The federal government is partially shut down over Democratic demands to rein in the Department of Homeland Security, and a compromise is nowhere in sight. What would a deal to end the shutdown look like?
Democrats have “nearly a dozen demands” for immigration enforcement reform, said The Hill. The list includes provisions to “tighten warrant requirements, unmask agents engaging in field operations and end roving patrols.” Those are “common sense proposals,” said Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.).
But Republicans say they have already agreed to “funding increases for body cameras and de-escalation measures,” said The Hill. What GOP officials have offered is “far better than what the status quo is,” said a Republican congressional aide.
What did the commentators say? The “daily thuggery of anonymous federal agents” has “rightly riled” much of the country, said Chris Brennan at USA Today. With the midterm elections just nine months away, the backlash should inspire the GOP-controlled Congress to take action “rather than just expressing discomfort” in the face of Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent attacks on Americans. Democrats are asking for “simple, commonsense reforms” in the way the agency enforces immigration laws.
There’s “one problem” hindering Democrats in the negotiations, said Audrey Fahlberg at the National Review. Republicans funded ICE through September 2029 in the “One Big Beautiful Bill” they passed last year. So the shutdown “won’t pause immigration enforcement operations or paychecks.” But it will take a toll on “other intra-agency operations,” including the Transportation Security Administration, Coast Guard, and Federal Emergency Management Agency. The Trump administration has withdrawn from Minneapolis, and DHS Secretary Kristi Noem has announced the expanded use of body cameras. Those concessions are a “clear effort to lay blame on Democrats” for the shutdown.
What next? One irony is that the shutdown is “throwing the fate of oversight at DHS into peril,” said Politico. The department’s inspector general has eight probes underway into the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown, which it’s being forced to suspend during the shutdown.
The broader public may be more concerned about the possibility of “longer security lines at the nation’s commercial airports,” said The Associated Press. TSA agents will not be paid until the shutdown is over, and that may not be soon. The White House rejected Democrats’ latest proposal to end the shutdown yesterday. |