After the measure successfully passed the Senate, it was also voted on by the House of Representatives, and is now about to be signed by President Donald Trump. The approved funds ensure the normal functioning of key agencies until the end of the financial year – September 30.
The decision ends a 75-day period of shortfall in funding that began on February 14 and has become the longest funding outage in the department’s history. The vote came just hours before a critical deadline, after Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin warned that available emergency payroll funds were running out.
The restoration of regular funding allows critical agencies such as the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), the Coast Guard, the Transportation Security Administration (TSA), and the Secret Service to resume full operations.
Despite the breakthrough, the political crisis is not completely over. The bill does not provide new funds for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and the Border Patrol, which remain outside the deal due to the deepening partisan dispute.
The standoff stems from Democratic demands to impose restrictions on operations at “sensitive locations” and change employee work protocols, which have been flatly rejected by Republicans. With the refusal to include these points of contention in the deal, the key issue of immigration control and security of the state border remains “frozen” and the political debate on the subject remains unresolved.












