Senate Republicans block Schumer's bid to fund TSA without ICE as DHS shutdown reaches 36 days
Senate Republicans shut down Chuck Schumer's attempt to peel off TSA funding from the broader Department of Homeland Security fight, refusing to let the minority leader cherry-pick which parts of border security deserve a paycheck. The New York Democrat used an arcane procedural tactic to force a vote on a bill that would pay TSA workers while leaving Immigration and Customs Enforcement starved of resources. Republicans blocked it.
The DHS shutdown entered its 36th day Saturday, with thousands of TSA agents still working without pay and airport security lines stretching longer by the day. Lawmakers are staring down a two-week recess at the end of next week, and neither side has blinked.
Schumer's selective compassion
The Schumer gambit was never about TSA workers. It was about creating a funding structure that keeps immigration enforcement defunded while wrapping the whole thing in the language of concern for federal employees.
Schumer took to the Senate floor to frame Republicans as hostage-takers:
"It is unacceptable for workers and travelers and entire airports to get taken hostage in political games."
He then made the quiet part loud:
"It is unacceptable to say we will only pay TSA workers if it is attached to a bill that funds ICE with no reforms, but that's what the Republicans have been doing."
Read that again carefully. Schumer's objection isn't to paying TSA workers. He objects that any TSA funding bill might also fund ICE. Democrats want airport security without immigration enforcement. They want the parts of DHS that scan your carry-on, but not the parts that remove people who entered the country illegally. Fox News reported.
This is not a negotiating position. It is a policy preference dressed up as a fiscal concern.
Republicans hold the line
Republicans have now tried and failed five times to fully reopen DHS. Five times they've offered to fund the entire department. Five times, Democrats have said no, because full funding means ICE stays operational.
Senate Democrats have made several attempts to move forward with standalone funding bills designed to open parts of DHS while carving out immigration enforcement. Each attempt tells the same story: Democrats will fund Homeland Security, as long as the "homeland" part doesn't include the border.
Senate Republicans and the White House pushed a new compromise offer to Democrats on Friday night. An open letter from the administration outlining several reforms to immigration operations surfaced earlier in the week. Back-to-back meetings on Capitol Hill brought Republicans, Democrats, and administration officials into the same room.
Sen. Katie Britt, R-Ala., who participated in the meetings, said she hoped there would be another soon. When asked whether Democrats would return to the table, her answer was honest: "That will be up to them, but I hope so."
The clock and the optics
Senate Majority Leader John Thune is threading a needle. He knows the shutdown carries political risk for everyone, and he told Fox News Digital it would be "very, very hard to explain if we leave town this next week without having funded the Department of Homeland Security."
But Thune also knows where the blame belongs. At a news conference Saturday, he made the case plainly:
"At some point, the Democrats are going to be held accountable for this."
He then turned a quote from an unnamed Democratic leader into a weapon:
"I know they think it's, as has been described by one of their leaders, 'very serene, very serene' with their position."
His response landed harder for its simplicity:
"Well, I'm telling you something. The people who are sitting in those lines at the airports right now don't see it as very serene. This needs to be resolved."
What Democrats are actually protecting
The fundamental question of this shutdown has never changed. Democrats claim they want to fund DHS. Republicans have repeatedly offered to fund DHS. The only disagreement is whether ICE gets included.
Consider what that means in practice. Democrats are willing to let:
- Thousands of TSA agents work without paychecks
- Airport lines grow increasingly long for millions of travelers
- The shutdown surpasses even last year's record-breaking full government closure
All to ensure that immigration enforcement doesn't receive funding. That is the trade they are making. Every day the shutdown continues, they are choosing it.
Schumer calls it a hostage situation. But hostage situations require someone to make unreasonable demands. Funding the entirety of a cabinet-level department is not an unreasonable demand. It is, by definition, the baseline. The people making selective demands are the ones who want to fund airport scanners but not deportation officers.
Recess looms
With lawmakers set to leave Washington for two weeks at the end of next week, the pressure intensifies daily. A recess with no resolution means TSA agents go even longer without pay. It means longer lines. It means more footage of frustrated travelers that no politician wants attached to their name.
Thune is right that leaving town without a deal would be difficult to explain. But the explanation is simpler than anyone in Washington wants to admit. Republicans offered to fund the department. All of it. Democrats said no, because "all of it" includes the part that enforces immigration law.
Travelers stuck in those airport lines deserve to know exactly why they're standing there. It isn't because Republicans refused to pay for TSA. It's because Democrats refused to let TSA funding pass alongside ICE funding. The workers are props in a fight over whether America enforces its own borders.
Thirty-six days. Five failed votes. One party is offering full funding. The other is demanding a carve-out for the agency that deports illegal immigrants.
The lines at the airport tell you everything you need to know about who's willing to let this drag on, and why.




