Zürcher Nachrichten - US Senate approves $70 billion for Trump immigration crackdown

EUR -
AED 4.194362
AFN 73.094756
ALL 93.997136
AMD 420.523252
ANG 2.044819
AOA 1047.87657
ARS 1700.586692
AUD 1.652009
AWG 2.058635
AZN 1.935388
BAM 1.957325
BBD 2.299982
BDT 140.797852
BGN 1.931154
BHD 0.430565
BIF 3409.168063
BMD 1.1421
BND 1.477345
BOB 7.908092
BRL 5.965983
BSD 1.141885
BTN 108.995537
BWP 15.48593
BYN 3.312852
BYR 22385.157128
BZD 2.296679
CAD 1.621371
CDF 2565.156538
CHF 0.918957
CLF 0.026849
CLP 1056.715829
CNY 7.753832
CNH 7.754721
COP 3847.334671
CRC 519.702645
CUC 1.1421
CUP 30.265646
CVE 110.612769
CZK 24.202579
DJF 202.973401
DKK 7.474472
DOP 67.498538
DZD 152.258657
EGP 56.066139
ERN 17.131498
ETB 180.625487
FJD 2.58166
FKP 0.860146
GBP 0.856348
GEL 3.009416
GGP 0.860146
GHS 13.025663
GIP 0.860146
GMD 82.80023
GNF 10021.92659
GTQ 8.711673
GYD 238.865063
HKD 8.957535
HNL 29.991685
HRK 7.532609
HTG 149.365068
HUF 354.43527
IDR 20597.542437
ILS 3.419047
IMP 0.860146
INR 109.101886
IQD 1496.721858
IRR 1571472.293475
ISK 143.51652
JEP 0.860146
JMD 179.349738
JOD 0.809737
JPY 184.386879
KES 147.650165
KGS 99.876863
KHR 4579.820353
KMF 492.244772
KPW 1027.890268
KRW 1766.223156
KWD 0.348661
KYD 0.951633
KZT 542.217715
LAK 25206.144028
LBP 102275.042116
LKR 383.281918
LRD 207.57634
LSL 18.581415
LTL 3.372324
LVL 0.690845
LYD 7.32657
MAD 10.714609
MDL 20.22358
MGA 4888.18764
MKD 61.62341
MMK 2397.560999
MNT 4093.502537
MOP 9.225607
MRU 45.752413
MUR 53.987316
MVR 17.656654
MWK 1983.827516
MXN 19.96611
MYR 4.648462
MZN 72.991699
NAD 18.604391
NGN 1565.023624
NIO 41.783701
NOK 11.261579
NPR 174.396115
NZD 2.006978
OMR 0.439156
PAB 1.14188
PEN 3.885397
PGK 5.01325
PHP 70.26255
PKR 317.646558
PLN 4.289442
PYG 6939.406756
QAR 4.162929
RON 5.234277
RSD 117.361017
RUB 88.513151
RWF 1673.176285
SAR 4.30252
SBD 9.203658
SCR 15.143761
SDG 685.82765
SEK 11.070882
SGD 1.476633
SHP 0.852693
SLE 27.810268
SLL 23949.267062
SOS 652.70485
SRD 42.996612
STD 23639.161076
STN 24.897777
SVC 9.991785
SYP 126.238693
SZL 18.582148
THB 37.992529
TJS 10.562784
TMT 4.00877
TND 3.342353
TOP 2.749903
TRY 53.373636
TTD 7.747002
TWD 36.48564
TZS 2998.009849
UAH 51.173318
UGX 4185.242559
USD 1.1421
UYU 45.83511
UZS 13608.119812
VES 729.691331
VND 30025.805147
VUV 137.048697
WST 3.163211
XAF 656.465603
XAG 0.018696
XAU 0.000277
XCD 3.086582
XCG 2.057967
XDR 0.816622
XOF 656.130886
XPF 119.331742
YER 270.734571
ZAR 18.581405
ZMK 10280.269652
ZMW 20.811032
ZWL 367.755687
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    65.61

    0%

  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    22.15

    -0.14%

  • CMSC

    0.0400

    21.99

    +0.18%

  • BCC

    0.4500

    75.93

    +0.59%

  • RIO

    1.0700

    94.42

    +1.13%

  • NGG

    2.6700

    82.85

    +3.22%

  • RELX

    0.5500

    31.93

    +1.72%

  • GSK

    2.3600

    53.66

    +4.4%

  • RYCEF

    0.2500

    19.75

    +1.27%

  • AZN

    11.2900

    195.15

    +5.79%

  • BCE

    0.4000

    21.42

    +1.87%

  • JRI

    0.0600

    13

    +0.46%

  • VOD

    0.1400

    13.15

    +1.06%

  • BTI

    1.2100

    61.77

    +1.96%

  • BP

    1.2500

    37.4

    +3.34%

US Senate approves $70 billion for Trump immigration crackdown
US Senate approves $70 billion for Trump immigration crackdown / Photo: Mandel NGAN - AFP/File

US Senate approves $70 billion for Trump immigration crackdown

The US Senate on Friday approved $70 billion in funding for Donald Trump's hardline immigration crackdown, but only after a long day of votes on multiple amendments that highlighted Republican infighting over some of the president's other contentious policy proposals.

Text size:

The bill would fund Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Border Patrol through the rest of Trump's term, handing the Republican leader a major victory on one of his signature issues after months of bitter fighting over the future of immigration enforcement.

It now heads to the House of Representatives, where Republican leaders hope to move it early next week to send it to Trump's desk.

The package follows a record partial shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) earlier this year, when Democrats refused to support new money for immigration enforcement without restrictions on tactics such as raids in sensitive locations and the use of masks by officers.

Republicans rejected those demands, instead choosing to fund ICE and Border Patrol through the fast-track "budget reconciliation" process, which allows them to bypass Democratic opposition if they can keep their own members united.

The Senate vote came after an hours-long amendment marathon known in Washington as a "vote-a-rama," a chaotic process allowing lawmakers to force votes on politically sensitive issues before final passage.

For Trump, the process meant renewed scrutiny of controversies that have alarmed members of his own party, including a proposed "anti-weaponization" fund for allies who claim they were unfairly targeted by the government and $1 billion that had been earmarked for security around his planned White House ballroom.

The underlying immigration bill no longer included the ballroom money, but both issues became symbols of a broader unease among Republicans about defending Trump's priorities ahead of midterm elections expected to be dominated by voter concerns over the cost of living.

- Rebellion -

The bill had been delayed for weeks after senators rebelled over the Justice Department's proposed $1.8 billion "anti-weaponization" compensation package, which critics attacked as a "slush fund" that could allow people convicted over the 2021 attack on the US Capitol to receive taxpayer money.

Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche told lawmakers this week that the administration would not move forward with the fund. But Trump continued to praise it, calling it "beautiful" and saying he would have to "ask the lawyers" whether it was dead or merely paused.

That ambiguity pushed some Republicans to try to write the fund's demise into law.

"When you're explaining, you're losing. There's no way to explain the $1.776 (billion) fund. So the only way you can explain it is explain that you got rid of it," North Carolina Senator Thom Tillis told reporters.

The amendment votes did little to derail Trump's agenda but showed the limits of party discipline, with multiple Republicans defecting on measures targeting the anti-weaponization fund, future ballroom funding and Trump's move to install a loyalist housing official atop US intelligence.

Democrats also used the process to try to redirect immigration enforcement money toward housing and other affordability concerns, arguing that Republicans were prioritizing Trump's deportation agenda over the cost of living.

And in what was seen as a separate rebuke of Trump policy, several Republicans also backed a Democratic effort to circumvent House leadership with a vote to impose new sanctions on Russia over its invasion of Ukraine and provide $8 billion in military financing loans to Kyiv.

Republicans countered that the money was needed to restore immigration enforcement funding after the earlier DHS shutdown left the issue unresolved.

The earlier stopgap measure funded much of Homeland Security through September 30, including the Federal Emergency Management Agency, the Coast Guard, the Transportation Security Administration and the Secret Service.

But it excluded ICE and Border Patrol, setting up the separate fight that ended with Friday's vote.

The result gives Trump a major legislative win on immigration while underscoring a recurring problem for Republican leaders: even with control of Congress, they must still manage internal resistance to the political baggage attached to some of the president's priorities.

W.F.Portman--NZN