Govt. funding bills pass House on razor-thin margins, head to Trump’s desk
The U.S. House passed a critical government funding package along bipartisan lines in a nail-biter Tuesday vote, sending it to the president’s desk.
Once President Donald Trump signs the legislation into law, Congress will have knocked out 11 of the 12 appropriations bills for fiscal year 2026.
“Funding the government is not an optional exercise – it’s the most basic duty we have in Congress,” House Appropriations Chair Tom Cole, R-Okla., told lawmakers before the vote. “I share the frustrations of many that the Senate altered our deal at the last minute. But our obligation is not to those emotions – it’s to the American people.”
The $1.2 trillion legislation funds State-Foreign Affairs, Financial Services, Defense, Labor-HHS-Education, and Transportation-HUD through Sept. 30.
It also includes a two-week Continuing Resolution in place of the Homeland Security bill, a last-minute change by the Senate that required the package to return to the House. Senate Democrats had demanded the change in exchange for their votes after the second fatal shooting of a protester in Minneapolis.
The CR temporarily freezes DHS and related departments’ funding at current levels as Democrats and Republicans craft a new Homeland Security bill that includes immigration enforcement reforms.
The action stung many House Republicans, causing 21 of them to vote against the package, which only succeeded due to 21 Democrats supporting it.
“Funding Democrat earmarks and resettlement money while giving DHS two weeks is not a compromise,” Rep. Eric Burlison, R-Mo., said on social media. “It’s a bad deal.”
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., has outlined Democrats’ demands, which include barring agents from wearing masks, enforcing body-worn cameras, and requiring agents to obtain judicial warrants on top of immigration court warrants in order to arrest people.
While Republican leaders have expressed support for measures like requiring body-worn cameras, they firmly oppose warrant reform. Lawmakers have until Feb. 13 to come to an agreement, or else risk another partial shutdown.
Latest News Stories
Report: Teachers’ unions give millions to progressive causes
Illinois quick hits: Record hotel tax revenues reported; grocer sentenced for SNAP, WIC fraud
Trump goes on attack over digital services taxes, threatens tariffs
WATCH: Policy questions loom as Pritzker announces ag investment, tax credits
Report: Claims that preserving coal plants will cost $6B based on unlikely assumptions
Federal officials confirm case of New World screwworm
Colorado committed to increasing housing supply
Stock market weathers Fed governor’s attempted firing well
WATCH: Police officer, legislator: Seize opportunity to reform Illinois’ cashless bail
Trump proposes returning death penalty to D.C.
WATCH: IL Hospital Association: $50B rural hospital fund ‘woefully inadequate’
Arizona, Nevada pay less at the pump than California
EEOC celebrates 200 days of protecting religious freedom under Trump
U.S. mining operations discarding rare minerals at center of trade talks