Good evening. President Trump this morning backed off his threat to destroy Iranian power plants if the Strait of Hormuz isn't reopened by today, citing "very good and productive conversations" with Iran over the last couple of days. Trump said he's postponing the threatened strikes for five days. Iran disputed that any talks are ongoing. Nevertheless, oil prices fell and stock prices rose as investors embraced the possibility that Trump was seeking a way to end the war.
Here's what else is happening.
Trump Rejects Deal to Fund Homeland Security, Reopen TSA
President Trump is rejecting a potential deal to reopen most of the Department of Homeland Security and end the funding standoff that has caused turmoil at U.S. airports. Instead, he is urging Republicans to tie the shutdown fight to his push for a bill stiffening voter registration and identification requirements.
Democrats are using funding for DHS as leverage in their effort to reform the Trump administration's immigration enforcement tactics after federal agents killed two U.S. citizens in Minneapolis. Now, with the shutdown in its 38th day, airport delays worsening and long security lines frustrating travelers, Trump is choosing to have the partial shutdown continue as he presses lawmakers to pass the SAVE America Act, his proposed package of election changes and transgender policies, which has no clear path to pass the Senate.
Trump demanded Monday that Democrats fully fund DHS and said that he's instructing Republicans not to cut any deal to reopen the Transportation Security Administration unless they can also pass the SAVE America Act, which he has long said is his top legislative priority.
"As part of homeland security, and I'm suggesting strongly to the Republican Party, don't make any deal on anything," Trump said at an event in Memphis. "The most important thing we can have is what's called the SAVE America Act. Don't make any deal on anything, unless you include voter ID."
Trump delivered a similar message in a social media post Sunday night. "I don't think we should make any deal with the Crazy, Country Destroying, Radical Left Democrats unless, and until, they Vote with Republicans to pass 'THE SAVE AMERICA ACT,'" he wrote, calling that bill "far more important than anything else we are doing in the Senate."
Trump also threatened Republicans who don't get on board with his plan. "They will never be elected again!" he wrote. "In other words, lump everything together as one, and VOTE!!! Kill the Filibuster, and stay in D.C. for Easter, if necessary."
Senate Republican leaders have said they simply don't have the votes to end the filibuster, with some in the party warning against the idea.
Trump also pushed his plan directly to Senate Majority Leader John Thune on Sunday. As first reported by Punchbowl News, Trump and Thune discussed the possibility of reopening TSA by funding all of DHS except for Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Some Republicans reportedly support the idea to end the current stalemate.
Such a deal would allow Republicans to fend off Democratic demands for immigration enforcement changes - and allow Democrats to avoid having to approve controversial ICE funding. Under the plan, ICE could be funded later via a new Republican budget reconciliation bill that would not need Democratic support. ICE has maintained its operations during the partial shutdown using billions in additional funding provided by last year's One Big Beautiful Bill Act, also passed via the reconciliation process.
Trump rejected the idea.
'Make this one for Jesus': The president has also pressured Republicans to stay in town and skip a scheduled two-week holiday recess set to start at the end of the week. Leaving for the holiday break without funding DHS would mean the shutdown would extend into record territory and TSA agents would miss more paychecks. Thune has indicated he could keep senators in town until they reach a deal.
Trump suggested that senators should keep working on his proposed package. "You don't have to take a fast vote. Don't worry about Easter, going home. In fact, make this one for Jesus. Okay, make this one for Jesus," Trump said.
Trump reportedly warned that he would publicly criticize Senate Republicans if they went ahead with their holiday. "Trump also said he'd invite all the GOP senators and their families for Easter dinner at the White House," Punchbowl News noted. "Some Republicans took that as a threat, not a reward."
Calling on ICE: The president said over the weekend that he will deploy ICE agents to some airports to help speed security lines. He is apparently betting that he can ease the pressure building at airports and increase his leverage over Democrats to help pass the SAVE America Act.
"When I announced yesterday about ICE, the Democrats called, 'We want to settle,'" Trump told reporters today. "I told the people: 'Don't settle, don't settle, because we have something bigger. Only settle if you get the Save America Act.'"
An opening for Democrats: At the same time, Trump's very public rejection of a deal to fund TSA and other parts of DHS gives Democrats an opening to lay the blame for travel disruptions squarely at his feet. Democrats have repeatedly tried to fund TSA and other agencies within DHS except for those tied to immigration enforcement. Republicans have blocked those attempts, insisting on funding all of DHS. Democrats have rejected that idea, demanding that ICE agents obtain judicial warrants for searches and stop wearing masks, among other reforms.
"All those long, long lines you're seeing at the airport are thanks to one man: Donald Trump," Democratic Sen. Mazie Hirono of Hawaii wrote in a social media post Monday. "He was presented with a deal to fund TSA along with the rest of DHS except ICE, and he said no. This is on him."
What's next: The shutdown continues, as does the pain at many U.S. airports. More than 400 TSA workers have quit since the shutdown began last month. Some Senate Republicans reportedly are looking to pitch Trump on the benefits of funding TSA and other agencies. For the moment, though, the White House reportedly has paused any further DHS funding talks until Sen. Markwayne Mullin gets confirmed to lead the department. That vote is expected tonight.
Trump Admin to Pay Nearly $1 Billion to Cancel Wind Farms
President Trump has long been a critic of offshore wind power projects, claiming that the massive windmills that produce electricity are ugly, inefficient and "driving whales crazy." Now his administration is paying a French energy company nearly $1 billion to abandon its plans to build two wind farms off the East Coast.
On Monday, the Interior Department announced that it would pay TotalEnergies $928 million to abandon its rights to build windfarms in the Atlantic Ocean off New York and North Carolina. The energy company, headquartered in Paris, France, won those rights in an auction held during the Biden administration, paying $928 million for the leases.
Under the terms of the deal, TotalEnergies will also invest roughly the same amount of money in oil and gas projects in the United States, including the Rio Grande LNG project, a major export facility for liquid natural gas under construction in Port of Brownsville, Texas.
Secretary of the Interior Doug Burgum celebrated the agreement while underlining the administration's stance. "Offshore wind is one of the most expensive, unreliable, environmentally disruptive, and subsidy-dependent schemes ever forced on American ratepayers and taxpayers," he said.
Others, though, raised questions about the TotalEnergies deal. Maxine Joselow and Brad Plumer of The New York Times noted that the agreement is highly unusual. "The deal is an extraordinary transfer of taxpayer dollars to a foreign company for the purposes of boosting the production of fossil fuels, a main driver of climate change, while throttling offshore wind power," they wrote. "It comes as the war in the Middle East has shocked global oil markets, prompting concerns about energy supplies."
Rep. Nicole Malliotakis, a Republican from New York who generally supports Trump, was sharply critical, saying, "It sounds like a colossal waste of taxpayer money."
Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer, who also represents New York, called the plan a "corrupt giveaway to the fossil fuel industry."
Noting that Trump has tried to kill wind farms multiple times through legal maneuverings, Schumer said he is now using public funds to accomplish his goal. "After failing five times in federal court, President Trump is now ludicrously proposing to waste $1 billion in taxpayer money to kill a wind farm off the coast of New York that would boost energy supply, help lower costs and create thousands of good-paying union jobs," Schumer said.
Chart of the Day: Playing Politics With Disaster Aid?
President Trump is approving disaster aid requests at a much higher rate for red states than for blue states, according to an analysis by Politico's E&E News.
Republican-led states (defined as having a Republican governor and two Republican senators) have seen 89% of their requests for aid from the Federal Emergency Management Agency approved by Trump over the last 14 months. By contrast, just 23% of requests for FEMA aid by Democrat-led states have been approved.
The Politico analysts reviewed about 2,500 disaster aid requests since 1979, when FEMA was created, and found that there has never been such a dramatic disparity in approval rates, including during the first Trump administration (see the chart below).
A White House spokesperson denied that Trump is politicizing disaster relief, but some Democrats are convinced otherwise. "Never in my lifetime has a president treated disaster relief as a political cudgel," Sen. Patty Murray, the senior Democrat on the Appropriations Committee, told Politico. "What President Trump has done to politicize disaster relief and hold up support for Americans who need it - including my constituents in Washington state - is frankly unforgivable."
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Fiscal News Roundup
- Trump Began Iran Talks as Allies Warned War Risked Disaster – Bloomberg
- DHS Funding Talks in Limbo After Trump Calls on GOP to Link Bill to SAVE America Act – CBS News
- Trump Rejects Off-Ramp to Fund DHS as Airport Delays Worsen – NBC News
- White House Rejects Meeting Between Homan and Democrats – NBC News
- Pressure Builds on Congress as DHS Shutdown Threatens to Drag Into April – Politico
- GOP Cracks in Senate Begin to Show in DHS Shutdown Fight – The Hill
- It's Three Times Harder for Blue States to Get Disaster Funding Under Trump – Politico
- Trump Administration to Pay $1 Billion to Energy Giant to Cancel Wind Farms – New York Times
- Gabbard Plans to Shift Coveted, CIA-Backed High-Tech Fund to Her Office – Politico
- Social Security 'Doesn't Allow Most Americans to Build Wealth,' Blackrock's Larry Fink Says – CNBC
- 'Tax Resistance' Gains Attention Amid ICE Protests, Iran War - and IRS Penalties Could Follow – CNBC
- Supreme Court Conservatives Appear Skeptical of Mail-In Ballots That Arrive After Election Day – NBC News
- Inside the Turmoil at Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s C.D.C. – New York Times
- Congress Launches Investigation Into California Hospice Fraud – CBS News
- When Health Insurance Costs $2,500 Per Month, Families Make Tough Choices – NPR
Views and Analysis
- Airport Chaos Is Adding Urgency to the DHS Shutdown Debate. But Who Has the Leverage? – Aaron Blake, CNN
- 'No Practical Use': TSA Experts Say Trump's ICE Deployments Won't Help With Airport Security – Eric Katz, Government Executive
- Chuck Schumer: This Is Trump's Plan to 'Guarantee the Midterms' – Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-NY), New York Times
- When Voters Worry About 'Affordability,' Many Point to Health Care – Ruth Igielnik and Kate Zernike, New York Times
- Trump Is Hiding the Truth About the War in Iran – New York Times Editorial Board
- War's Attacks on Energy Could Turn Economic Shock Into Long-Term Damage – Patricia Cohen, New York Times
- Iran's Cheap, Deadly Drones Have Done the U.S. a Favor – Damir Marusic, Washington Post
- The $1.3-Million-a-Minute War – Nicholas Kristof, New York Times
- Is $200 Billion Too Much to Win a War? – Wall Street Journal Editorial Board
- Trump's Civil Service Cuts Are Now Putting Americans in Danger – Grace Segers, New Republic
- Amid Mounting Risks, the Fed Wisely Puts Rates on Hold – Bloomberg Editorial Board
- Staff Revolts, Secret Meetings: Inside the Tense Fight Between Mike Pence and the Heritage Foundation – Edward-Isaac Dovere, CNN