Here’s the latest I can share based on recent reporting:
- The DHS funding standoff persisted through late March 2026, with multiple Senate votes failing to advance a House-passed DHS funding bill and ongoing negotiations around reforms tied to immigration enforcement.[1]
- A notable development around that time: the Senate voted to fund much of DHS but not the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) portion, creating a partial funding package that would need House action to finalize (aimed at avoiding a full shutdown while still addressing policy debates).[4]
- Public-facing negotiations during this period often framed the choice as between funding DHS in full with policy concessions or pursuing a broader package tied to immigration enforcement reform and voting-related proposals; leaders described “final offers” and continued discussions as of late March 2026.[3][5]
To help you get even more precise, I can pull the very latest updates (e.g., any new floor votes, White House statements, or a finalized funding bill) if you’d like. If you’re following Capitol Hill developments for work or study, I can also summarize the key political positions from both parties and outline how the proposed funding changes would affect DHS components like ICE, CBP, and the border operations.
Would you like me to fetch the freshest headlines and provide a concise, cited briefing?