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Explained: Why is the US facing another government shutdown threat?

The United States is once again staring down a government funding deadline, and this time, the flashpoint is a fatal shooting hundreds of miles from Washington.

After federal immigration agents shot and killed 37‑year‑old nurse Alex Pretti in Minneapolis over the weekend, Senate Democrats say they will block new money for the Department of Homeland Security.

The development can sharply increase the odds that parts of the US government will shut down when funding expires on January 30.

What happened: trigger, politics and the clock

The immediate flashpoint is the Minneapolis shooting.

Federal immigration agents shot Pretti during an operation in the city, the second deadly confrontation involving federal officers in Minnesota this month.

The back-to-back incidents have sparked protests and a wave of criticism aimed at Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Border Patrol, both housed under the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).

Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer, along with a growing number of Democratic senators, is threatening to block the spending package if it keeps funding DHS without new constraints on immigration enforcement.

Their bottom line is simple: either carve DHS out of the wider bill and fight over it separately, or rewrite the funding language to include tougher reforms.

The procedural reality is that the House has already passed a roughly $1.2 trillion package that funds DHS, along with the Pentagon and major domestic departments.

That package is now in the Senate, and the deadline is close: lawmakers need to approve it before money for those agencies runs out at midnight on Friday, January 30.

But moving it isn’t as straightforward as a simple vote. Under Senate rules, most big spending bills need 60 votes to clear the hurdle.

Republicans control 53 seats, so they will need at least seven Democrats on board to push it through.

Schumer’s vow to deny those votes has turned what looked like a routine finish into a real shutdown risk.

What a partial shutdown would mean, and how it could still be avoided

This wouldn’t be a repeat of last year’s full-scale 43-day shutdown.

Large parts of the federal government are already funded under separate bills, including the Department of Agriculture, Veterans Affairs, the legislative branch, and agencies such as the Environmental Protection Agency and the Commerce Department.

Those operations would continue even if negotiations fall apart again.

A funding lapse now would instead hit the agencies still relying on the final package.

That puts key departments in the firing line: DHS, which oversees ICE, Border Patrol, the Transportation Security Administration (airport screening), and parts of FEMA.

In practical terms, many “essential” workers, from airport security officers to Border Patrol agents, would still report for duty, but without pay until Congress resolves it.

The political math is razor-thin as a small bloc of moderate House Democrats already joined Republicans to pass the DHS funding bill last week.

But the Senate is a different story. Several Democrats who previously helped end shutdowns are now warning they will vote no unless the current DHS language changes.

That gives them leverage to push for reforms, but it also raises the risk that the broader funding package stalls.

The post Explained: Why is the US facing another government shutdown threat? appeared first on Invezz

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