WASHINGTON — House Speaker Mike Johnson said Sunday it will be a few days before a government funding package comes up for a vote, all but ensuring the partial federal shutdown will drag into the week as Democrats and Republicans debate reining in the Trump administration's sweeping immigration enforcement operations.
Johnson signaled he is relying on help from President Donald Trump to ensure passage. Trump struck a deal with senators to separate out funding for the Department of Homeland Security from a broader package after public outrage over two shooting deaths during protests in Minneapolis against Immigration and Customs Enforcement. The measure approved Friday by the Senate would fund DHS temporarily, for two weeks, setting up a deadline for Congress to debate and vote on new restrictions on ICE operations.
''The president is leading this,'' Johnson, R-La., told ''Fox News Sunday.''
''It's his play call to do it this way," the speaker said, adding that the Republican president has ''already conceded that he wants to turn down the volume'' on federal immigration operations.
Johnson faces a daunting challenge ahead, trying to muscle the funding legislation through the House while Democrats are refusing to provide the votes for speedy passage. They are demanding restraints on ICE that go beyond $20 million for body cameras that already is in the bill. They want to require that federal immigration agents unmask and identify themselves and are pressing for an end to roving patrols, amid other changes.
Democrats dig in on ICE changes
''What is clear is that the Department of Homeland Security needs to be dramatically reformed,'' said House Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries of New York said on ABC's ''This Week.''
Jeffries said the administration needs to begin negotiations now, not over the next two weeks, on changes to immigration enforcement operations.