The United States House of Representatives moved Thursday to restore funding for most of the Department of Homeland Security, ending what officials described as the longest lapse in the agency’s history.
The measure passed by voice vote, reopening major components of DHS 75 days after funding disruptions began.
Now it heads to President Donald Trump’s desk for signature.
The deal brings immediate relief to several frontline agencies.
The United States Coast Guard, United States Secret Service, Federal Emergency Management Agency, and Transportation Security Administration will all receive full funding under the bill.
But the resolution is only partial.
Two of the most politically charged arms of DHS—Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Customs and Border Protection—are notably excluded and will be addressed in a separate budget fight still looming on Capitol Hill.
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House votes unanimously to reopen DHS, ending 75-day shutdown – ICE, CBP to be funded separately https://t.co/SAmmAOMb8r pic.twitter.com/C3rGLexcNf
— New York Post (@nypost) April 30, 2026