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GOP Take Another Shot at DHS Funding 03/05 06:02
Republicans are invoking the war in Iran and the prospect of retaliatory
terrorist attacks as they tee up votes Thursday on a funding bill for the
Department of Homeland Security.
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Republicans are invoking the war in Iran and the prospect
of retaliatory terrorist attacks as they tee up votes Thursday on a funding
bill for the Department of Homeland Security.
The House already approved a DHS spending bill in January, but it faltered
in the Senate as Democrats insisted on changes to immigration enforcement
operations following the shooting death of ICU nurse Alex Pretti in
Minneapolis. As a result, funding for the department lapsed on Feb. 14.
Republicans are calling on Democrats to reconsider their vote in the wake of
the conflict in Iran. Both the House and the Senate are expected to hold votes
on the matter.
"The military action in Iran makes it all more urgent and crucial to have a
fully funded, fully staffed DHS across all its departments," House Speaker Mike
Johnson said.
It did not appear the GOP's strategy had changed the position of Democratic
lawmakers, though. They said they are prepared to fund most of the agencies at
the department, just not Immigration and Customs Enforcement or Customs and
Border Protection.
"It's the same lousy, rotten bill that does not put any guardrails or
constraints on ICE or CBP after federal agents shot American citizens in the
street," said Rep. Jim McGovern, D-Mass.
Workers are beginning to miss part of their paychecks
Following the longest federal shutdown in the country's history last year,
Congress has completed work on 11 of this year's 12 appropriations bills. Only
the bill for Homeland Security remains outstanding.
Republicans said the timing couldn't be worse for a Homeland Security
shutdown. While a large majority of the department's employees are considered
essential and continue to work, many will not receive a full paycheck this week.
Republicans said the prospect of an increase in unscheduled absences by the
Transportation Security Administration's agents and screeners could lead to
longer wait times at the nation's airports. Meanwhile, the Cybersecurity and
Infrastructure Security Agency has canceled various assessments to determine
vulnerabilities to critical infrastructure. And training for first responders
conducted through the Federal Emergency Management Agency has been canceled.
"Can we not understand America is under siege, now likely to be attacked
because radical Islam is under siege, and they're going to hit back and we're
sitting here looking at each other and not funding DHS," Sen. Lindsey Graham,
R-S.C., said during a hearing Tuesday featuring DHS Secretary Kristi Noem.
Democrats are seeking several changes at the department include prohibiting
ICE enforcement operations at sensitive locations like schools and churches,
allowing independent investigations into alleged wrongdoing, requiring warrants
to be signed by judges before federal agents can forcibly enter private homes
or other nonpublic spaces without consent, and requiring agents to wear
identification and remove their masks.
Republicans note that the bill does include a bipartisan provision directing
more resources for deescalation training and $20 million to outfit immigration
enforcement agents with body-worn cameras.
Little to show from negotiations
The White House and congressional Democrats don't appear to have made
significant progress in recent weeks resolving their differences after trading
several offers.
"Look, we're still far apart but we're negotiating and exchanging paper back
and forth," Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer said.
Alabama Sen. Katie Britt, the Republican chairwoman of a panel that oversees
homeland security funding, said she's been talking to Democrats about a
possible pathway forward, but prospects are unclear.
She and other Republicans are citing last weekend's mass shooting in Austin
as an example of the dangerous threat environment that's facing Americans
following the attack on Iran.
"I think that it is incredibly irresponsible to not fund the agency that is
supposed to keep us safe here at home," Britt said.
Democrats said they are ready to fully fund all the agencies within the
department except for ICE and CBP.
Rep. Rosa DeLauro, the ranking Democrat on the House Appropriations
Committee, authored a proposal to do that, but it was blocked from
consideration. She said Republican leadership was using Trump's "aimless,
costly and illegal war with Iran to force through more funding for ICE and
Customs and Border Protection without any of the substantial changes that the
vast majority of Americans believe those agencies need."
"It is a cynical effort and it is one that will fail," DeLauro said.
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