WATCH LIFE: House considers funding deal to reopen Department of Homeland Security
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The Bottom Line
The Senate unanimously approved a funding deal to reopen the Department of Homeland Security, sending it to the House.
How This Affects You
DHS funding restoration will prevent disruption to border security, immigration enforcement, and other critical homeland security operations.
AI Summary
The Senate unanimously approved a funding deal to reopen the Department of Homeland Security, sending it to the House for a vote expected Friday. The DHS had faced a shutdown or lapse in funding, which would have disrupted border security, immigration enforcement, and other critical homeland security operations. House approval would restore full funding and operations to the agency. The unanimous Senate passage suggests bipartisan support for the measure, though the House vote will be the final legislative hurdle before the deal reaches the president's desk.
What's Being Done
The Senate passed the funding bill unanimously; the House is expected to vote Friday to send it to the president's desk.
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DHS funding live updates as Johnson says House will vote on its own stopgap plan, rather than Senate-approved bill - CBS News

WATCH: Johnson rejects Homeland Security funding bill passed by the Senate as a 'joke'
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