Senate Democrats call for greater oversight of DHS and ICE
- Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee Chairman Rand Paul (R-Ky.) is facing calls to ramp up oversight of the Department of Homeland Security. Democrats on the committee are calling on him to investigate the Trump administrationβs immigration enforcement operations. They said Paul should issue subpoenas if necessary and have senior officials like Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem testify in front of the panel. Their letter comes in the wake of the fatal shooting of Renee Good in Minnesota.(Democrats letter to Chairman Paul - HSGAC)
- DOGE representatives at the Social Security Administration discussed sharing agency data with an advocacy group looking to βoverturn election resultsβ in some states. The Justice Department said one of the DOGE staffers even signed a βvoter data agreementβ with the unnamed group. DOJ referred the two DOGE employees for potential violations of the Hatch Act which bars federal employees from using their positions for political purposes. (Trump administration admits DOGE accessed personal Social Security data - Washington Post)
- A Republican in Congress is looking to remove federal employees from their jobs if they have been convicted of a violent crime. The so-called βNo Violent Criminals in the Federal Workforce Actβ seeks to bar individuals with a violent criminal record from working for the federal government. The requirements of the bill would also apply to federal contractors. Rep. Nancy Mace (R-S.C.) introduced the legislation this week, calling it "common sense."(No Violent Criminals in the Federal Workforce Act - Rep. Nancy Mace (R-S.C.))
- As he marked one year in office yesterday, President Trump called his administrationβs cuts to the federal workforce βtremendous.β But some good government groups are painting a much darker picture. Agencies saw a loss of about 320,000 federal employees governmentwide over the course of 2025. The White House touted the staffing cuts as a step toward efficiency. But organizations like the Partnership for Public Service tell a much different story of the administrationβs impacts on the federal workforce. βIt tells a disturbing story about who weβve lost in our government and what is actually happening to the workforce,β said Max Stier, president and CEO of the Partnership.
- Congressional appropriators approved all 13 line-item consolidations requested by the Army in its fiscal 2026 budget, but flatly rejected the serviceβs βagile fundingβ request to raise notification threshold for reprogramming or transfers from $15 million to $50 million for procurement programs and to $25 million for research and development efforts. Lawmakers said that increasing reprogramming thresholds alone wonβt improve program execution and cautioned that unilaterally moving funding without proper oversight could create uncertainty for programs and the industrial base. Appropriators also said they βdiscourage the Defense secretary and the service secretaries from submitting future requests of this nature.β(Congressional appropriators reject Armyβs βagile fundingβ request - Federal News Network)
- The latest minibus spending measure includes some big cybersecurity updates. The minibus appropriations agreement released this week would extend the Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act of 2015 until the end of September. It would do the same for the State and Local Cybersecurity Grant Program. Both authorities were set to expire at the end of this month. Cyber experts have particularly stressed the need to reauthorize the liability protections in the information sharing law. If the appropriations agreement passes, lawmakers will have more time to hash out their differences over a longer term extension of CISA 2015. (DHS spending bill bolsters staffing at CISA, FEMA, Secret Service - Federal News Network)
- Congressional appropriators are backing the Pentagonβs push to speed up weapons buying, but warn that speed βmust be factored alongside cost, performance and scalability.β Congressional negotiators said they support the Defense Departmentβs acquisition reform agenda but remain skeptical about the Pentagonβs push for greater budget flexibility. While Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has directed the department to work with Congress to improve budget flexibility, lawmakers said the reforms are βinternal in natureβ and that the department needs to βdemonstrate progress on those internal proceduresβ first. Lawmakers also raised concerns about joint requirements process reform and deep cuts to the departmentβs acquisition workforce that could jeopardize its ability to carry out Hegsethβs acquisition reforms. (Congress pushes back on parts of DoDβs acquisition reform agenda - Federal News Network)
- Lawmakers are seeking a higher pay raise for air traffic controllers. Congressional appropriations propose giving the Federal Aviation Administration funds to implement a 3.8% pay raise for air traffic controllers, as well as supervisors and managers who oversee air traffic. Thatβs the same pay raise the Trump administration already approved for federal law enforcement. The spending deal would also give FAA enough funding to hire 2,500 air traffic controllers. Current controllers are working six days a week, including mandatory overtime.
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