The US Congress passes a $70 billion funding bill to support President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown, with the measure cleared by the Senate and then approved by the House before being sent to Trump. Reuters and other reports say the legislation is intended to fund immigration enforcement through fiscal 2029 and ends months of partisan conflict over how the money should be used and whether new limits and oversight should be added.
The bill allocates about $38 billion for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and about $26 billion for Border Patrol, with an additional $5 billion set aside for contingency or unforeseen costs. Multiple outlets report that Democrats oppose the package, arguing it gives the administration broad freedom for deportations and enforcement tactics without new restrictions.
Reports also describe how the dispute is tied to a earlier, contentious period of Homeland Security funding battles, including a partial DHS shutdown after Democrats demanded limits on tactics such as certain raids, officers wearing masks, and entry onto private property without judicial warrants. Republicans used a fast-track reconciliation approach to move the bill forward after failing to reach agreement on proposed amendments. The legislation includes controversy over related compensation and other provisions, but these elements are reported as removed or left unresolved.