US Congress approves USD70B for Trump immigration crackdown
 Posted on : Jun 11, 2026, 8:56AM   5 total views  Category : World
The Capitol in Washington, DC. PHOTO: AP

WASHINGTON (AFP) – The United States (US) Congress passed a USD70-billion bill funding US President Donald Trump’s hardline immigration crackdown through the rest of his term, ending months of bitter partisan fighting over the future of deportations and border enforcement.

The measure – approved roughly along party lines in the House after clearing the Senate last week – now heads to Trump’s desk and gives the Republican leader a major victory on one of his signature issues ahead of November’s midterm elections.

The bill provides around USD38 billion for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), USD26 billion for Border Patrol and another USD5 billion for unforeseen costs, effectively ensuring a steady flow of money for Trump’s deportation agenda through fiscal 2029.

Democrats, who opposed the bill, accused Republicans of handing the administration a blank check for aggressive enforcement tactics without new limits or oversight.

The dispute dates back to a months-long fight over Homeland Security funding that began with a January immigration enforcement surge in Minneapolis, during which two civilians were shot dead by federal law enforcement.

Democrats refused to support new money for ICE and Border Patrol without restrictions on tactics including raids in sensitive locations, the use of masks by officers and entry onto private property without judicial warrants.

Republicans rejected those demands and turned instead to the fast-track budget reconciliation process, which allows spending measures to pass the Senate by a simple majority – bypassing the 60-vote threshold normally required to overcome Democratic opposition.

“With today’s vote, House and Senate Republicans have officially ended the third Democrat government shutdown of this Congress,” Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson said.

“And here’s the end result of Democrats’ record-setting obstruction: CBP and ICE will now be funded for the remainder of US President Trump’s term and Democrats will have no ability to defund these agencies in the 119th or 120th Congresses.”

Johnson has described the bill as “long overdue”, while Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries argued taxpayer money should be used to lower costs for Americans, not to give ICE “another USD70 billion blank check”.

The package comes on top of nearly USD140 billion already approved by the Republican-controlled Congress last year for immigration enforcement as part of Trump’s tax and spending law. It also arrives as the administration faces pressure from immigration hardliners to accelerate deportations after falling short of Trump’s goal of removing one million people a year.

Trump’s border chief Tom Homan has promised stepped-up enforcement, including possible operations in heavily Democratic New York, the country’s largest city.

The vote ends a turbulent journey for legislation that had been delayed by Republican unease over other Trump priorities that were initially attached to the bill.

A proposed USD1 billion security provision linked to Trump’s planned White House ballroom was stripped out after procedural and political objections.

Critics attacked the fund as a “slush fund” that could allow Trump allies, including people convicted over the 2021 attack on the US Capitol, to receive taxpayer money.

The Justice Department later said it would not move forward with the fund, although Trump has continued to praise the idea and has declined to say clearly whether it was dead or merely paused.

Courtesy of Borneo Bulletin

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