Senate takes key step toward funding ICE and border patrol with only GOP votes

Originally Published: 23 APR 26 03:55 ET
By Morgan Rimmer, Sarah Ferris, Ted Barrett, CNN
(CNN) — With Congress still at a stalemate over how to end the Department of Homeland Security shutdown, Senate Republicans took a key step to tee up a party-line measure funding the most controversial immigration programs — and eventually reopen the government completely.
The GOP effort to fund Immigration and Customs Enforcement and border patrol without any Democratic support moved ahead after a marathon overnight session known as a “vote-a-rama” that stretched into the early hours of Thursday morning.
The chamber adopted the Senate GOP budget blueprint by a vote of 50-48 with all Democrats present opposed. Two Republicans, Sens. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Rand Paul of Kentucky, broke ranks, voting against the measure.
Next, the House will have to pass the same measure — and then a GOP legislative package funding ICE and Customs and Border Protection will need to survive a parliamentary gauntlet in the Senate before another marathon vote series in the coming weeks.
This complicated process, called budget reconciliation, should allow Republicans in Congress to approve the funds without needing Democratic votes. Democrats have been clear that they won’t support any future funding for immigration enforcement unless there are major changes to ICE tactics and protocols, after two Americans were shot and killed by federal agents in Minnesota earlier this year.
The Senate unanimously approved a package to fund the rest of the Department of Homeland Security weeks ago, but House Republicans rejected the bipartisan deal, prolonging the shutdown because it did notinclude contentious funding for immigration enforcement.
Senate Majority Leader John Thune has expressed hope that Senate GOP progress toward funding ICE and CBP will ensure the House adopts it as well. However, House GOP leadership has not committed to a timeline for funding the rest of DHS.
Democrats aimed amendments during the “vote-a-rama” atchanges to ICE policies and affordability issues they argue Republicans are ignoring ahead of the midterm elections.
This is a developing story and will be updated.
The-CNN-Wire
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