This week, President Donald Trump signed the Secure America Act into law – sweeping legislation that fully funds Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Border Patrol through the end of his term. The development is a major victory for Republicans and a stinging defeat for Democrats following a protracted effort earlier this year to stop the Trump administration’s border security and deportation agenda.
The Secure America Act provides $70 billion in funding for Border Patrol and ICE over the next three years, meaning that Democrats can no longer block funding for those agencies as a means to extract policy concessions – a tactic they have repeatedly relied on early in Trump’s second term. The bill specifically provides $38 billion for ICE, $26 billion for Border Patrol, and $5 billion for Department of Homeland Security (DHS) contingency funding.
The funding package includes resources for personnel pay, continued border security operations, and ongoing funding for border wall construction. It also expands funding for DHS investigations to strengthen efforts to combat human trafficking and drug smuggling networks, while providing more resources to identify, detain, and deport criminal illegal immigrants. Additional investments include body cameras, protective equipment, uniforms, and technological upgrades, including drones and detection devices for ICE and CBP.
President Trump touted the measure as a major victory for American sovereignty and national security. “I’m thrilled to sign the Secure America Act to immediately and fully fund the Department of Homeland Security through the end of my term, so we won’t have that to be talking about anymore.”
He continued, “We’ll give the heroes of ICE and Border Patrol – and that’s what they are, they’re heroes, what they have to go through to keep us safe – the support and resources they need to defend our borders, protect our homeland and to keep America safe.”
Every Democrat in Congress voted against the Secure America Act, underscoring unified opposition to the legislation and a broader rejection of border security policy and immigration enforcement.
“As long as Republicans are in charge, there will be agents at our borders to prevent terrorists, traffickers, and other dangerous individuals from making their way into our country, and there will be agents to take criminal illegal immigrants off our streets,” Senate Majority Leader John Thune said. “I wish I could say the same of my Democrat colleagues.”
The legislation follows the longest DHS funding lapse in U.S. history earlier this year. Beginning on February 14, Democrats blocked funding for DHS by weaponizing the Senate filibuster rule. Democrats demanded major concessions to reopen the agency, including banning ICE officers from wearing masks even as law enforcement agents were seeing an all-time high in threats against them and banning immigration enforcement operations near a long list of “sensitive” locations like schools and hospitals – and polling places.
Democrats infamously admitted that their shutdown of DHS was “making people hurt,” but said they were “very serene” about their strategy. After 75 days, Republicans agreed to pass a DHS funding bill without any funding for ICE. However, the agency was flush with cash thanks to the One Big Beautiful Bill passed last year, and so it saw no slowdown in operations.
The Secure America Act is the culmination of that saga. Ultimately, Democrats received nothing that they asked for. ICE now has even more funding than it would have had Democrats passed the full DHS funding bill back in February. Republicans made no concessions to Democrats on ICE policy, and the agency will continue to be free to enforce the nation’s immigration laws.
Lillian Ferrell is a senior at Hillsdale College studying English and music. She has experience in journalism and podcasting as the host of the Grace Over Grind podcast. Her written work focuses on American politics, culture, and public policy.
