GOP representatives do not have long to pass a funding bill for ICE, and doing so may prove impossible, according to party members.
The Republican Party cannot muster the votes necessary to pass a funding bill for Immigration and Customs Enforcement, with the Democratic Party standing in the way of a funding measure. The bill would see the Department of Homeland Security reopened after a record-breaking shutdown, though Republican representatives fear there will be no middle ground between the two parties.

Speaking to Politico, Senator John Hoeven of North Dakota claimed the GOP simply has no choice when it comes to securing ICE funding. Donald Trump previously issued a June 1 deadline for a bill that would fund the government agency.
Trump took to Truth Social earlier this week and posted, "We are going to work as fast, and as focused, as possible to replenish funding for our Border and ICE Agents, and the Radical Left Democrats won’t be able to stop us."
Sen. Hoeven believes it is not as easy as Trump portrays it, saying, "Democrats have put us where we are, and we have to deal with it. We don't have a choice."
Further complaints from the Democratic Party over funding of the Iran war will cause further issues for the GOP, with Sen. Chris Coons speaking of how he and his colleagues view the problems for the party in power.
Sen. Coons, the Democratic Party's senator for Delaware, said enacting funding through reconciliation "requires no compromise with the other party. And if that becomes the sole way we fund the core functions of government, that is a bad idea."
Even some Republicans aired their concern about a funding bill for the Iran war being backed by the Democratic Party. House Appropriations Chair Tom Cole said, "I would prefer not to. We'll wait and see. A lot of that depends on what the Democrats want to do."
Senate Appropriations Chair Susan Collins (R-Maine) believes the Democrats' refusal to pass the Border Patrol and ICE funding bill would come back to haunt them. Collins warned it "sets a precedent that they may one day come to regret."


