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Hardline Republicans throw DHS funding bill into chaos as millions of passengers face TSA hell

by London Mail
March 27, 2026
in News
Reading Time: 6 mins read

Hardline House Republicans have thrown a Senate-passed DHS funding bill into chaos, leaving millions of passengers facing TSA hell.

Speaker Mike Johnson and the powerful House Freedom Caucus of MAGA conservatives rejected the bill passed late last night by the Senate, as it does not include funding for ICE.

The rupture lays bare a rift between the more moderate Senate Majority Leader John Thune and his Republican colleagues in the House.

The dispute means that TSA agents will miss another paycheck on Friday as the 42-day DHS funding impasse is set to run into at least next week as millions prepare for Easter travel.

Now, Johnson is reportedly circulating a Trump-backed plan that would extend current funding levels for DHS for 60 days, but the Senate has left town, and the new plan won’t get passed until lawmakers return to Washington. 

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said that Johnson’s plan was ‘dead on arrival.’ 

Meanwhile, Trump said on Thursday he’d order newly appointed DHS Secretary Markwayne Mullin to find cash to pay TSA workers in a gambit to calm US travelers. 

Florida Republican Congressman Byron Donalds told reporters Friday that the Senate-backed bill was a ‘turd sandwich.’ 

Congress appeared poised to pass funding for TSA workers on Friday before some hardline Republican's rejected their Senate counterpart's proposal

Congress appeared poised to pass funding for TSA workers on Friday before some hardline Republican’s rejected their Senate counterpart’s proposal

peaker of the House Mike Johnson (R-LA) speaks to reporters after a vote to fund the Department of Homeland Security, at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, DC on March 26
Senate Majority Leader Sen. John Thune (R-SD) (C) speaks on March 24

The rupture lays bare a rift between the more moderate Senate Majority Leader John Thune and his Republican colleagues in the House

US Airport wait times have exploded due to a shortage of TSA workers. Around 500 TSA workers have quit during the partial government shutdown, which began on February 14

US Airport wait times have exploded due to a shortage of TSA workers. Around 500 TSA workers have quit during the partial government shutdown, which began on February 14 

House Freedom Caucus Chairman Andy Harris said: ‘The only thing we’re going to support is adding that [ICE] funding into the bill, adding voter ID, sending it back to the Senate, making them come back in and do their work.’ 

Homeland Security Secretary Mullin has yet to act, as Congress appeared poised to pass funding until House Republicans rejected the Senate’s bill on Friday. 

Complicating the plan is the need for members of Congress to stay in DC and vote on the new proposal. 

Many members of the House and Senate have already fled DC to return home for the Easter break, which is supposed to last until mid-April. 

Should the House vote on the 60-day proposal on Friday or over the weekend, the Senate would be forced to return to the capital to pass the House plan before the bill could be signed by Trump for the funding to be approved.

It could take several days for the House’s proposal to receive a vote; it could take even more time for the Senate to return to DC and then vote on the new proposal.

Meanwhile, airport wait times are expected to remain long and TSA workers will continue to be unpaid.

Democrats voted against DHS funding in February in opposition to providing more funds for Trump’s immigration agenda. The Senate compromised by authoring a bill providing funding for the many branches of DHS except ICE.

Donald Trump waves as he boards Air Force One en route to Mar-a-Lago at Joint Base Andrews, Maryland, on Friday

Donald Trump waves as he boards Air Force One en route to Mar-a-Lago at Joint Base Andrews, Maryland, on Friday

Passengers stand in line at Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport (BWI), in Baltimore, Maryland, on Friday

Passengers stand in line at Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport (BWI), in Baltimore, Maryland, on Friday

Trump had largely left the issue to Congress, but warned he was ready to take action, threatening to send the National Guard to airports in addition to his deployment of ICE agents who are now checking travelers’ IDs.

The White House had floated the extraordinary move of invoking a national emergency to pay the TSA agents, a politically and legally fraught approach.

Trump’s order would draw on funds from his 2025 tax bill to pay TSA agents, a senior administration official said.

Should the House pass the package and send it to Trump’s desk, his executive order to pay TSA agents could prove short-lived or unnecessary.

The funding shutdown has resulted in travel delays and even warnings of airport closures as TSA workers who are missing paychecks stop coming to work.

Multiple airports are experiencing greater than 40 percent callout rates of TSA workers, and nearly 500 of the agency’s nearly 50,000 transportation security officers have quit during the shutdown.

Nationwide on Wednesday, more than 11 percent of the TSA employees on the schedule missed work, according to DHS. That is more than 3,120 callouts.

Everett Kelley, president of the American Federation of Government Employees, said the union was grateful workers would be paid but demanded Congress stay in session to pass a deal ‘that funds DHS, pays all DHS workers, and keeps these vital agencies running.’ 

A TSA office at Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport (BWI), in Baltimore, Maryland, on Friday

A TSA office at Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport (BWI), in Baltimore, Maryland, on Friday

Melissa Gates, stranded at George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston, said she had waited more than two hours without reaching the security checkpoint and missed her flight to Baton Rouge, Louisiana, with no alternative available until Friday.

‘I should have just driven, right?’ Gates said. ‘Five hours would have been hilarious next to this.’

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