Slotkin reverses course on DHS funding one day after synagogue attack in her state

 March 16, 2026

Michigan Democratic Sen. Elissa Slotkin voted Thursday to keep the Department of Homeland Security in a partial shutdown. By Friday, after a man rammed a vehicle loaded with explosives into a synagogue in her state, she was at a press conference calling DHS "essential" and urging Congress to fund it.

The reversal took less than 24 hours.

DHS identified the deceased suspect as Ayman Mohamed Ghazali, a Lebanese native who became a U.S. citizen in 2016. According to Oakland County Sheriff Mike Bouchard, Ghazali allegedly rammed his vehicle into Temple Israel in West Bloomfield, Michigan, while several explosives sat in the trunk. He then engaged in gunfire with the building's security team, which caused him to die at the scene. The vehicle caught fire after what Bouchard described as "something ignited" inside.

From shutdown vote to 'essential' in a day

On Thursday, Slotkin stood with her Democratic colleagues and voted to continue the partial DHS shutdown. On Friday, she stood at a press conference and said this:

"Certainly, we need to fund the Department of Homeland Security and we need, in my view, to cut away all the conversation on ICE, which is its own conversation, from all of the core missions at the Department of Homeland Security."

She also praised the department's workforce in Michigan, noting that DHS employees, including CBP personnel, "are on the call and they are doing their jobs." She called them essential workers. She said they're on the job.

All of which was true on Thursday, too, when she voted to keep their agency unfunded.

What changed, and what didn't

Slotkin's stated reason for voting against DHS funding traces back to January, the Daily Caller reported. She said in a Jan. 31 statement that she voted against funding DHS because of the events that took place in Minneapolis, Minnesota, referring to the deaths of Renee Good and Alex Pretti, both shot by immigration enforcement when they protested operations there.

So the logic, as Slotkin presented it, was this: because immigration enforcement actions in Minneapolis resulted in deaths during protests, the correct response was to defund the entire Department of Homeland Security. Not just ICE. Not just the specific unit involved. The whole department, including TSA, CBP, the Secret Service, FEMA, and every other component that falls under that umbrella.

That position held right up until a man with explosives attacked a synagogue in Metro Detroit. Then, suddenly, the department was essential again.

The shutdown Democrats built

The partial DHS shutdown marks the third time TSA employees have worked without pay in nearly six months. The agency has called on Democrats to end the shutdown, particularly with the spring break travel season threatening lengthy lines at airports across the country.

The Senate has yet to reach a deal on immigration reform. Democrats have demanded that immigration enforcement ditch masks and stop entering private property without a warrant. A Republican staffer told the Daily Caller News Foundation that Senate Republicans will not negotiate any policies that interfere with Immigration and Customs Enforcement's mission.

That's the impasse. Democrats want to handcuff ICE as a condition of funding the rest of DHS. Republicans refuse to trade enforcement capability for a budget deal. Meanwhile, TSA agents screen bags without paychecks and CBP officers patrol borders on IOUs.

Democratic Pennsylvania Sen. John Fetterman was the only member of his party to support the full-year appropriations bill for DHS. One Democrat out of the entire caucus looked at a department responsible for airport security, border enforcement, disaster response, and counterterrorism and decided it was worth funding without preconditions.

One.

The pattern is the point

This is what happens when a political party treats homeland security as a bargaining chip. Democrats have spent months framing ICE as a rogue agency that needs to be restrained. They've held up funding for the entire department to extract concessions on enforcement tactics. And when someone with a trunk full of explosives attacks a house of worship, the same senators who starved DHS of resources rush to microphones to declare the agency indispensable.

Slotkin's Friday comments are revealing not because they're wrong. DHS is essential. Its employees do critical work. The department does need to be funded. Every word she said at that press conference was correct.

The problem is that all of it was equally correct on Thursday, when she voted the other way.

The attack on Temple Israel was a horror. A man drove a vehicle into a synagogue with explosives in the trunk and opened fire on its security team. That security team stopped him. The fact that this happened in an American suburb, at a place of worship, during what should have been an ordinary day, deserves gravity and sober reflection.

What it should not become is a convenient excuse for a senator to reverse a vote she cast 24 hours earlier and pretend nothing changed. Slotkin didn't discover that DHS matters on Friday. She knew it on Thursday. She just decided other priorities came first.

A synagogue in West Bloomfield changed the political math. It shouldn't have taken that.

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