By Alex Miller | 福克斯新闻
2026年2月10日 美国东部时间上午6:00发布
参议院正紧急行动,以避免唐纳德·特朗普总统任内第三次政府停摆。在谈判看似陷入僵局后,议员们谨慎乐观地认为可能达成协议。
据熟悉谈判情况的消息人士向福克斯新闻数字频道透露,参议院共和党人周末收到了参议院民主党人的”党派诉求清单”。白宫也提交了自己的反建议,但截至周一晚间,一些议员尚未明确该方案的具体内容。
包括南达科他州共和党参议院多数党领袖约翰·图恩在内的一些议员不愿透露具体细节,但指出国会民主党人和白宫正在”交换文件”,并暗示这种来回沟通是谈判取得进展的良好迹象。
但议员们尚未摆脱困境,图恩自参议院民主党要求国土安全部(DHS)延长两周资金以来就一直警告这一点。国会必须在周五前避免停摆,几乎没有时间在两院之间推进短期临时拨款法案。
共和党警告民主党移民改革推动实为削减边境执法资金的幌子
共和党人正在考虑另一项短期拨款延长,即继续决议案(CR),以避免部分停摆。图恩表示,民主党人是否会签署取决于背景谈判的进展情况,但暗示到目前为止,事态正朝着解决方案发展。
“基于我对目前讨论的了解,我认为存在达成协议的可能,但要等提案回来后才能有更清楚的认识,”图恩说,”我们有机会对其进行评估。”
图恩稍后表示,他计划在周二提出另一项继续决议案,但指出期限”还需要谈判确定”。”让我们看看第二天会带来什么,然后再继续推进。”
民主党人的主要目标是约束美国移民和海关执法局(ICE),这是在亚历克斯·普雷蒂和蕾妮·妮可·古德被枪杀之后提出的。
他们提交的提案中包含一些共和党人认为难以接受的内容,包括要求ICE探员获得司法令状、摘下面罩并准备好身份证明——共和党一些人警告称,这样做会导致更多探员遭到”公开信息曝光”(doxxing),即个人私人信息如地址被公之于众。
纽约州民主党参议院少数党领袖查克·舒默警告称,共和党人回应的”时钟正在滴答作响”。
停摆暂避,但参议院警告国土安全部争端可能在数日内引发新一轮停摆
“我们已经向你们提交了提案,这些提案非常合理,”舒默在参议院发言时表示,”我希望我们这边的同事,至少是参议院中的许多人,认识到情况需要改变,表明他们准备采取有意义的行动。”
在民主党人最终在周六提交其诉求的立法版本之前,共和党人曾公开质疑他们是否真的希望进行严肃谈判。但周末情况发生了变化。
一名白宫官员告诉福克斯新闻,”特朗普总统始终如一,他希望政府保持开放,政府一直在与两党合作,确保美国人民不必再忍受另一场漫长、毫无意义且伤人的停摆。”
与此同时,第三次可能停摆的范围和规模将仅限于国土安全部,但实际上只会影响联邦紧急事务管理局(FEMA)、运输安全管理局(TSA)、海岸警卫队以及该机构伞下的其他优先事项。这是因为ICE和移民行动正从特朗普的”巨额漂亮法案”中获得数十亿美元资金支持。
“认为美国人的安全不是首要考虑因素,我认为这对民主党人来说是一个巨大的错误,我当然希望他们能继续真诚行事,”阿拉巴马州共和党参议员、国土安全支出小组委员会主席凯蒂·布里特表示。
“因为你确实知道,ICE以及海关和边境巡逻队将继续获得资金支持,”她补充道。
舒默与杰弗里斯修复裂痕,在最后期限临近之际就国土安全部改革展现统一阵线
上议院的局势很快也将变得复杂。议员们定于本周四离开华盛顿特区开始为期一周的休会,许多人还将前往慕尼黑安全会议。
该会议从最后期限当天开始并持续到周末。图恩警告称,如果避免国土安全部停摆的进展甚微,他可能会取消即将到来的休会。
尽管如此,参议院民主党人认为现在主动权掌握在共和党人手中,并等待其对手采取行动。
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“我的意思是,我认为他们相当通情达理,”康涅狄格州民主党参议员、参议院国土安全拨款小组委员会最高民主党成员克里斯·墨菲表示。
“我的意思是,我们没有要求遥不可及的目标,”他继续说道,”我们只是要求对ICE在恐吓美国城市的方式进行有针对性但有影响力的改革。显然,我们愿意进行谈判。”
亚历克斯·米勒是福克斯新闻数字频道记者,负责报道美国参议院新闻。
https://www.foxnews.com/video/6388744851112
Senate races to avert third shutdown as DHS deal takes shape
By Alex Miller | Fox News
Published February 10, 2026 6:00am EST
The Senate is scrambling to avoid a third government shutdown under President Donald Trump, and after negotiations seemingly appeared to hit a brick wall, lawmakers are cautiously optimistic that a deal could be made.
Senate Republicans received Senate Democrats’ “partisan wishlist” of demands over the weekend, sources familiar with negotiations told Fox News Digital. The White House sent over its own counter-proposal, but several lawmakers weren’t clear what was in the package as of Monday night.
Some, including Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., wouldn’t say, but noted that congressional Democrats and the White House were “trading papers,” and signaled that the back and forth activity was a good sign of negotiations moving forward.
But lawmakers aren’t out of the woods yet, a reality that Thune warned of since Senate Democrats demanded a two-week funding extension for the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). Congress has until Friday to avert a shutdown and little time to actually move a short-term patch from one side of the building to the other.
REPUBLICANS WARN DEMOCRATS’ ICE REFORM PUSH IS COVER TO DEFUND BORDER ENFORCEMENT
Republicans are mulling another short-term extension, known as a continuing resolution (CR), to avert a partial shutdown. Thune said whether Democrats would sign off depended on how well background negotiations were going, but hinted that so far, things were moving toward a solution.
“I think, based on what I’m familiar with about the discussion so far, I think there is, but we’ll know more when the proposal comes back,” Thune said. “Let’s have a chance to evaluate it.”
Thune later said that he planned to tee up another CR on Tuesday, but noted that the length would “have to be negotiated. But let’s see what the next day brings, and we’ll go from there.”
Democrats’ prime objective is reining in Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), following the fatal shootings of Alex Pretti and Renee Nicole Good.
The proposal they submitted included items that are a bridge too far for Republicans, including requiring ICE agents to get judicial warrants, de-mask and have identification ready — some in the GOP warn doing so would lead to more agents being doxxed, or when a person’s private information is made public, like their address.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., warned that the “clock is ticking” for Republicans to respond.
SHUTDOWN AVERTED FOR NOW, BUT SENATE WARNS DHS FIGHT COULD TRIGGER ANOTHER IN DAYS
“We have sent you our proposals, and they are exceedingly reasonable,” Schumer said on the Senate floor. “I hope our colleagues on the other side, many of whom, at least here in the Senate, recognize that things need to change, show they’re ready to act in a meaningful way.”
Prior to Democrats finally handing over the legislative version of their demands on Saturday, Republicans publicly questioned if they actually wanted to have serious negotiations. That changed over the weekend.
A White House official told Fox News that “President Trump has been consistent, he wants the government open and the Administration has been working with both parties to ensure the American people don’t have to endure another drawn-out, senseless, and hurtful shutdown.”
Meanwhile, the scope and scale of a possible third closure would be limited to just the DHS, but would really only have an effect on FEMA, TSA, the Coast Guard and other priorities under the agency’s umbrella. That’s because ICE and immigration operations are flush with billions from Trump’s “big, beautiful bill.”
“To say that the security of Americans is not paramount, I think, would be a huge mistake for the Democrats, and I certainly hope that they’ll continue to operate in good faith,” Sen. Katie Britt, R-Ala., and the chair of the Homeland Security spending panel, said.
“Because you do realize, ICE and Customs and Border Patrol would continue to be funded,” she continued.
SCHUMER, JEFFRIES MEND RIFT, PRESENT UNITED FRONT ON DHS REFORMS AS DEADLINE NEARS
Things are also about to get complicated quickly in the upper chamber. Lawmakers are set to leave Washington, D.C., for a weeklong recess this Thursday, and many are headed overseas to the Munich Security Conference.
That starts on the day of the deadline and lasts through the weekend. Thune warned that it was possible he would cancel the upcoming recess, especially if there was little progress toward avoiding a DHS shutdown.
Still, Senate Democrats believe that the ball is in the GOP’s court and are waiting for their counterparts to act.
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“I mean, I think they’re pretty reasonable,” Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., and the top Democrat on the Senate Homeland Security Appropriations panel, said.
“I mean, we did not ask for the moon,” he continued. “We asked for targeted but impactful changes in the way that ICE is terrorizing American cities. So obviously we’re willing to negotiate.”
Alex Miller is a writer for Fox News Digital covering the U.S. Senate.
https://www.foxnews.com/video/6388744851112
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