Washington is once again on the brink of a government shutdown as a funding deadline looms for several major agencies, including Homeland Security. Senate Democrats are demanding changes to immigration enforcement policies before allowing a massive House-passed spending package to advance. Republicans argue the reforms are excessive and procedurally impossible before the deadline. With negotiations intensifying, a temporary fix or partial shutdown now appears equally plausible.
Congress is racing to avoid a partial shutdown as DHS funding expires. Senate Democrats are blocking a $1.2T minibus over ICE reforms, while GOP leaders push to pass the House bill unchanged. Talks suggest a possible DHS split deal. #GovernmentShutdown #ShutdownCountdown pic.twitter.com/XF7WwhmXC2
— Matthew Brady (@mattbrady775) January 29, 2026
- Congress faces a high risk of a partial government shutdown starting late January 30 / early January 31, 2026, as funding for several agencies expires.
- The House passed a six-bill FY2026 “minibus” totaling $1.2+ trillion, including funding for the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), Defense, and Transportation-HUD.
- Senate Democrats, led by Chuck Schumer, are threatening to block the package unless the DHS bill is split out and immigration enforcement reforms are added.
- Democratic pressure intensified after the fatal shooting of Alex Pretti, a U.S. citizen and VA nurse, during a federal immigration-related operation in Minneapolis.
- Proposed Democratic reforms target Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Border Patrol, including stricter warrant rules, visible identification, body cameras, and limits on masked operations.
- Republicans, led by Senate Majority Leader John Thune, argue the House bill already includes accountability measures and warn changes would force an impossible House revote before the deadline.
- Negotiations between Senate leaders and Donald Trump have intensified, with reports of a possible compromise to temporarily extend DHS funding while passing the other five bills.
- If no deal is reached, a short or partial shutdown could occur, affecting non-essential services while core security and military operations continue.



