Overview
- The House passed the package 217–214 with 21 Democrats voting yes and 21 Republicans voting no, and President Trump signed it into law shortly after.
- The legislation funds most federal departments through September, while DHS operates under a stopgap that expires Feb. 13.
- The DHS carve-out follows the killings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti in Minneapolis; Secretary Kristi Noem said agents in the city will immediately use body cameras.
- Democrats say further DHS funding requires reforms such as banning masked agents, requiring visible IDs and body cameras, judicial-warrant standards, ending roving patrols, and a uniform use-of-force policy.
- Republicans are split as Trump demanded “NO CHANGES” to the Senate deal, some members pushed for a SAVE Act vote, and GOP leaders signaled another short-term DHS measure may be needed.