The Department of Homeland Security entered its fourth day of a shutdown on Tuesday with little sign that the funding lapse will end anytime soon.
The House and Senate are both out of town, with lawmakers not planning to return until Monday. Many are traveling across the globe meeting with foreign leaders, taking the focus away from funding. And key DHS agencies are flush with cash from the GOP’s reconciliation bill, decreasing the urgency to strike a deal.
The dynamics are setting the stage for what could be an extended DHS shutdown.
When MS NOW asked a Republican lawmaker on the House Appropriations Committee Monday when the funding lapse might end, the member was blunt: “Your guess is as good as mine.”
While lawmakers don’t seem to be getting much closer to a resolution, they are generating activity.
Late Monday night, Democratic leaders sent Republicans a counteroffer in the DHS negotiations.
The offer — from Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y. — came five days after the last exchange in negotiations, when the White House sent Democrats an offer Schumer deemed “incomplete and insufficient.”
(Schumer’s office declined to provide specifics about the latest Democratic offer.)
Democrats are insistent that any DHS funding bill include new provisions to rein in immigration enforcement after officers under the DHS banner shot and killed Alex Pretti and Renee Good in Minnesota. Republicans say they’re open to reforms, but thus far, they’ve resisted many of the Democratic demands.
Neither party seems terribly interested in compromise.
Asked on Sunday if Democrats were willing to drop any of their demands to reopen DHS, Jeffries wasn’t exactly direct.
“We’re willing to have a good faith conversation about everything, but, fundamentally, we need change that is dramatic, that is bold, that is meaningful and that is transformational,” he said on CBS’ “Face the Nation,” adding that the Democratic requests “are common sense things.”
Meanwhile, Republicans think they’re the ones who are acting reasonably.
“What our Democratic colleagues have to realize is that we’re not gonna walk away from enforcing the law,” Sen. Katie Britt, R-Ala., said on “Fox News Sunday.”
Britt, who’s leading negotiations for the GOP on Capitol Hill, said Republicans had “come to the table with good faith propositions” that “keep our law enforcement officers safe and keep American citizens safe, which is our priority, and I hope that Democrats will join us.”
In other words, no one is budging at the moment.
Earlier this month, Democrats laid out a list of 10 requests for the negotiations, including a requirement that federal agents remove their masks, a mandate that they turn on body cameras, and an order that they obtain judicial warrants before entering private property.
In a sign of just how far apart the two sides are, border czar Tom Homan on Sunday defended agents wearing masks, taking an axe to one of the demands that Democrats see as one of the easiest asks.
“The masks right now are for officer safety reasons,” Homan said on CBS’ “Face the Nation.”
As the partisan bickering continues — and negotiators make little progress — DHS is prepared for a long shutdown.
More than 90% of the department’s 272,000 employees were classified as “excepted” under its latest shutdown plan, meaning they’ll continue working without pay. On Thursday, another 1,700 furloughed workers will come back to the office, part of a plan to reduce the number of furloughs for shutdowns lasting longer than five days.
The department also has billions of dollars available despite the funding lapse, though the Trump administration hasn’t outlined a plan on how to use that money.









