Has Homeland Security funding bill passed? Latest on partial shutdown
Melina KhanThe fate of the record-long Department of Homeland Security partial shutdown still hangs in the balance in Congress.
House Speaker Mike Johnson indicated on April 27 that there could be delays with a bill to fund most of DHS, despite the proposed legislation having already passed in the Senate.
The partial shutdown has stretched on for more than 70 days since the DHS's annual budget failed to pass in mid-February. Lawmakers have been at odds over funding for Immigration and Customs Enforcement in the wake of the killings of two U.S. citizens by federal agents in Minnesota earlier this year.
Over a month into the impasse, President Donald Trump signed an order on March 27 to reroute federal dollars to pay DHS employees.
But that money is running out, officials have said, making the situation more urgent for Congress. Here's the latest.

Did DHS funding bill pass? Where it stands in Congress
Despite some progress in Congress at times over the last few months, lawmakers have so far failed to strike a bipartisan deal to fund DHS.
The Senate has twice voted to send a DHS funding bill to the House for consideration, to no avail.
Last week, Senate Republicans fast-tracked a budget proposal that recommends giving ICE and Border Patrol roughly $70 billion over the next three years.
On April 27, Johnson suggested that the House will push for a revised version of the funding resolution, which it had been expected to vote on this week, per Reuters.
"We have a modified version that I think is going to be much better for both chambers. It doesn't change most of the substance. But it makes sure that we're not going to orphan the primary agencies of DHS," Johnson told reporters.
When does emergency DHS funding run out?
The newly-appointed DHS Secretary Markwayne Mullin warned that the emergency funds approved by Trump to pay the agency's workers could run out as soon as the first week of May.
“I’ve got one payroll left and there (are) no more emergency funds, so the president can’t do another executive order because there’s no more money there," Mullin said on “Fox and Friends" on April 21.
Without a funding deal, tens of thousands of Transportation Security Administration agents could go without pay again, potentially leading to more delays at airports around the country.
Contributing: Zachary Schermele and Kate Perez, USA TODAY
Melina Khan is a national trending reporter for USA TODAY. Keep up with her on X @melinakh and Instagram @bymelinakhan.