Trump Signs $70 Billion Bill To Fund Immigration Enforcement For 3 years

President Donald Trump signed a bill on Wednesday morning to fund immigration agencies through the end of his presidency.

 

Several Republican lawmakers joined the president in the Oval Office, including Kentucky GOP Sen. Rand Paul.

Paul chairs the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, which is one of the panels with jurisdiction over immigration.

“Boy oh boy, it’s nice to have Rand,” Trump remarked Wednesday as he kicked off the event.

House Republicans delivered the legislative victory to President Trump on Tuesday, narrowly passing a reconciliation package that will provide tens of billions of dollars in long-term funding for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), Customs and Border Protection (CBP), and other Department of Homeland Security operations.

The measure passed the House by the slimmest of margins, 214-212, following a tense floor vote that remained deadlocked until the final moments.

At one point, the vote stood tied at 213-213, creating uncertainty about whether Republican leaders would be able to secure enough support to push the package across the finish line.

Moments later, a Republican lawmaker changed his vote, giving the bill the one-vote majority needed for passage.

The legislation now represents one of the most significant border security funding packages approved during Trump’s second term and locks in resources for immigration enforcement through January 2029.

The package allocates roughly $70 billion in supplemental funding.

According to congressional reports, approximately:

• $38.6 billion will go to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)

• $22.6 billion will go to Customs and Border Protection (CBP)

• Nearly $5 billion will support broader Department of Homeland Security operations

• Additional funding will support child exploitation investigations and related law enforcement priorities

The legislation originated in the Senate, where Republicans approved the package after an overnight marathon voting session that lasted nearly 18 hours.

Because the bill was advanced through the budget reconciliation process, Republicans were able to pass it with a simple majority vote rather than the 60 votes normally required to overcome a Senate filibuster.

That procedural advantage allowed GOP lawmakers to bypass Democratic opposition and secure funding for key immigration enforcement priorities.

Republicans have argued that the funding is necessary to maintain border security gains achieved during Trump’s second term while providing long-term certainty for agencies responsible for immigration enforcement.

Supporters also contend that annual funding battles have created unnecessary instability for agencies tasked with securing the border and enforcing immigration laws.

The bill marks the latest step in what has become a dramatic expansion of federal immigration enforcement resources since Trump returned to office.

In 2025, Congress approved the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act,” which provided an additional $75 billion supplemental funding package for ICE.

That legislation significantly expanded the agency’s resources beyond its traditional annual operating budget of roughly $10 billion.

When spread across multiple years, the 2025 funding package effectively elevated ICE’s annual resources to nearly $29 billion per year, making it the most heavily funded federal law enforcement agency in the country.

Tuesday’s vote builds on that foundation.

Rather than relying on future appropriations battles, the new legislation guarantees funding levels through the remainder of Trump’s presidency.

For the White House, that represents a major strategic victory.

The administration has repeatedly emphasized immigration enforcement as one of its central priorities and campaigned heavily on promises to secure the southern border, expand detention capacity, increase deportations, and strengthen federal immigration enforcement operations.

Many GOP lawmakers described the package as essential for continuing border wall construction, hiring additional personnel, expanding detention facilities, and supporting what Trump has frequently described as the largest deportation operation in American history.

The legislation also provides certainty for federal agencies that previously depended on yearly funding negotiations in Congress.

Supporters argue that long-term funding allows agencies to make strategic investments in personnel, technology, and infrastructure without concerns about annual budget battles.

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