America’s Longest Shutdown Ends With MAJOR Catch

America’s longest partial government shutdown just ended after 76 grueling days—but at what cost to border security?

Story Snapshot

  • House unanimously approves Senate bill by voice vote on April 30, 2026, funding most DHS agencies except ICE and CBP.
  • Record 76-day shutdown began February 14, 2026, over immigration funding disputes.
  • Republicans plan reconciliation to fund border enforcement without Democratic votes.
  • DHS Secretary Markwayne Mullin blames Democrats, declares agency “back open” pending Trump’s signature.
  • Employees gain backpay; travelers and communities see immediate relief from TSA and Coast Guard strains.

Shutdown Origins and Timeline

The partial DHS shutdown started February 14, 2026, when Congress failed to pass funding amid partisan clashes over immigration enforcement. Democrats demanded ICE operational changes after incidents like the Minneapolis killings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti. Bipartisan negotiations collapsed. Temporary funds for TSA and Coast Guard dwindled, risking paychecks for hundreds of thousands. House Speaker Mike Johnson faced GOP hardliners like Rep. Chip Roy before relenting under White House pressure.

House Passage Details

On April 30, 2026, the House approved the Senate-passed bill by unanimous voice vote, avoiding a recorded tally. The measure funds Secret Service, FEMA, TSA, and Coast Guard through September but excludes ICE and CBP. President Trump expects to sign it imminently, formally ending the shutdown. This DHS-specific impasse outlasted the 35-day 2018-2019 shutdown over Trump’s border wall, marking a new record.

Key Players Drive Resolution

DHS Secretary Markwayne Mullin announced the end on X, labeling it a “Democrat shutdown that never should have happened.” He thanked furloughed workers and Trump for prioritizing “Make America Safe Again.” Speaker Johnson reversed course after Wednesday’s budget framework approval for reconciliation. Sen. John Fetterman stood alone among Democrats supporting full funding, calling the shutdown a congressional failure. Republicans sidestepped Democratic “games” on ICE reforms.

From a conservative viewpoint, Mullin’s blame aligns with facts: Democrats prolonged the crisis by tying funding to policy shifts, defying common-sense border priorities. Johnson’s navigation of internal resistance delivered results without compromising core enforcement.

Impacts on Employees and Security

Furloughed DHS workers endured 76 days without paychecks, straining families economically. Travelers faced TSA disruptions; emergency responses faltered without full FEMA operations. Border communities suffered reduced ICE and CBP presence, heightening vulnerabilities. Backpay guarantees now provide relief. Long-term, reconciliation sets a precedent for unilateral GOP funding of enforcement, bypassing Senate filibusters as in Trump’s 2025 tax law.

Political fallout favors Republicans, reinforcing narratives of Democratic obstruction on immigration. This volatility disrupts federal law enforcement and ties into surveillance extensions like Section 702. Affected parties—from Coast Guard families to airport lines—welcome stability, but unresolved border funding looms as the next battleground.

Sources:

US House ends 76-day DHS shutdown, approves funding bill

House approves bill to fund DHS, ending record-long partial shutdown

Trump signs DHS legislation, ending record-breaking shutdown

House approves Senate bill to fund DHS and end record-setting 76 …

House passes Senate DHS funding bill after Johnson … – Fox News

House votes to fund most of DHS, ending 76-day partial shutdown

House unanimously passes DHS funding bill, ending 76-day shutdown