Spiker Izby Reprezentantów Mike Johnson odrzucił w piątek senacki projekt mający przywrócić finansowanie większości Departamentu Bezpieczeństwa Krajowego. Zamiast tego zaproponował ośmiotygodniowe prowizorium, które utrzymałoby finansowanie całego resortu na obecnym poziomie, także dla ICE i CBP. Spór przedłuża częściowe zamknięcie DHS, które trwa już ponad pięć tygodni i powoduje kolejki oraz braki kadrowe na lotniskach w Stanach Zjednoczonych.

Johnson odrzuca senacki projekt

Spiker Izby Reprezentantów nazwał projekt „żartem” i przedstawił własne ośmiotygodniowe prowizorium.

Spór o ICE i CBP

Demokraci chcieli ograniczeń dla działań ICE, a Senat przyjął kompromis bez bezpośredniego finansowania ICE i CBP.

Nowe żądania konserwatystów

House Freedom Caucus domaga się także ustawy o identyfikacji wyborców i osobnego finansowania śledztw ws. handlu dziećmi.

Rozwiązanie się oddala

Przerwa wielkanocna w Senacie potrwa do 13 kwietnia, co utrudnia szybkie porozumienie.

House Speaker Mike Johnson rejected a Senate-passed bill to reopen most of the Department of Homeland Security on Friday, calling the measure „to żart” and proposing instead an eight-week stopgap that would fund the entire department at current levels, including Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Customs and Border Protection. The Senate had passed its bill by voice vote in the early hours of Friday morning, funding all of DHS through the end of the fiscal year except for ICE and Border Patrol. Johnson's rejection extends a partial DHS shutdown that has now lasted more than five weeks, causing long security lines and staffing shortages at U.S. airports during the spring break travel period. President Donald Trump ordered DHS Secretary Markwayne Mullin to pay Transportation Security Administration officers via executive order, describing the situation at airports as an „emergency situation”.

Strzelaniny w Minneapolis skłoniły Demokratów do zablokowania środków dla ICE The funding impasse traces directly to the fatal shootings of two American citizens, Renee Good and Alex Pretti, in Minneapolis in January 2026 by federal immigration agents — Good by ICE officers and Pretti by CBP agents. Senate Democrats had insisted for weeks that they would not support new DHS funding unless the Trump administration agreed to significant restrictions on ICE tactics and officer conduct, including requirements that agents not wear masks and obtain judicial warrants before forcing entry into a home. Despite an initial commitment from Trump to negotiate such limits, the White House and congressional Republicans resisted any policy changes. The Senate bill that passed overnight represented a compromise in which Democrats dropped their demands for policy restrictions but still blocked direct funding for ICE and CBP. Senate Majority Leader John Thune signaled that Republicans planned to address ICE and CBP funding separately through a budget reconciliation process requiring only Republican votes. Minnesota has also separately sued the Trump administration over the shootings, seeking access to evidence, according to reporting from Reuters dated March 24, 2026.

The partial DHS shutdown began over disagreements about immigration enforcement funding, with the standoff rooted in the broader debate over the Trump administration's aggressive deportation campaign launched after January 2025. Senate rules typically require 60 votes to advance most legislation, giving the Democratic minority significant leverage despite Republicans holding a 53-47 majority. Republicans had already allocated tens of billions of dollars to ICE and Border Patrol as part of Trump's tax and spending legislation passed earlier, providing some cushion to those agencies even without new fiscal-year appropriations.

Freedom Caucus dokłada kolejne żądania House conservatives complicated Johnson's path further by demanding that any DHS funding bill include voter ID legislation and dedicated funding for child sex trafficking investigations, a division within ICE. House Freedom Caucus Chairman Andy Harris stated Friday morning that the caucus would not support DHS funding without those additions attached.

„Jeśli nie zrobimy tego dziś, nie wpłynie to na lotniska.” — Andy Harris via Axios

Freedom Caucus member Chip Roy was equally blunt about the Senate bill, saying the upper chamber had failed to do its job and then left town.

„Czy Senat może być jeszcze bardziej leniwy, niż wysłać nam projekt, który nie załatwia sprawy, a potem wyjechać z miasta?” — Chip Roy via Bloomberg Business

Representative Tom Emmer, the third-ranking House Republican, described a unified leadership reaction against the Senate measure.

„W naszym kierownictwie i wśród naszych członków panuje wspólna niechęć do tego, co zrobili tam, w Senacie.” — Tom Emmer via Bloomberg Business

Conservatives also warned Johnson against bringing the Senate bill to the floor under a suspension procedure that would rely on Democratic votes to pass, with Representative Andy Biggs telling Axios that doing so would violate caucus rules.

Przerwa w pracach Senatu oddala rozwiązanie co najmniej o kilka tygodni With most senators having already left Washington for a two-week Easter recess running through April 13, any legislative fix faces a significant calendar obstacle. Johnson suggested the Senate could approve the House's eight-week stopgap by unanimous consent at a planned pro forma session on Monday, but Senate Republicans warned the House measure would be dead on arrival in the upper chamber. 60 (głosów) — próg wymagany do przeprowadzenia większości ustaw w Senacie Democrats have already rejected similar stopgap proposals multiple times over the past month, and the House Freedom Caucus's additional demands for voter ID legislation make a bipartisan deal in the Senate even less likely. Johnson framed the standoff as a Democratic problem, deflecting criticism of the split with Thune.

„Chuck Schumer i Demokraci w Senacie wymusili to na Senacie. Ja muszę chronić Izbę Reprezentantów. Nasi koledzy po tej stronie rozumieją, że to nie jest gra. My nie gramy w ich gry.” — Mike Johnson via Politico

Thune, for his part, acknowledged he had not spoken directly with Johnson in the final hours before the Senate vote, communicating only by text, and said he had not known in advance how the House would respond to the Senate bill. Some Republican centrists in the House argued their conference should simply accept the Senate deal and end the standoff, while others doubted the eight-week stopgap could pass either chamber. The impasse leaves TSA officers, airport travelers, and a range of other DHS-funded programs in continued uncertainty with no clear resolution in sight before senators return from recess.

Mentioned People

  • Mike Johnson — 56. spiker Izby Reprezentantów Stanów Zjednoczonych
  • John Thune — lider większości w Senacie i senator ze stanu Dakota Południowa
  • Donald Trump — prezydent Stanów Zjednoczonych
  • Markwayne Mullin — sekretarz bezpieczeństwa krajowego Stanów Zjednoczonych
  • Andy Harris — przewodniczący House Freedom Caucus i przedstawiciel Stanów Zjednoczonych z Maryland

Sources: 8 articles