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Members of Congress clash over funding for Homeland Security after US strikes on Iran

Lawmakers are ratcheting up a showdown over funding for the Department of Homeland Security over concerns that the United States is at greater risk following U.S. and Israeli strikes in Iran.

After news of the attacks broke, members of Congress started sparring online with competing social media posts arguing over whether the partial shutdown of DHS, now in its third week, should come to a quick resolution. In a congressional hearing on Tuesday, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem blamed Democrats for halting her agency’s funding amid a heightened threat environment.

“As a result, critical national security missions, including border security, immigration enforcement, aviation security, disaster response, cybersecurity and the protection of critical infrastructure are all being strained,” Secretary Noem told the Senate Judiciary Committee.

Why We Wrote This

The U.S.-Israeli attacks on Iran are sending political ripples through Congress beyond whether members back the action. Republicans are using the potential of retaliation from Iran as leverage against Democrats, who want immigration enforcement reforms before voting to fund the Department of Homeland Security.

The extent of what’s “strained” is unclear and may involve the agency’s own actions. DHS has reassigned personnel to immigration enforcement, which some analysts have said draws resources away from criminal cases that are key to national security. Ms. Noem herself was assailed by some Republican senators at Tuesday’s hearing. Sen. Thom Tillis, a Republican from North Carolina, called for her resignation and labeled her leadership of the agency “a disaster.”

DHS, which oversees the nation’s airport and border security, did not respond to the Monitor’s requests for clarity around which roles in the agency continue to receive paychecks tied to a mega spending bill approved last year. (Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Customs and Border Protection, both part of DHS, were allocated roughly $140 billion from that bill.)

A shooting over the weekend in Texas added to security concerns, particularly among Republican lawmakers who raised the incident in their argument to fund DHS. Federal authorities are investigating the fatal shooting in Austin from Sunday – a day after the United States and Israel began bombing Iran – as a potential terrorist attack. Authorities say the suspect, now deceased, was a naturalized U.S. citizen who appeared to be wearing a t-shirt with an Iranian flag design. They said his motive is not known.

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