Chairman's News

House Passes DHS Funding Bill, Ending Shutdown and Restoring Operations

AI Analysis Relevanz: 9/10

The House has passed H.R. 7147, sending it to President Trump to end the Department of Homeland Security shutdown. This bill fully restores funding, stability, and pay for critical operations including TSA, FEMA, Secret Service, Coast Guard, CISA, U.S. Border Patrol, and ICE. The move aims to prevent missed paychecks for frontline personnel and ensure uninterrupted federal services.

Why relevant? Ending a government shutdown, particularly for a major department like DHS, has a direct and immediate impact on the economy, federal employees, and critical services. It removes uncertainty, ensures the functioning of agencies vital for national security and public safety, and prevents economic disruption from unpaid federal workers, thus directly affecting consumer spending and business operations.

Original Article

from the Senate Finance Committee

Cole Statement on DHS Funding Bill

Washington, D.C. – House Appropriations Committee Chairman Tom Cole (OK-04) released the following statement regarding today’s House passage of H.R. 7147, which will now head to President Trump's desk to end the Democrat-led Department of Homeland Security shutdown:
 
Backed by President Trump, this bill ends the Democrat DHS shutdown. It fully restores funding, stability, and pay for a vast majority of critical operations – including TSA, FEMA, Secret Service, Coast Guard, and CISA. And it does so without any policy restrictions at the center of Chuck Schumer and Senate Democrat leadership’s radical agenda.
 
While the far-left hoped to eradicate U.S. Border Patrol and Immigration and Customs Enforcement resources, complete funding for those agencies is advancing concurrently. This two-pronged approach restores DHS immediately – and makes clear: enforcement will not be stripped.
 
“Having Democrats diminish Article I and force the use of reconciliation was not my preferred path. Yet, this is the reality before us. My support of today’s action is for all the frontline personnel who would have – once again – been subjected to missed paychecks starting this weekend. I’d rather carry the weight of an imperfect move forward than ask them to carry the real-life burden of Democrat failure.
 
“Trying to unilaterally dictate which national security functions survive while holding key operations and employees hostage during the longest government shutdown in history is not a record I would be proud of – but it’s one Democrats hold.
 
“I thoroughly regret the erosion of the appropriations process Senate Democrats have instigated, and the consequences that were paid by everyday Americans. It’s not a standard I accept – and my votes and position throughout this process have made that clear, each and every time.”
 

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