Democrats bash Johnson for rejecting Senate DHS bill, urge support for discharge petition
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The Bottom Line
House Democrats criticize Speaker Johnson for rejecting bipartisan Senate bill to reopen most of Department of Homeland Security.
How This Affects You
A continued partial DHS shutdown could affect federal employee paychecks and delay services including passport processing, border operations, and security-related functions.
AI Summary
House Democratic leaders criticized Speaker Mike Johnson on Friday for rejecting a bipartisan Senate bill that would reopen most of the Department of Homeland Security, accusing Republican leaders of prolonging the partial shutdown to satisfy conservative hardliners. Democrats are rallying behind a discharge petition—a procedural tool that allows lawmakers to bypass leadership and force a floor vote—to advance the Senate legislation. The disagreement centers on what conditions should accompany DHS funding, with Democrats arguing Johnson is prioritizing ideological demands over reopening the agency. A discharge petition requires 218 signatures to move forward, giving Democrats a path to advance the bill if they can secure enough Republican support. The dispute underscores the broader standoff between the two parties over funding the government and the DHS specifically.
What's Being Done
House Democratic leaders are pushing a discharge petition to advance the Senate bill despite Speaker Johnson's rejection.
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Airports continue to struggle with long lines as Congress fails to reach DHS funding agreement

US House passes stopgap DHS funding bill after Republicans reject Senate deal - The Guardian

How the Homeland Security deal unraveled and split Republican leaders in Congress - AP News

US House passes stopgap DHS funding bill after Republicans reject Senate deal
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