共和党反对特朗普“政治迫害追责”基金 移民海关执法局拨款投票受阻


2026-05-21T20:17:01.227Z / 路透社

华盛顿5月21日路透电 — 美国参议院共和党人周四放弃就一项为美国移民执法行动拨款的法案进行投票的计划,此举是针对唐纳德·特朗普总统一项优先事项的政治反抗:该事项是设立18亿美元基金,用于补偿政府“政治迫害”的受害者,包括2021年1月6日美国国会大厦骚乱期间被判暴力犯罪的人员。

参议院取消了原定于当日就一项720亿美元拨款法案进行的投票,该法案旨在为特朗普主导的大规模移民驱逐行动提供资金,由美国移民与海关执法局(ICE)执行。投票至少推迟至6月议员们结束为期一周的阵亡将士纪念日假期休会返回后进行。

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参议院多数党领袖约翰·图恩原本试图将该立法聚焦于为ICE和边境巡逻队拨款至特朗普任期结束。但在特朗普的授意下,18亿美元的“政治迫害追责”基金以及另一笔用于建造白宫宴会厅的10亿美元拨款成为了阻碍投票的关键争议点。

“这项法案本应非常聚焦、目标明确、简洁直白,但本周情况变得复杂了一些,”图恩表示,他表达了自己的挫败感,“这让一切都变得比本该有的样子难得多。”

这场围绕ICE拨款法案的党派之争发生之际,一名特朗普支持的挑战者击败了连任两届的路易斯安那州共和党参议员比尔·卡西迪,且特朗普在德克萨斯州支持了一位初选挑战者,挑战资深共和党参议员约翰·科宁。

总统通常会支持本党在任议员。共和党人表示,特朗普反对卡西迪和科宁的立场加剧了此次辩论的激烈气氛。

“他在参议院已经失去了一些支持,”内布拉斯加州共和党人唐·培根说道,他预测参议院共和党人将不得不对特朗普的这项基金施加限制。该基金是司法部宣布的特朗普与美国国税局之间法院和解协议的一部分。

“他既是原告,也是被告方的老板。仅从表面来看,这件事就很可疑,”他说。

代理总检察长被传唤至国会山

在此背景下,代理美国司法部长托德·布兰奇被传唤至国会山,在他为18亿美元基金进行辩护时,直面愤怒参议员的质询。该基金旨在补偿特朗普盟友及其他政府“政治迫害”的受害者。

布兰奇在会面期间,多名参议员坚持要求这笔资金不得用于补偿在国会大厦骚乱期间袭击执法人员并被定罪的人员,据一位知情人士透露。

特朗普已经赦免了许多在那场致命袭击中犯罪并被定罪的人员。

“我认为有人担心公关问题,”印第安纳州共和党参议员托德·杨在接受记者采访时谈到此次会面时表示。

据一位熟悉该安排的消息人士透露,双方情绪极度激动,原计划特朗普、参议院共和党人与众议院议长迈克·约翰逊之间的白宫会议被取消。

两党反对宴会厅拨款

特朗普的反对立场在周三晚间显露无遗,参议院共和党人对一项10亿美元的新安全资金提案说“不”。这笔资金用于特朗普计划在白宫东翼旧址建造的9万平方英尺(约合8360平方米)宴会厅,该宴会厅已于去年10月被拆除。

数月来,特朗普一直表示该项目无需纳税人出资。尽管如此,一项10亿美元的纳税人负担费用被附加到720亿美元的移民驱逐项目拨款法案中,摆在了参议员们面前。

培根表示,白宫未能说明这笔10亿美元宴会厅资金中的大部分将用于白宫建筑群内必要的安全升级。“宴会厅的推出方式太糟糕了,我不确定短期内能否挽回局面,”他说。

民主党人猛烈抨击这是一个“浮华”、“奢侈”的“虚荣项目”,这将成为他们中期选举竞选宣传的一个切入点,回应选民对食品、住房、医疗保健尤其是汽油价格高企的担忧。美国2月28日对伊朗发动袭击后,汽油价格飙升。

图恩本周一开始就特朗普反对科宁的背书与总统进行了一场紧张的电话通话,他在周四会议结束后告诉记者,他的政党将在假期休会后“从我们停下的地方继续推进”。

不寻求连任的北卡罗来纳州共和党参议员汤姆·蒂利斯毫不避讳地批评特朗普。

在接受Spectrum News采访时,蒂利斯谈到“政治迫害追责”基金时说:“我认为这简直蠢透了。”“美国人民会立刻拒绝这项提案。”

理查德·考恩、大卫·摩根、博·埃里克森、雅各布·博奇和凯瑟琳·杰克逊报道;凯特琳·韦伯、罗德·尼克尔和迈克尔·勒尔蒙德编辑

Republican revolt over Trump ‘weaponization’ fund stalls ICE funding vote

2026-05-21T20:17:01.227Z / Reuters

WASHINGTON, May 21 (Reuters) – U.S. Senate Republicans abandoned plans to vote on a bill to fund U.S. ​immigration enforcement operations on Thursday in a political revolt against one of President Donald Trump’s priorities: a $1.8 billion fund for victims of government “weaponization,” including those ‌convicted of violent crimes during the U.S. Capitol riot on January 6, 2021.

The Senate walked away from a planned vote on a $72 billion bill funding Trump’s massive migrant deportation led by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, delaying the vote at least until June, when lawmakers return from a one-week Memorial Day holiday recess.

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Senate Majority Leader John Thune had sought to focus the legislation narrowly to secure the money intended to fund ​ICE and Border Patrol through the end of Trump’s presidency. But at Trump’s behest, the $1.8 billion “weaponization” fund and another $1 billion for building a White House ballroom became ​sticking points.

“It was something that was supposed to be very narrow, targeted, focused, clean, straightforward, and it got a little bit more complicated ⁠this week,” Thune said, expressing his frustration. “It makes everything way harder than it should be.”

The battle over the partisan ICE funding bill came after a Trump-backed challenger unseated two-term Republican ​Senator Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, and the president endorsed a primary challenger over veteran Republican Senator John Cornyn in Texas.

Presidents usually back their party’s incumbents. Republicans said Trump’s opposition to Cassidy ​and Cornyn added to the mood of acrimony surrounding the debate.

“He’s lost some support in the Senate,” said Nebraska Republican Don Bacon, who predicted that Senate Republicans would have to impose curbs on Trump’s fund, which the Justice Department announced as part of a court settlement between Trump and the Internal Revenue Service.

“He’s the plaintiff and the boss of the defendants. So just on the surface, it smells,” he said.

ACTING ATTORNEY ​GENERAL SUMMONED TO CAPITOL HILL

Against that backdrop, Acting U.S. Attorney General Todd Blanche was summoned to Capitol Hill to face questions from angry senators when he made his case for ​the $1.8 billion fund designed to compensate Trump allies and other victims of government “weaponization.”

During Blanche’s meeting, several senators insisted the money not be used to compensate people convicted of assaulting law enforcement during the ‌Capitol riot, the ⁠person said.

Trump had already pardoned many of those convicted for crimes they committed during that deadly assault.

“I think there are people who are concerned about public relations,” Senator Todd Young, an Indiana Republican, told reporters about the meeting.

Emotions were so raw that a planned White House meeting between Trump, Senate Republicans and House of Representatives Speaker Mike Johnson was canceled, according to a source familiar with the arrangement.

BIPARTISAN RESISTANCE TO BALLROOM FUNDING

The resistance against Trump became evident late on Wednesday when Senate Republicans said “no” to $1 billion in new security funding for the 90,000-square-foot (8,360-square-meter) ​ballroom Trump wants to build on the ​site of the White House East Wing ⁠that he had razed last October.

For months, Trump has said no taxpayer dollars would be needed for the project. Nonetheless, a $1 billion tab to be picked up by taxpayers stared senators in the face as an add-in to a $72 billion bill for Trump’s migrant deportation program.

Bacon ​said the White House failed to communicate that most of the $1 billion ballroom money would fund needed security upgrades across the ​White House complex. “The ballroom was ⁠rolled out so badly that I’m not sure it can be recovered in the near term,” he said.

Democrats hammered away about a “glitzy,” “gauzy” “vanity project,” a preview of their midterm election pitch addressing voters’ worries about the high prices of food, housing, healthcare and particularly gasoline, which skyrocketed after the February 28 U.S. attack on Iran.

Thune, who started the week with a tense phone call with the ⁠president over ​his endorsement against Cornyn, told reporters after Thursday’s meeting that his party “will pick up where we left off” ​after the holiday recess.

Republican Senator Thom Tillis of North Carolina, who is not running for reelection, did not hold back in criticizing Trump.

“I think it’s stupid on stilts,” Tillis said of the “weaponization” fund in an interview with Spectrum ​News. “The American people are going to reject this out of hand.”

Reporting by Richard Cowan, David Morgan, Bo Erickson, Jacob Bogage and Katharine Jackson; Editing by Caitlin Webber, Rod Nickel and Michael Learmonth

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