
Trump was offered an off-ramp to the DHS shutdown but he didn’t take it – yet
Key Takeaways
- Off-ramp would fund all DHS parts except ICE enforcement operations.
- Two sources familiar with the conversations told CNN.
- Senate Majority Leader John Thune spoke with Trump after staff presented the idea.
Off-ramp offer and rejection
Trump was offered an off-ramp to the DHS shutdown: fund every part of the department except enforcement operations by Immigration and Customs Enforcement, two sources familiar with the conversations told CNN.
“President Donald Trump was presented Sunday with a potential off-ramp to the more than month-long Department of Homeland Security shutdown: fund every part of the department except enforcement operations by Immigration and Customs Enforcement, two sources familiar with the conversations told CNN”
Senate Majority Leader John Thune spoke with Trump after staff presented the idea to the president, but Trump rejected the idea as he took to Truth Social to attack Democrats for not backing the 'SAVE America Act,' a federal elections overhaul bill that faces near-impossible odds in the Senate, the sources said.

He posted that he would not make any deal with the Democrats and described a proposed Five Billion Dollar cut in ICE funding as unacceptable to him and the American people.
GOP dynamics and talks
The funding idea marked a major reversal for Republicans who had blocked similar proposals from Democrats for weeks and reflected shifting political dynamics as security lines grow across the country at understaffed airports.
It also reflected a growing sentiment among some in the GOP, including Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, whose state has been badly hit by TSA lines in recent days.

Democrats have long argued they'd be willing to fund everything but ICE as negotiations over reining in Trump’s immigration enforcement policies have stalled in the Senate.
Aides warn progress has been tedious and slow, and there is little sign negotiators could break the logjam by week’s end by solely continuing to search for a middle ground on the complicated immigration enforcement policies that Democrats have attacked for months.
Negotiations mechanics and stakes
As part of the plan, Trump was told lawmakers could fund immigration pieces of ICE using reconciliation—the arcane budget process that allows Senate Republicans to pass bills with just 51 votes, the sources said.
“President Donald Trump was presented Sunday with a potential off-ramp to the more than month-long Department of Homeland Security shutdown: fund every part of the department except enforcement operations by Immigration and Customs Enforcement, two sources familiar with the conversations told CNN”
That process last summer allowed the GOP to inject billions into immigration enforcement last summer without Democratic support.
Trump’s call for Capitol Hill to back the elections overhaul bill will likely be a nonstarter for Democrats, especially with the White House demanding it include controversial provisions ending the widespread practice of no-excuse mail voting and targeting transgender policies.
Even before the Sunday night missive, Republicans — who’d been waiting for Democrats to respond to the latest White House offer in DHS talks — suggested negotiations were largely stalled.
Democrats believed they were making progress in meetings with Homan, but a source familiar with the negotiations told CNN that Democrats were told Homan was not available to meet this morning with Democratic appropriators.
Republicans had agreed to infuse $100 million for body cameras. Democrats also believed they were making progress in training standards and barring enforcement in sensitive areas like hospitals, schools and churches.
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