WASHINGTON. Senate Republican leaders this week moved to drop a proposed $1 billion security allocation for the White House complex and President Trump's planned ballroom after multiple GOP senators questioned the timing, cost and lack of detailed justification; the request had been tied to a roughly $70 billion bill to fund ICE and Border Patrol. Senators John Kennedy and Thom Tillis publicly cited insufficient votes as leaders, including Majority Leader John Thune, acknowledged ongoing vote and parliamentary issues on Wednesday; the Senate is seeking to pass the immigration-enforcement funding bill and send it to the House before a weeklong Memorial Day recess while leaving the contested security provision off the package.
Prepared by Lauren Mitchell and reviewed by editorial team.
This decision impacts your tax dollars. The proposed $1 billion security upgrade for the White House was questioned by GOP senators for its timing and cost. Check where your senators stand on this issue. It's your money they're deciding on.
Senate Republicans have dropped a $1 billion security request for the White House, citing cost and timing concerns. They're focusing on passing a $70 billion immigration-enforcement funding bill instead. Worth forwarding if you know someone interested in how our government spends money.
Republican senators who opposed the $1 billion security request gained leverage to block the proposal and shaped party debate over spending priorities ahead of a key recess.
The White House and the Secret Service suffered a setback as their $1 billion funding request lost Republican support amid questions about cost and transparency.
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