Republicans just pulled the trigger on a high-stakes immigration funding push, forcing it through the Senate in a marathon overnight session that left Democrats sidelined and fuming.
The GOP-led chamber adopted a budget blueprint early Thursday that unlocks the reconciliation process, clearing the path for billions in funding for Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Border Patrol.
It’s a procedural move with major consequences. By using reconciliation, Republicans can bypass Democratic opposition and move funding with a simple majority.
The vote followed hours of rapid-fire amendments and partisan clashes, with most Republicans holding the line. Only Sens. Rand Paul and Lisa Murkowski broke ranks to oppose the measure.
At the center of the fight: more than $70 billion Republicans want to front-load into border enforcement, betting Democrats won’t agree to future funding.
Democrats blasted the move as misplaced and politically motivated.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer accused Republicans of ignoring economic pain at home.
“America is crying out for relief from high costs,” Schumer said, slamming the plan to pour billions into agencies he claimed lack public trust.
NEW: Sen. Chuck Schumer lashes out at Republicans for passing a resolution to fund ICE and Border Patrol — blasting the pair as “rogue agencies.”
“What kind of bubble are they living in? How out of touch are they with people’s real needs?”
Republicans moved to front-load more… pic.twitter.com/z3kaHoiPUB
— Fox News (@FoxNews) April 23, 2026
Republicans fired back hard.
Senate Majority Whip John Barrasso flipped the argument, defending law enforcement and blaming Democrats directly.
“Today’s Democrats are a rogue and radical party,” Barrasso said. “You deserve better than reckless Democrat hostage-taking.”
Meanwhile, Democrats attempted to steer the debate toward affordability, offering amendments focused on cost-of-living concerns. Every one of them failed along party lines.
The blueprint now heads to the House, where lawmakers must either adopt it as-is or make changes — a move that would send it back to the Senate and trigger another round of grueling votes.
NEWS: The U.S. Senate has CLEARED a key procedure hurdle, advancing a $70B budget plan to fund ICE and CBP through the end of President Trump's term in 2029.
The Department of Homeland Security has been in a partial shutdown since mid-February 2026. President Trump signed an… pic.twitter.com/wts9NlN8NH
— RedWave Press (@RedWavePress) April 23, 2026