Good afternoon, Press Pass readers. It’s 2026. That means elections, government shutdowns, chaos, and—most importantly—having hope. Keep your spirits up this year with a Bulwark+ membership. You can join our growing pro-democracy community at the link below: Today’s edition brings you into the Senate just in time to catch Democrats and Republicans getting stuck at another government funding impasse. Democrats laid out their demands to rein in the Trump administration’s mass deportation effort and alarming uses of state power during recent ICE and CBP deployments targeting U.S. cities. We should know by tomorrow night whether their demands have resulted in another shutdown or the pulling-back of the arm the government has been using to slap its own citizens around. In addition, Trump’s anti-gun comments got me thinking: Do the Republican members of Congress who are always loyal to the president now also believe Americans shouldn’t be allowed to practice their Second Amendment rights? Lastly, Zohran Mamdani wore a personalized jacket at a press conference about the snowstorm over the weekend. While the fit caused a stir, he is hardly the first politician to wear a custom piece of apparel. I’ve put together some of the best examples as a palate cleanser. All that and more, below. Dems Demand Republicans Stop, Collaborate, and ListenICE could be back with some brand new restrictions.The ask is inSenate Democrats made their first major stand against ICE on Thursday by voting to derail a government funding package that included taxpayer dollars for the Department of Homeland Security as well as several other areas of the federal budget. They were joined by a handful of other Republicans to defeat the measure by a vote of 45–55. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer had announced Democrats’ demands to reform immigration enforcement agency and the Trump administration’s mass deportation effort a day before the package came to the floor, telling reporters on Wednesday that “our caucus is unified” on these goals. Thursday’s vote means that lawmakers will now have to negotiate a new funding package with precious little time to spare before Friday night’s shutdown deadline. Should that deadline pass without a resolution, it would only paralyze part of the federal budget. But that isn’t to say the effects wouldn’t be felt by the American people. DHS has a larger portfolio than you might expect. In addition to immigration enforcement, its budget also includes air travel security, disaster aid, the Coast Guard, and more. The package that failed in the Senate also affects other areas of government; it includes funding for defense, education, labor, health, housing, and transportation. Decoupling DHS from the rest of the package would allow the Senate to swiftly get the rest of the government funded by sending it to the president’s desk, leaving negotiations on reining in ICE and CBP as the sole issue before the Senate. But that’s not the only demand Democrats are making. Before they are willing to support a funding package that includes DHS, they expect three specific reforms to ICE. Schumer listed them in order:... Join The Bulwark to unlock the rest.Become a paying member of The Bulwark to get access to this post and other subscriber-only content. A subscription gets you:
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