The US Senate passed a $70 billion immigration enforcement funding bill 52-47 early Friday morning, ending a partial government shutdown that had stalled federal operations.
The legislation bankrolls Donald Trump's immigration crackdown, covering border security and deportation operations at a scale that drew fierce opposition from Democratic senators and unease from a handful of Republicans.
The vote broke largely along party lines, though the narrow margin reflected internal splits over a dedicated fund structured around Trump's enforcement priorities, according to reporting by The Guardian on June 5, 2026.
Democrats argued the bill handed the White House unchecked money for mass deportations. Republican supporters said the funding fulfilled a core campaign mandate.
The shutdown had begun after Congress missed a spending deadline, with the immigration fund emerging as the central sticking point in negotiations.
The bill now goes to the House, where leadership is expected to schedule a floor vote in the coming days.