The House just pushed through a critical funding package, but the specter of a government shutdown still looms large before the Jan. 30 deadline.
On Wednesday, the House passed a two-bill “minibus” package by a bipartisan vote of 341 to 79, combining Financial Services–General Services and national security–State Department funding.
This marks progress toward averting a shutdown, with eight appropriations bills now cleared by the House, alongside three others signed into law by President Donald Trump after last year’s 43-day shutdown.
However, disputes over a separate Department of Homeland Security (DHS) funding bill and a tight Senate schedule continue to threaten a lapse in government operations.
The issue has sparked heated debate, particularly around the DHS bill, which was pulled from the minibus due to Democratic objections following an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officer-involved shooting in Minneapolis of Renee Good.
While the House moves forward with other appropriations, the unresolved tension over DHS funding reveals deeper divisions on immigration enforcement policy. Let’s unpack where things stand and why this matters.
The recent House vote saw 57 Democrats join most Republicans in favor, though 22 GOP members dissented, the Washington Examiner reported. Two conservative amendments—one by Rep. Chip Roy (R-TX) to slash D.C. appeals court funding by 20% and another by Rep. Eli Crane (R-AZ) to defund the National Endowment for Democracy—both flopped hard, with votes of 163-257 and 127-291, respectively. It’s a sign that even within the party, not every hardline idea gains traction.
Meanwhile, the Senate isn’t sitting idle, having broken a filibuster earlier this week with an 80-13 procedural vote on a separate three-bill minibus covering Commerce, Justice, Energy, and more.
They’re set to tackle that package on Thursday before a recess and congressional trips thin their ranks. The latest minibus is slated for Senate review the week of Jan. 26, but time is not on their side.
With four major bills still pending—DHS, Defense, Labor-Health and Human Services, and Transportation-Housing—House appropriators are racing the clock.
Fully funding fiscal 2026 without a stopgap measure would be a rare win, something not seen in years. Yet, the DHS standoff could derail everything if cooler heads don’t prevail.
As the Jan. 30 deadline nears, the Senate’s packed schedule and upcoming recess add pressure to resolve these lingering bills.
House GOP leadership hopes to package DHS in a final minibus next week, but Democratic resistance suggests that’s a long shot. Compromise, not confrontation, is the only path to avoid another shutdown.
What’s clear is that funding the government fully for 2026 would be a historic achievement, a break from years of last-minute scrambles.
Yet, the DHS dispute underscores a bigger battle over how America handles immigration policy and enforcement. Both sides need to prioritize practical solutions over partisan point-scoring.
The stakes couldn’t be higher with just weeks to go. A shutdown would disrupt vital services and erode public trust even further. Let’s hope Congress remembers that governing means getting things done, not just drawing lines in the sand.
