Trump signs executive order to pay TSA workers as Democrat-caused DHS shutdown hits day 40
President Trump signed an executive order on Friday directing federal officials to ensure more than 60,000 TSA employees receive pay during the ongoing Department of Homeland Security shutdown, now well into its sixth week. The order instructs the Secretary of Homeland Security, working with the Office of Management and Budget, to tap funds with a "reasonable and logical nexus" to TSA operations to cover worker compensation and benefits.
The move comes as America's airport security infrastructure buckles under the weight of a funding lapse that has left TSA officers working without paychecks for 40 days. Nearly 500 workers have already walked off the job. Thousands more have called out sick. Security wait times at some airports have ballooned past three hours.
DHS confirmed on X that TSA has begun steps to resume paying its workforce, with officers expected to see paychecks as early as Monday.
An Emergency That Didn't Have to Happen
Trump did not mince words about who owns this crisis. From the executive order itself:
"As the Democrat-caused shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security continues well into its sixth week, America's air travel system has reached its breaking point."
He called it an "unprecedented emergency," pointing to the cascading operational failures that congressional Democrats have forced onto the traveling public and the federal employees caught in the middle.
"As a result, security wait times at some airports have reached untenable lengths of three or more hours."
There is a particular kind of political cynicism at work when lawmakers allow a shutdown to grind on for 40 days while the people who keep airports safe go unpaid. Congressional Democrats have apparently calculated that the pain inflicted on TSA workers and millions of travelers is an acceptable cost of whatever leverage they believe they're building. The workers screening your bags and patting down your carry-ons didn't vote for a funding lapse. They showed up anyway. Many of them, at least, until the paychecks stopped coming, as Fox News reports.
The Legal Mechanism
The executive order directs the Secretary of Homeland Security, coordinating with the OMB Director, to identify and redirect funds tied to TSA operations. Trump cited 31 U.S.C. 1301(a) as the applicable legal authority. A senior administration official told Fox News that funding from Trump's "One Big Beautiful Bill Act" will be used to ensure officers are paid during the disruption.
Rachel Cauley, the White House OMB Communications Director, framed the action in terms of precedent:
"Not unlike actions taken during the first Democrat-shutdown (i.e., paying the troops), President Trump has determined that congressional Democrats have created an emergency situation that cannot be allowed to continue."
The parallel is instructive. During the first Democrat-driven shutdown, the political calculation was the same: force a standoff, let federal workers absorb the damage, and hope the public blames the other side. Trump responded then by ensuring military personnel got paid. He's responding now by ensuring the people responsible for aviation security aren't forced to choose between their mortgages and their posts.
What 40 Days Without Pay Actually Looks Like
It is easy to talk about government shutdowns in the abstract. The numbers tell a more concrete story:
- More than 60,000 TSA employees working without pay
- Nearly 500 who have already quit
- Thousands more calling out sick
- Three-plus-hour security lines at some of the country's airports
Every one of those 500 departures represents an experienced screener who won't be replaced overnight. Every sick call means a checkpoint that's short-staffed. Every three-hour line means missed flights, missed connections, and a traveling public that loses a little more faith in the system. This is what happens when a political standoff meets an operational reality that doesn't care about messaging strategy.
Trump previewed the executive action Thursday, vowing to address the airport disruptions directly. He followed through within 24 hours.
The Politics of Who Gets Hurt
Democrats have long positioned themselves as the party of the working class, the party that fights for federal employees, the party that would never let ordinary Americans suffer for political gain. Forty days into a shutdown they caused, with tens of thousands of TSA workers living without income, that branding looks like what it has always been: a slogan, not a commitment.
DHS captured the dynamic plainly in its statement:
"President Trump has made the decision that echoes what TSA's frontline employees and the millions of Americans enduring terrible wait times at our airports are saying: the Democrat DHS shutdown has become an emergency."
The workers wanted to be paid. The public wanted to board their flights without surrendering half a day to a security line. Congressional Democrats wanted leverage. Only one of those parties was willing to let the other two suffer indefinitely.
Trump chose the workers and the travelers. The shutdown continues because Democrats chose something else.




