Senate Democrats sent over their latest proposal for immigration enforcement changes at the Department of Homeland Security as a shutdown of the vast department drags into its second month.
The offer, confirmed by a White House official and two other people with knowledge of the matter, is the latest of several the two parties have traded since the funding lapse began Feb. 14. Little progress has been made since toward an agreement that would fund agencies including TSA, FEMA, ICE and the Coast Guard.
Democrats have vowed to block funding until the administration agrees to immigration enforcement changes in the wake of federal agents killing two U.S. citizens in Minneapolis. Republicans, meanwhile, have rejected Democrats’ efforts to lop off immigration enforcement agencies and fund the rest of DHS.
The White House is “currently reviewing” the offer, the official said. But Senate Majority Leader John Thune told reporters Tuesday that the offer “didn’t change much from where we were.”
He said the White House has offered to increase funding for agent body cameras from an initial $20 million to $100 million and has proposed audits from the inspector general and reviews for noncompliance.
“There’s a whole bunch of stuff in there … that, in my view, have been significant gives on the part of the White House,” he said.