Story Highlights
- The Senate Judiciary and Homeland Security Committees released $71.7 billion in combined legislative text for the reconciliation package
- ICE would receive approximately $38.2 billion; CBP would receive roughly $22.57 billion, both funded through fiscal year 2029
- The bill also allocates $1 billion to the Secret Service for security infrastructure tied to the White House ballroom project
What Happened
Two Republican-led Senate committees late Monday released legislative text to flesh out a roughly $70 billion reconciliation package to fund immigration enforcement agencies at the Department of Homeland Security through the remainder of President Donald Trump‘s term. The Senate Judiciary Committee text shows that panel’s piece of the package would amount to nearly $39.2 billion. A separate title from the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee would provide $32.5 billion, bringing the total to $71.7 billion in new spending.
The Judiciary Committee’s text would provide $30.73 billion for hiring, paying, training, and equipping ICE personnel — including officers, agents, investigators, attorneys, and support staff — through fiscal year 2029, a year past the end of President Trump’s second term. The Judiciary and Homeland Security bills together would provide $22.57 billion to hire, train, pay, and equip Customs and Border Protection personnel through fiscal year 2029.
The office of Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin would receive a separate, flexible $5 billion in the combined measure, to be used for any purpose consistent with other parts of the bill or the immigration-related parts of last year’s reconciliation package. Nearly $1.5 billion would go to the Justice Department for terrorism prosecution, the Drug Enforcement Administration, the Marshals Service, U.S. attorneys offices, and the FBI. Roll Call
The Secret Service would receive $1 billion for security upgrades related to the new White House ballroom project, for “purposes of security adjustments and upgrades” including “above-ground and below-ground security features.” The project has taken on additional urgency since the alleged attempted murder of Trump and other top administration officials at last month’s White House Correspondents’ Dinner.
Senate Homeland Security Chairman Rand Paul (R-Ky.) had previously been a skeptic of large funding boosts for immigration agencies. Rather than allow Budget Chairman Lindsey Graham to write the text under his committee’s jurisdiction — as happened last year — Paul decided to participate directly. He announced he was planning a markup for his title of the package when lawmakers return to Washington.
Why It Matters
This reconciliation bill represents one of the most significant pieces of domestic policy legislation currently advancing through Congress and is the direct product of months of bitter political conflict. Democrats refused to fund ICE and Border Patrol in the DHS appropriations bill, triggering a record-length government shutdown. Republicans refused to provide that funding alongside Democratic-demanded reforms. The reconciliation process is the GOP’s way of settling that fight entirely on its own terms.
The scale of the investment in immigration enforcement is historically unprecedented. Providing $38.2 billion specifically for ICE operations over the next several years would expand the agency’s capacity for hiring, detention, transportation, and local law enforcement partnerships far beyond anything previously appropriated. Combined with the $170 billion allocated in last year’s “One Big Beautiful Bill,” the Trump administration is engineering a permanent structural expansion of federal immigration enforcement.
Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer attacked the proposals directly: “Republicans are on a different planet than American families. Republicans looked at families drowning in bills and decided what they really needed was more raids and a Trump ballroom.” Democrats have signaled they will challenge provisions of the bill under the Senate’s Byrd Rule, which restricts what can be passed via reconciliation.
The inclusion of the $1 billion ballroom security allocation has drawn particular fire from the opposition, though the White House has framed it as a necessary response to the recent assassination attempt on the president. The controversy is unlikely to derail the legislation given Republicans’ ability to pass it with a simple majority, but it has become a potent political symbol for Democrats seeking to energize voters ahead of November.
Economic and Global Context
The $72 billion package adds meaningfully to federal expenditure at a moment when the national deficit is already running well above projections. The Congressional Budget Office projected a 2026 deficit of $1.853 trillion, while the White House Office of Management and Budget has estimated a figure closer to $2 trillion. Republican leaders have argued that stronger enforcement reduces illegal immigration, which they say reduces long-term costs to federal programs.
The bill’s passage through reconciliation also comes as the Supreme Court’s February ruling that struck down Trump’s use of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act for tariffs has scrambled the administration’s broader fiscal toolkit. Congress is increasingly the primary vehicle through which Trump must advance major spending priorities, raising the stakes for every reconciliation bill.
President Trump has urged Congress to send a final reconciliation bill to his desk by June 1, giving GOP leadership limited room for procedural error. That deadline reflects Trump’s awareness that legislative windows narrow as midterm campaigns heat up and that any slippage in the timeline risks the bill becoming mired in pre-election politics.
Implications
If enacted, the legislation will lock in funding for ICE and Border Patrol through January 2029, effectively ensuring those agencies’ operational continuity regardless of what happens in November’s elections. Even a Democratic wave that flips the House would not be able to defund those operations for the remainder of Trump’s term — a deliberate and significant structural protection built into the bill’s design.
For Republican incumbents in competitive districts, the bill offers both an asset and a liability. Delivering on immigration enforcement is a core promise to the base, but the price tag and the ballroom security controversy give Democrats a clear line of attack with independent voters who are already frustrated by inflation and the cost of the Iran war.
Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.) vowed that Democrats are prepared to comb through the bill “line by line” and “vigorously challenge” any provisions that may violate the Byrd Rule. Byrd Rule challenges, ruled on by the Senate Parliamentarian, could strip individual provisions from the package, potentially forcing Republicans to revise or drop components they consider essential before final passage.
Sources
Republicans unveil budget reconciliation bill to fund ICE, Border Patrol through 2029


