WASHINGTON — Senate Democrats delivered their latest counteroffer to the White House on Monday night to fund the Department of Homeland Security, as the partial shutdown of the sprawling agency stretched into its 32nd day with no resolution in sight. The proposal, confirmed by a White House official and two other people with knowledge of the matter, is the latest in a series of offers the two parties have exchanged since funding lapsed on February 14.
How the Shutdown Reached Day 32
The partial government shutdown began when DHS funding lapsed at midnight on February 14, 2026, after Congress failed to reach agreement on a spending bill before the deadline. The breakdown has kept large portions of the department in limbo for over a month, affecting agencies including U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP), Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), FEMA, and the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) — whose workers have continued reporting to duty without regular paychecks.
| Date | Event |
|---|---|
| Feb. 14, 2026 | DHS funding lapses at midnight — partial shutdown begins |
| Feb. 15–28, 2026 | Initial round of offers and counteroffers exchanged between parties |
| Early March 2026 | Negotiations stall; no public progress reported for nearly two weeks |
| March 16, 2026 (Mon.) | Senate Democrats deliver latest counteroffer to White House |
| March 17, 2026 (Tue.) | White House says it is "reviewing" the offer; Thune says little changed |
| March 18, 2026 | Shutdown enters its 32nd day — no resolution announced |
Thune: Offer Didn't Change Much
Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-SD), speaking to reporters on Tuesday, offered the clearest public signal yet that the two sides remain far apart. His characterisation — that the Democratic proposal "didn't change much from where we were" — suggests that the offer did not close the gap on the core sticking points that have deadlocked the talks throughout February and into March.
"It didn't change much from where we were."
Thune's remarks track a pattern that has defined the negotiations: each new offer has been received, reviewed, and ultimately described by the opposing side as insufficient movement. The White House's parallel statement — that it is "currently reviewing" the Democratic proposal — is consistent with language it has used at each prior stage of the standoff, leaving open the question of whether a final agreement is close or weeks away.
What's at Stake
The Department of Homeland Security is one of the largest civilian agencies in the federal government, with a workforce of roughly 260,000 employees and a budget that covers border security, disaster response, aviation security, cybersecurity, and immigration enforcement. A prolonged funding lapse creates compounding operational disruptions across each of those functions:
TSA
Airport screeners continue working without pay, raising concerns about staffing levels and potential sick-outs at major airports.
FEMA
Disaster preparedness and active relief operations are disrupted; grant disbursements to states may be delayed.
CBP & ICE
Border and immigration enforcement operations continue under "essential personnel" rules but with reduced administrative capacity.
CISA
Cybersecurity and critical infrastructure protection activities may be curtailed, increasing vulnerability windows.
Background: The Core Dispute
While specific details of the Democratic proposal were not made public, the core disagreements in the DHS budget talks have centred on several flashpoint areas:
- •Border enforcement spending levels — Republicans have pushed for significantly higher allocations for wall construction and detention capacity; Democrats have resisted what they describe as funding for hardline immigration measures.
- •FEMA disaster relief — Democrats sought carve-outs to fully protect ongoing disaster relief operations; Republicans have framed this as an attempt to expand the bill's scope.
- •Rider provisions — Both sides have attached unrelated policy riders to their proposals that the other side has rejected as non-starters.
Monday night's Democratic counteroffer represents the latest attempt to move those positions incrementally. Whether it succeeded in doing so meaningfully — or whether, as Thune suggested, it was largely a repackaging of earlier proposals — will determine how quickly, or slowly, the two sides can reach a deal.
What Comes Next
With the White House reviewing the offer and Thune's remarks suggesting limited progress, the shutdown appears set to extend at minimum into the coming week. Congress is not in session through the end of the week, which may further slow the pace of formal negotiations.
Pressure on both parties has been building as TSA screeners and other essential DHS workers approach 35 days without regular pay — the point at which historical precedent suggests workforce attrition begins to accelerate and operational disruptions become more visible to the travelling public.
ObjectWire will continue monitoring negotiations as talks develop.