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$70B ICE/CBP Enforcement Funding Package Heads to House Floor — Expected Vote Week of June 8-12 as Largest Immigration Appropriation Nears Final Enactment

| ICE

As of June 7, 2026, the $70 billion immigration enforcement reconciliation package passed by the U.S. Senate 52-47 on June 5 was headed to the U.S. House of Representatives, where a floor vote was expected during the week of June 8-12 when the chamber returns from recess. If enacted without significant changes, the package will provide approximately $38.6 billion for ICE enforcement and detention, $26 billion for CBP, and approximately $5 billion in discretionary DHS enforcement funds, all secured through the remainder of Trump's second term — insulating both agencies from future government shutdown pressures after the 76-day DHS shutdown that ended in March 2026. The bill also includes the controversial $1.776 billion anti-weaponization settlement fund for individuals the Trump administration claims were improperly prosecuted. Combined with the $45 billion+ appropriated through the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (H.R. 1, signed July 4, 2025), total immigration enforcement appropriations under Trump's second term would exceed $115 billion — equivalent to roughly 13 times ICE's pre-2025 annual base budget. The package contains no independent oversight provisions for ICE detention, no minimum medical care standards, and no use-of-force accountability requirements. House passage is expected along near-party-line votes with no Democratic support. The bill would then go to President Trump for signature.

$70B ICE/CBP enforcement package heads to House floor for vote expected week of June 8-12 — on track to become largest immigration enforcement appropriation in US history.
$70B ICE/CBP enforcement package heads to House floor for vote expected week of June 8-12 — on track to become largest immigration enforcement appropriation in US history. — AP / Local10