BY Benjamin ClarkFebruary 14, 2026
16 hours ago
BY 
 | February 14, 2026
16 hours ago

Fetterman stands alone as every other Senate Democrat votes to defund Homeland Security

Sen. John Fetterman was the only Democrat in the Senate to vote Thursday to advance a full-year funding package for the Department of Homeland Security. Every single one of his colleagues on the left voted no.

That includes senators typically described as centrists — Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto of Nevada and Sen. Angus King of Maine, the independent who caucuses with Democrats. Both voted against funding the department responsible for FEMA, the Coast Guard, TSA, and the nation's cybersecurity infrastructure.

Fetterman's reasoning was blunt. He took to social media to lay out a case that his own party apparently couldn't be bothered to consider:

"ICE has $75B in funding from Trump BBB that I did not vote for. Shutting DHS down has zero impact and zero changes for ICE. But it will hit FEMA, Coast Guard, TSA and our Cybersecurity Agency."

In other words, the protest vote Democrats cast Thursday doesn't touch ICE. It touches everything else. The Pennsylvania senator grasps something the rest of his caucus either doesn't understand or doesn't care about — that performative opposition has a cost, and that cost lands on agencies that keep Americans safe, as The Hill reports.

A party choosing the theater over the function

The Democratic argument against the funding bill centers on ICE and immigration enforcement — the one area where defunding DHS accomplishes precisely nothing. President Trump signed the One Big Beautiful Bill Act into law last year, which delivered $75 billion in funding to ICE. That money doesn't evaporate because Senate Democrats throw a tantrum over a spending bill.

The funding package even included provisions Democrats have previously demanded: body cameras for ICE officers and de-escalation training for immigration personnel. They voted against their own wishlist.

Cortez Masto offered the standard deflection:

"The Republicans have to work with us, and they haven't even come to the table on addressing our concerns."

She went further, announcing she would oppose even a temporary funding extension for DHS — a position that makes the "we want to negotiate" line sound less like an invitation and more like an ultimatum. You can't claim you want a seat at the table while flipping it over.

This is especially striking given the recent history. During the 43-day government shutdown in the fall, Fetterman, Cortez Masto, and King all voted multiple times for a House-passed measure to end it. Cortez Masto was willing to fund the government then. The difference now is the political calculus — the Democratic base wants a fight over immigration enforcement, and most Senate Democrats are happy to give them one, consequences be damned.

Fetterman's break isn't new — but it keeps widening

Fetterman has been drifting from progressive orthodoxy in ways that clearly unsettle the left. Over the weekend, he defended requiring Americans to show identification to vote — a position shared by overwhelming majorities of the country but treated as heresy in Democratic circles:

"It's not a radical idea for regular Americans to show your ID to vote, and absolutely those things are not Jim Crow or anything."

He acknowledged the historical weight of voter suppression — calling it "part of an awful, awful legacy of our nation" — but refused to let that history be weaponized against a common-sense policy. That's a distinction most Democrats won't make. For years, the party line has been that voter ID equals voter suppression, full stop. Fetterman broke the equation.

On DHS funding, he framed his vote not as a break from Democratic values but as a fulfillment of them:

"As a committed Democrat, I want the same changes that every other Democrat wants to make on ICE." "We want to find a way forward to produce those changes but shutting down the government is the wrong way."

Whether you agree with his policy preferences on ICE or not, the man is at least engaging with reality. Shutting down Homeland Security doesn't reform immigration enforcement. It grounds the argument that Democrats care more about messaging than governing.

The left's contradiction laid bare

Consider the position Senate Democrats have constructed for themselves. They oppose funding DHS because they object to immigration enforcement — enforcement that is already fully funded through separate legislation they cannot touch with this vote. They reject a bill that includes body cameras and de-escalation training for the very agents they claim to distrust. And they do all of this while insisting they're the responsible governing party.

This is what happens when a political party lets its activist wing dictate strategy. The vote becomes the point. The outcome is irrelevant. The only thing that matters is the signal — and the signal Senate Democrats sent Thursday is that they'd rather defund the Coast Guard than be seen cooperating on anything adjacent to border security.

Fetterman, whatever his other political liabilities, recognized the trap. He refused to walk into it.

"As a Democrat, I can't vote to shut down critical parts of our government."

Forty-nine of his Democratic colleagues apparently can.

Written by: Benjamin Clark
Benjamin Clark delivers clear, concise reporting on today’s biggest political stories.

NATIONAL NEWS

SEE ALL

January CPI drops to the lowest core inflation since 2021 as Trump declares Biden's price crisis over

President Trump greeted reporters on the White House lawn Friday with a message that doubled as a victory lap: the January Consumer Price Index report…
16 hours ago
 • By Benjamin Clark

Trump pardons five former NFL stars, including a posthumous nod to Heisman winner Billy Cannon

President Trump granted pardons Thursday to five former NFL players who were convicted of crimes ranging from counterfeiting to drug trafficking — a move announced…
16 hours ago
 • By Benjamin Clark

Former Obama White House counsel enlisted Jeffrey Epstein to manage fallout from Colombia prostitution scandal

Emails released by the Department of Justice show that Kathy Ruemmler, former White House counsel under Barack Obama, turned to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein…
16 hours ago
 • By Benjamin Clark

Federal appeals court rules pro-life pregnancy network can hire based on its own mission

The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New York City handed a significant victory to a pro-life pregnancy care network, reversing a lower court's…
2 days ago
 • By Benjamin Clark

James Van Der Beek dead at 48: Faith, family, and the final words that moved millions

James Van Der Beek, the actor who became a household name as Dawson Leery on "Dawson's Creek," died Wednesday morning after a battle with Stage…
2 days ago
 • By Benjamin Clark

DON'T WAIT.

We publish the objective news, period. If you want the facts, then sign up below and join our movement for objective news:

    LATEST NEWS

    Newsletter

    Get news from American Digest in your inbox.

      By submitting this form, you are consenting to receive marketing emails from: American Digest, 3000 S. Hulen Street, Ste 124 #1064, Fort Worth, TX, 76109, US, http://americandigest.com. You can revoke your consent to receive emails at any time by using the SafeUnsubscribe® link, found at the bottom of every email. Emails are serviced by Constant Contact.
      Christian News Alerts is a conservative Christian publication. Share our articles to help spread the word.
      © 2026 - CHRISTIAN NEWS ALERTS - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
      magnifier