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Senate GOP drops $1 billion for White House ballroom from budget package

Senate Republicans dropped the money after the chamber’s rule-keeper said it could trigger a filibuster and derail the broader immigration package.

  • On Wednesday, Senate Republicans released a revised immigration bill that officially stripped up to $1 billion in security funding for President Donald Trump's proposed East Wing ballroom project.
  • Senate parliamentarian Elizabeth MacDonough ruled last month that the ballroom funding violated the Byrd Rule, which bars extraneous provisions in reconciliation bills, requiring 60 votes to pass.
  • GOP leaders also abandoned a proposed $1.8 billion "anti-weaponization fund" critics derided as a "slush fund," while several Republican senators opposed the ballroom funding fearing it appeared out of touch before midterms.
  • White House officials downplayed the removal, attributing the change to parliamentary rules rather than political pressure, as the revised bill proceeds toward securing funding for Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Customs and Border Protection.
  • Construction on the ballroom remains underway, though it is unclear how the lack of federal appropriation will affect the project; Trump previously claimed the ballroom would be funded by private donations, including his own.
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29 Articles

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Republicans released a million-dollar package to reinforce immigration agencies after withdrawing support that generated criticism within the party

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Center

Senate begins voting on funding immigration enforcement after Trump's settlement fund is dropped

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Republican-led Senate is moving forward with legislation to fund immigration enforcement agencies after forcing the White House to drop its settlement fund for political allies and stripping a separate proposal for White House security from the bill. The Senate voted 53-46 on Wednesday to begin debate on the roughly $70 billion bill to fund U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the Border Patrol. The legislation was …

·Albuquerque, United States
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The New Republic broke the news on Wednesday, June 3, 2026.
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