Federal News
Congress Pushes DHS Funding Without ICE
March 19, 2026
Congressional representatives have introduced and supported legislation to fund critical Department of Homeland Security (DHS) agencies such as the Transportation Security Administration (TSA), Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), Coast Guard, and Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) amid a partial DHS shutdown. This legislative effort seeks to ensure continued pay and operational stability for essential DHS employees while excluding funding for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Customs and Border Protection (CBP) until reforms are enacted. Multiple discharge petitions have been filed to force House votes on bills that separate funding for core DHS functions from immigration enforcement agencies, reflecting ongoing political disputes that have disrupted national security operations and travel.
- Key agencies affected: TSA, FEMA, Coast Guard, CISA remain unfunded due to shutdown, impacting security, emergency response, and cybersecurity operations.
- Legislative strategy: Discharge petitions aim to compel House votes on funding bills excluding ICE and CBP, emphasizing reforms before restoring their funding.
- Procurement implications: Funding uncertainty may delay contracts and operational procurements for TSA, FEMA, Coast Guard, and CISA, affecting vendors and contractors supporting these agencies.
- Actionable insight: Contractors and procurement professionals should monitor congressional actions closely, as partial funding restorations could lead to segmented contract awards and shifts in agency priorities during the shutdown resolution process.
The hardworking employees of the U.S. Coast Guard, TSA, cybersecurity, FEMA, and equally critical agencies at the Department of Homeland Security are missing paychecks this month because of an avoidable shutdown. A simple commonsense solution is available: Congress must pass funding for all components of DHS except for ICE, CBP, and the Office of the Secretary.
— Congressman Joe Courtney
The political games in Washington around DHS funding aren’t helping people or making our communities safe. Right now, we need to fund critical work at places like the TSA, Coast Guard, emergency disaster relief, and anti-terrorism and anti-trafficking task forces. There’s no reason that can’t happen while we finish negotiations on important reforms to ICE. This is common sense, and the Speaker needs to call a vote on our bill today.
— Congresswoman Kristen McDonald Rivet
The security of our nation shouldn’t pause because of the militarization of our immigration system. If we are serious about protecting the American people, we must ensure that critical components of DHS can operate at full strength—especially as the United States enters direct conflict with Iran.
— Rep. Scott Peters
Agencies
Department of Homeland Security, Transportation Security Administration, Federal Emergency Management Agency, Coast Guard, Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency
Locations
Sources
- Peters, Horsford Introduce Bill to Pay Essential Homeland Employees During Shutdown | Congressman Scott Peters · Peters Ca 52 House · Mar 06
- Congressman Patronis Issues Statement as DHS Shutdown Cripples TSA and Threatens National Security | Representative Jimmy Patronis · Patronis House · Mar 17
- Congressman Cohen Works to Fund Critical DHS Agencies While Insisting on ICE and CBP Reforms | Congressman Steve Cohen · Cohen · Mar 17
- Congresswoman Escobar Signs Discharge Petition to Pay TSA Agents, Other DHS Employees | Congresswoman Veronica Escobar · Escobar House · Mar 18
- Rep. Gabe Vasquez Calls for Vote to Fully Fund TSA, FEMA, and Coast Guard | Representative Gabe Vasquez · Vasquez House · Mar 19