Schumer keeps public guessing on how long Dems will refuse to fund DHS amid terror attacks
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., remained silent earlier this week when asked how long Democrats intended to hold out on funding the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) amid a...
By Fox News · Fox News
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer , D-N.Y., remained silent earlier this week when asked how long Democrats intended to hold out on funding the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) amid a recent string of suspected terror attacks. Fox News Digital approached Schumer with a pair of questions in the basement of the Senate. "Is it time to fund the DHS after four domestic suspected terror attacks have occurred?" a Fox News Digital reporter asked. "If the Republicans don’t agree to the ICE reforms that you guys want, all of them, what’s the next step? How long are you willing to leave DHS unfunded?" SCALISE ACCUSES DEMOCRATS OF REVIVING 'DEFUND THE POLICE' PUSH WITH DHS FUNDING GAMBIT Schumer deflected the questions. "Ask the Republicans," Schumer answered. Funding for DHS originally lapsed on Feb. 14 when Democrats refused to advance spending legislation for DHS that didn’t also include a set of demands to reform ICE . Among other changes, Democrats have conditioned their support on a ban on masks for ICE agents, stiffer warrant requirement for apprehending suspects in public and a ban on roaming patrols. Republicans have rebuffed the demands, arguing they would handcuff President Donald Trump's immigration enforcement goals. Republicans need at least seven Democrats to reach the 60-vote threshold to break a filibuster in the Senate, where they hold just 53 seats. DEM SENATORS IN THE HOT SEAT AS REPUBLICANS RIP THEIR DHS VOTE AMID TERROR THREATS: 'UNDER ATTACK' The standoff has overlapped with a series of domestic attacks , raising alarm among Republicans that DHS’s closure may be reducing the country’s preparedness to counter similar threats. A vehicle ramming at a synagogue in Michigan, a university shooting in Virginia, the detonations of explosives in New York and another shooting in Texas have left Republicans like Sen. John Barrasso, R-Wyo., calling for Democrats to abandon their demands. "Democrats have shut down the very department charged with defending ou…