特朗普取得胜利:尽管共和党分歧加剧,参议院通过700亿美元移民执法资金法案


2026年6月5日 美国东部时间5:01 / 福克斯新闻频道

该和解法案将为美国移民与海关执法局(ICE)和边境巡逻队提供三年半的资金支持,随后将送交众议院审议

作者:亚历克斯·米勒,福克斯新闻

福克斯新闻首席国会通讯员查德·珀格拉姆在《底线》节目中报道了针对唐纳德·特朗普总统“反武器化基金”的反对声浪。

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参议院共和党人成功结成统一战线,推动唐纳德·特朗普总统提出的约700亿美元移民执法法案通过,但经过一整天马拉松式投票后,共和党内部对总统议程的分歧暴露无遗。

这项旨在为未来三年半的移民与海关执法局和边境巡逻队提供资金的预算和解法案的通过,结束了参议院一场旷日持久的拉锯战,这场博弈始于美国历史上最长的政府停摆时期。

参议院共和党人全天都在重申这一立场,他们表示,参议院少数党领袖、纽约州民主党参议员查克·舒默及民主党人拒绝在未附带大量改革方案的情况下为移民执法行动提供资金,最终迫使共和党采取行动。

数十名共和党反叛者未能永久废除特朗普颇具争议的20亿美元基金

2026年6月3日,唐纳德·特朗普总统在华盛顿白宫椭圆形办公室向媒体发表讲话。(曼德尔·恩根/法新社摄)

“民主党人不愿达成任何协议,最终干脆彻底离场,想必是因为他们认为,将这个问题留到11月大选对他们更有利,”参议院多数党领袖、南达科他州共和党议员约翰·图恩说道。

但当天及此前几周,参议院共和党人与特朗普政府之间不断加剧的裂痕几乎彻底破坏了整个立法进程。

起初,法案中包含为特朗普的舞厅提供10亿美元安保升级资金的条款,随后该条款被删除。

随后,美国司法部宣布将设立近20亿美元的“反武器化基金”,允许那些认为自己遭到政府 targeting的民众从这笔纳税人资金中提出索赔。

共和党人迫使特朗普颇具争议的20亿美元基金妥协后,推进移民执法资金法案

2026年2月3日,参议院卫生、教育、劳工与养老金委员会主席比尔·卡西迪在华盛顿国会山德克森参议院办公楼举行的听证会上质询美国国立卫生研究院主任贾扬塔·巴塔查里亚。(奇普·索莫德维拉/盖蒂图片社摄)

多名参议院共和党议员担忧,这笔资金可能会被2021年1月6日国会山骚乱中被定罪袭警的骚乱者挪用。

舒默和民主党人抓住这一争议点,在一整天马拉松式的“投票狂欢”系列投票中,试图永久废除该基金,尽管代理司法部长托德·布兰奇已承诺特朗普政府不会再推进该基金。

“我们能相信唐纳德·特朗普吗?他日复一日地对我们撒谎,当这笔资金能让他和他的家族获益时,我们能相信他不会伸出贪婪之手吗?绝对不可能,绝无可能,”舒默说道。

共和党借助移民执法资金法案,让特朗普颇具争议的20亿美元基金“彻底消失”

https://www.foxnews.com/video/6393105820112

民主党提出的多项修正案让共和党议员陷入艰难的连任困境,缅因州共和党议员苏珊·柯林斯、俄亥俄州共和党议员乔恩·赫斯特德以及阿拉斯加州共和党议员丹·沙利文都面临政治上的严峻挑战。

共和党议员也曾试图废除该基金,导致参议院会议厅内的紧张局势升级。

“局势并没有那么紧张,”路易斯安那州共和党议员约翰·肯尼迪说道,“我的意思是,我见过更糟的场面。至今还没人拿刀捅人呢。”

不过,在马拉松式投票开始之初,该基金险些让整个进程彻底停滞——路易斯安那州共和党议员比尔·卡西迪等人希望确保共和党废除该基金的提案也能进行投票。

“我只是想最大化成功的几率,”卡西迪在谈到这次延误时说道。

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最终,尽管有十几名共和党议员投票支持北卡罗来纳州共和党议员汤姆·蒂利斯的修正案,还有多名议员支持卡西迪的提案,但所有试图阻止未来重启该基金的尝试均告失败。

当六名共和党议员与参议院民主党人联手,要求未经国会批准不得动工修建这座大型建筑时,舞厅安保资金的争议再次浮出水面。

此外,南卡罗来纳州共和党议员林赛·格雷厄姆曾试图将《拯救美国法案》附加到和解法案中,但遭到共和党议员的反对,最终也未能通过。

该法案目前已送交众议院,预计共和党将于下周在众议院通过该法案。

亚历克斯·米勒是福克斯新闻数字频道负责报道美国参议院的记者。

Trump scores victory despite growing GOP divide after Senate passes $70B ICE, Border Patrol funding package

June 5, 2026 5:01am EDT / Fox News

The reconciliation bill funds ICE and Border Patrol for three and a half years and now heads to the House

By Alex Miller, Fox News

Fox News chief congressional correspondent Chad Pergram reports on the pushback against President Donald Trump’s ‘anti-weaponization fund’ on ‘The Bottom Line.’

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Senate Republicans managed to stitch together a unified front to advance President Donald Trump’s roughly $70 billion immigration enforcement package, but divisions over the president’s agenda were laid bare after a marathon day of votes.

Passage of the budget reconciliation package geared toward funding Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Border Patrol for the next three and a half years closes a long, drawn out chapter in the Senate that began during the longest shutdown in history.

It’s a point that Senate Republicans tried to return to throughout the day, reiterating that Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and Democrats had forced their hands after refusing to fund immigration operations without a plethora of reforms.

DOZEN GOP REBELS FAIL TO PERMANENTLY KILL TRUMP’S CONTROVERSIAL $2B FUND

President Donald Trump speaks to the press in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, D.C., on June 3, 2026.(Mandel Ngan/AFP)

“Democrats would not agree to anything, and eventually they walked away altogether, presumably because they thought that it would serve them better to have an issue for November,” Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., said.

But the day, and preceding weeks, were dominated by a growing rift between Senate Republicans and the Trump administration that threatened to blow up the process altogether.

First, it was the inclusion of $1 billion in funding for security upgrades to Trump’s ballroom, which was later stripped out.

Then, it was the Department of Justice’s (DOJ) announcement that a nearly $2 billion “anti-weaponization” fund was being launched to allow people who felt targeted by the government to make a claim from the pot of taxpayer money.

GOP ADVANCES ICE FUNDING PACKAGE AFTER FORCING TRUMP’S CONTROVERSIAL $2B FUND INTO RETREAT

Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee Chairman Bill Cassidy questions National Institutes of Health Director Jayanta Bhattacharya during a hearing at the Dirksen Senate Office Building on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., on Feb. 3, 2026.(Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

Several Senate Republicans worried that the money could be accessed by Jan. 6, 2021, rioters who were convicted of assaulting police.

Schumer and Democrats leaned into that open wound and spent much of the marathon, “vote-a-rama” vote series trying to spell a permanent end to the fund, despite acting Attorney General Todd Blanche vowing that the administration would no longer pursue it.

“Do we believe that Donald Trump, who has lied to us day in and day out, do we believe that he will be able to resist getting his sticky fingers in the slush fund when it would benefit himself and his family? No way, no way,” Schumer said.

GOP LEVERAGES ICE FUNDING PACKAGE TO MAKE TRUMP’S CONTROVERSIAL $2B FUND ‘NEVER EXIST’

https://www.foxnews.com/video/6393105820112

Many of the amendments pushed by Democrats placed Republicans in tough bids for reelection, Sens. Susan Collins, R-Maine, Jon Husted, R-Ohio, and Dan Sullivan, R-Alaska, into politically challenging positions.

Republicans tried to kill it, too, causing tensions on the Senate floor to rise.

“It’s not that tense,” Sen. John Kennedy, R-La., said. “I mean, I’ve seen worse. Nobody’s stabbed anybody yet.”

Still, the process nearly came to a grinding halt because of the fund at the start of the marathon vote series when Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La., and others wanted to ensure that GOP attempts to end the fund would get a vote, too.

“I just wanted to optimize the chances of success,” Cassidy said of the delay.

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Ultimately, despite a dozen Republicans voting for Sen. Thom Tillis’, R-N.C., amendment, and several voting for Cassidy’s, all attempts to thwart future bids to revive the fund failed.

The ballroom also came back into the picture when six Republicans joined Senate Democrats to prevent construction on the colossal structure from going forward without congressional approval.

Then there was an attempt by Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., to attach the SAVE America Act to the reconciliation package, which met Republican resistance and ultimately failed, too.

The package now heads to the House, where Republicans are expected to pass it by next week.

Alex Miller is a writer for Fox News Digital covering the U.S. Senate.

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