Get you up to speed: Senate GOP delays vote on reconciliation bill amid opposition to DOJ fund, White House ballroom
Senate Republicans have delayed a vote on a $72 billion reconciliation package for the Department of Homeland Security’s immigration agencies due to opposition regarding the Justice Department’s new “anti-weaponization” fund and Secret Service security funding. Senators reported that plans for a vote were abandoned, leading to the chamber’s adjournment for the Memorial Day recess.
Senate Republicans have yet to release a revised version of their $72 billion reconciliation package, which faced opposition over funding tied to the Secret Service and the Justice Department’s new “anti-weaponization” fund. House votes on the package, initially expected for Thursday evening, may be postponed as some members suggest addressing the legislation after the Memorial Day recess.
Senate Republicans have postponed a vote on a reconciliation package for the Department of Homeland Security due to opposition to the inclusion of the Justice Department’s new “anti-weaponization” fund and security funding linked to a ballroom renovation. House Speaker Mike Johnson plans to meet with the President to discuss next steps, while some House Republicans suggest delaying any vote until after the Memorial Day recess.
What remains unclear — It is uncertain when the Senate will reconvene to address the reconciliation package and related funding issues.
Senate Republicans postpone vote on reconciliation bill over DOJ fund concerns
Washington — Senate Republicans said they will not be voting on a reconciliation package to fund the Department of Homeland Security’s immigration agencies on Thursday, delaying consideration of the measure in the face of opposition to the Justice Department’s new “anti-weaponization” fund and security funding tied to the White House ballroom.
Senate Republicans’ $72 billion package hit a snag when members in both chambers began voicing concerns about the inclusion of $1 billion in Secret Service security funding, including for the president’s East Wing Modernization Project that features plans for a massive ballroom.
The Justice Department’s announcement of the new $1.776 billion fund to compensate those who say they were unfairly targeted by the government proved too much for some GOP senators to stomach. Several senators emerged from a meeting with acting Attorney General Todd Blanche without commenting.
Senators told reporters earlier that they expected the Secret Service funding to be stripped from the broader package. Republicans had been aiming to release new bill text on Wednesday, but had not done so as of Thursday afternoon.
GOP leaders had been aiming to kick off a marathon vote series on Thursday night. But senators told reporters that vote would no longer happen, and that the chamber would adjourn for the Memorial Day recess.
President Trump has set a June 1 deadline to get the legislation to his desk.
House Speaker Mike Johnson is planning to head to the White House to discuss the path forward, according to a source familiar with the plans. The House had been expected to remain in town on Friday to approve the package if the Senate did the same, but the upper chamber’s plans changed abruptly Thursday.
Blanche met with Senate Republicans for nearly two hours, trying to get skeptical members on board with the Justice Department’s new fund. The fund was established as part of a settlement of a suit by Mr. Trump against the IRS, and pro-Trump allies, including those charged for their involvement in the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, have said they are eager to submit claims.
But Senate Republicans faced the prospect of being forced to vote on Democratic amendments related to the fund as part of the reconciliation process.
Senate Majority Leader John Thune told reporters earlier this week that he’s “not a big fan.” And with a number of members skeptical of the fund, Senate Republicans are considering how to add guardrails to their reconciliation bill to rein it in. Thune, when asked about the specific provisions members are seeking heading into the meeting, said “we’ll find out.”
GOP Sen. Susan Collins of Maine, the top appropriator in the Senate who has expressed opposition to the DOJ fund, told WTX US News as she left the meeting that she did not feel better about it.
The ballroom security and DOJ funds are also facing pushback in the House.
In a letter to Blanche on Wednesday, GOP Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick of Pennsylvania expressed “urgent concern” about the anti-weaponization fund, saying it “represents a dangerous backsliding in the transparency of our institutions and our commitment to the American taxpayer.”
Fitzpatrick has also said he will not support funding for the ballroom.
House lawmakers have votes scheduled for 4:30 p.m., and were advised that votes related to reconciliation were possible later in the evening, before the Senate changed its plans.
Some House Republicans were already open to pushing a vote past the Memorial Day recess.
“If they drag their feet, there’s no reason we have to do it before the Memorial Day break. We can do it when we come back,” GOP Rep. Andy Harris of Maryland, the chairman of the conservative House Freedom Caucus, told reporters as he left Johnson’s office Thursday afternoon.
“There’s no emergency about moving it by June 1, except the president has thrown it out there,” Harris said.













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