
WASHINGTON — Senate Republicans voted early Thursday morning to approve a budget measure that would pave the way for Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Border Patrol funding without any Democratic support. Subscribe to read this story ad-free Get unlimited access to ad-free articles and exclusive content. The vote was 50-48 after a marathon session last night. GOP Sens. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, and Rand Paul, R-Ky., joined Democrats in voting against passage of the resolution.
Main Idea: Senate Republicans approved a budget measure that could let them write a bill to fund ICE and Border Patrol without Democratic support, while Senate Democrats pushed back against the move.
Key Points:
The bill could speed up large new funding for ICE and Border Patrol, which may mean more aggressive immigration enforcement and more conflict in schools, hospitals, and neighborhoods.
The measure could help reopen Homeland Security funding sooner, which may reduce shutdown risks for workers, travelers, and taxpayers.
Rate how each entity in this article affected the American people.
Primary agency the budget measure aims to fund and expand through reconciliation.
Core collective actor whose vote passed the budget measure and drives the article.
Primary agency the budget measure aims to fund with major new spending.
Senate Minority Leader whose opposition and criticism are central to the story.
Senate Majority Leader quoted as the key architect and public advocate for the GOP plan.
Important counterpart whose next move is needed for the budget measure to advance.
Politically vulnerable senator whose amendment votes are highlighted as notable defections.
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Sign in to commentDemocratic senator whose amendment is a key part of the vote-a-rama political maneuvering.
Named Republican senator whose vote against passage is specifically noted.
Named Republican senator whose vote against passage is specifically noted.
Politically vulnerable senator whose amendment votes are highlighted as notable defections.
Named senator whose amendment votes are mentioned as a notable, but secondary, detail.