John,
For decades, I had the privilege of knowing Senator Joe Lieberman as a mentor, a boss, and a dear friend. I served as his Chief of Staff on Capitol Hill from 2003 to 2013, where I watched him build the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) from the ground up with members of both parties. After 9/11, Sen. Lieberman worked with Republicans Fred Thompson and Susan Collins to draft the Homeland Security Act of 2002, merging 22 federal agencies into a single department charged with protecting the American people. It was not easy. It required serious people in serious rooms making difficult choices under enormous pressure. That is what governing looks like.
I have been thinking about that often these days. Because the department Sen. Lieberman and his colleagues built is now one week away from shutting down, and no one in Washington appears to be doing much about it.
In case you have not been closely following the news, here is where things stand. Congress funded most of the federal government through September 30 in a package signed by President Trump on February 3. DHS was the exception, receiving only a two-week continuing resolution that expires on February 13.
This is because Senate Democrats demanded DHS be separated from the other spending bills after federal immigration agents fatally shot two Americans in Minneapolis. Several Senate Republicans, including Sen. Collins, the current Appropriations Committee Chair, supported the decision to separate DHS and give negotiators more time. Democrats have released a list of enforcement reforms they want in exchange for their votes. Republicans have rejected most of them. And as of this week, there are no formal negotiations between party leaders.
Majority Leader Thune called a deal "an impossibility" in the remaining time, and both chambers left Washington for the weekend. They return with five days on the clock.
If DHS funding lapses, TSA agents will work without pay, FEMA disaster relief will face delays, and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency will scale back operations. Yet ICE and CBP, the agencies at the center of the dispute, will keep running on $170 billion already appropriated through the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. The agencies that protect air travelers, respond to hurricanes, and defend against cyberattacks are the ones that go dark. The irony is hard to miss.