Overview
- The Republican-led House approved the Department of Homeland Security bill 220–207, with seven Democrats voting yes and Rep. Thomas Massie as the lone Republican no.
- The measure provides about $64.4 billion for DHS, including roughly $10 billion for ICE and $2.2 billion for the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency.
- Negotiators included limited oversight steps and funding shifts that Democrats argue fall short of needed ICE reforms following calls for accountability after Renee Good’s killing in Minneapolis.
- The bill now heads to the Senate, where advancing it will require at least seven Democratic votes to clear the 60-vote threshold before a potential partial shutdown.
- In a separate vote, the House passed a package funding the remaining agencies 341–88, and leaders plan to bundle the measures as they move to the Senate.