agencies from spending funds that have not been authorized by Congress.
The shutdown could last relatively quickly if House conservatives back down on their demands, but it's uncertain. Republicans are dealing with a razor-thin majority in the House, and Democrats could decide to help propel it to final passage.
Once the funding package reaches the House Rules Committee, one of the next steps is a procedural vote on the rule, which would typically be approved by the majority in a party-line vote. However, several conservatives have already warned that they could withhold their votes if their demands aren't met.
The Trump administration's approach to immigration enforcement has been at the center of this funding fight. Since the longest shutdown in U.S. history last fall, lawmakers have been working on individual spending bills to fund federal agencies through September 2026. Congress has already passed and signed six of these bills, but the remaining six are the focus of the current funding battle.
Bipartisan talks appeared to have yielded a deal in recent weeks, with the Senate releasing the text of the funding measures on January 20. However, the deadly shooting of Renee Good by an ICE officer in Minneapolis and then Alex Pretti by federal immigration agents last weekend changed the calculus for Senate Democrats, who came out fiercely against funding for DHS without further reforms.
In a last-minute move, Senate Democrats struck a deal with the White House, which would support the five non-DHS funding bills, while extending funding for DHS at current levels for two weeks. The deal still needs to be approved by the House, and the lower chamber isn't set to return to Washington until Monday.
The shutdown is not expected to affect the Trump administration's immigration enforcement campaign, as DHS received an infusion of roughly $165 billion in last year's One Big Beautiful Bill Act. However, many federal agencies are affected, including the Department of Defense, State Department, and Department of Labor.
In contrast, six appropriations bills have already been approved by both chambers, funding agencies such as the Department of Veterans Affairs, Department of Agriculture, and Food and Drug Administration through September 2026.
A government shutdown occurs when Congress fails to pass funding for some or all agencies, which are funded annually by a dozen appropriations bills. The law known as the Antideficiency Act prohibits federal agencies from spending funds that have not been authorized by Congress.
The shutdown could last relatively quickly if House conservatives back down on their demands, but it's uncertain. Republicans are dealing with a razor-thin majority in the House, and Democrats could decide to help propel it to final passage.
Once the funding package reaches the House Rules Committee, one of the next steps is a procedural vote on the rule, which would typically be approved by the majority in a party-line vote. However, several conservatives have already warned that they could withhold their votes if their demands aren't met.