Democrats lay out demands for DHS funding, urging GOP to “get serious” with both sides far apart


Washington — Democratic leaders on Wednesday outlined their demands for funding the Department of Homeland Security beyond next week, reiterating several policy proposals to rein in the Trump administration’s immigration enforcement practices — some of which Republicans have already rejected. 

“Taxpayer dollars should be used to make life more affordable for everyday Americans, not to brutalize or kill them,” House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries said at a news conference at the Capitol. “ICE is completely and totally out of control, immigration enforcement should be just, it should be fair, and it should be humane. That is not what is taking place right now.”

Jeffries, who spoke alongside Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and other Democratic leaders, said “dramatic changes” are necessary at DHS, which oversees Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Customs and Border Protection. 

The House approved a funding package Tuesday that funded the bulk of the government through September and extended funding for DHS through Feb. 13. Democrats and Republicans are now up against the clock to reach an agreement on long-term funding or pass another short-term extension.

Schumer and Jeffries released a list of demands Wednesday night, laying out a series of “guardrails” that they believe Congress should put on DHS. Those include rules restricting immigration agents from wearing masks, requiring them to wear body cameras and identification and standardizing their uniforms to avoid the appearance of “paramilitary” policing.

The Democratic leaders also want immigration officers to be banned from entering private property without judicial warrants, carrying out operations near sensitive locations like schools and churches, detaining people without verifying they aren’t U.S. citizens first or conducting searches based on a person’s race, language, accent or job. 

They demanded a “reasonable use of force policy” and a requirement that state law enforcement agencies be allowed to investigate incidents where federal agents are accused of using excessive force. They want DHS to get permission from state and local governments before carrying out “large-scale operations.” And they want “safeguards” to ensure that lawyers and members of Congress can enter immigration detention facilities.

“These are just some of the common-sense proposals that the American people clearly would like to see in terms of the dramatic changes that are needed at the Department of Homeland Security before there’s a full-year appropriations bill,” Jeffries said.

Schumer said Democrats in the House and Senate are “on the same page.”

Many of the demands mirror the changes Schumer articulated before the Senate voted to approve the most recent funding package. He said Democrats would release legislation detailing the demands soon.

“We’re united with the American people, we’re united as House and Senate Democrats,” Schumer said. “We’re going to have tough, strong legislation. We hope to have it within the next 24 hours that we will submit together. And then we want our Republican colleagues to finally get serious about this, because this is turning America inside out in a way we haven’t seen in a very long time.”

Republicans have appeared amenable to some of the proposals, like the use of body cameras and bringing an end to roving patrols, while some of the other proposals have been more divisive. And Senate Majority Leader John Thune has acknowledged that reaching a deal and getting it through both chambers is an “impossibility” ahead of the deadline. 

Democratic leaders have suggested they will oppose another funding extension for DHS, making a shutdown of the department likely. Immigration operations would continue operating, since ICE and CBP received an influx of funds in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act last year.



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