海角大神

ICE arrives at clogged airports. But security lines, DHS shutdown persist.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers operate at Newark Liberty International Airport in New Jersey, as hundreds of agents were ordered to airports across the country to help fill TSA staffing gaps, March 23, 2026.

Jeenah Moon/Reuters

March 24, 2026

Last month, Democratic lawmakers blocked federal funding for the Department of Homeland Security over the public conduct of immigration enforcement officials. Six weeks into that stalemate, the president has placed those officers and agents squarely back in public view 鈥 at the country鈥檚 busiest airports.

As Immigration and Customs Enforcement personnel arrived at their new posts across the United States on Monday to aid fellow federal workers, delays wore on at terminals from New York to Houston. Despite mounting discontent from constituents facing travel setbacks, members of Congress don鈥檛 appear close to a compromise to fund DHS, which houses both ICE and the airport workers of the Transportation Security Administration.

Expected negotiations didn鈥檛 happen on Monday after President Donald Trump said he wanted to wait until a new DHS secretary is confirmed. Oklahoma Sen. Markwayne Mullin was confirmed Monday night.聽

Why We Wrote This

The arrival of Immigration and Customs Enforcement personnel, expected at more than a dozen major airports in the U.S., was the latest move in a standoff between Republicans and Democrats over funding for the Department of Homeland Security. Despite the high-profile deployment, negotiations remained stalled.

Meanwhile, those TSA employees continued to work without pay, as staffing issues appeared to keep many security lines at a crawl.

鈥淚 think it increases talking points for Democrats who are critical of ICE,鈥 says Cayce Myers, a political communications expert at Virginia Tech University. 鈥淚 think it鈥檚 also going to increase the talking points for President Trump, who is saying that he鈥檚 having to resort to these alternative means to keep TSA going.鈥

US fights a war abroad, faces terror threats at home

At the end of the week, both the House and Senate are scheduled to head into a two-week Easter recess, meaning the DHS shutdown could stretch into mid-April. At that point, it would be the longest government shutdown ever.

Airports still affected

Federal immigration agents arrived, or were expected to arrive, at more than a dozen airports on Monday. DHS declined to confirm the locations, citing operational security, but reporters tracked ICE arrivals at airports, including in , , , , , , and . (An Sunday at LaGuardia Airport in New York, in which a jet that was landing hit a fire truck on the runway, was not related to the DHS funding shutdown.)

鈥淲hile the Democrats continue to put the safety, dependability, and ease of our air travel at risk, President Trump is taking action to deploy hundreds of ICE officers, that are currently funded by Congress, to airports being adversely impacted,鈥 said Lauren Bis, the acting assistant DHS secretary, in a statement. Atlanta鈥檚 Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport on Monday travelers to arrive at least four hours early because of 鈥淭SA staffing constraints.鈥

The city鈥檚 mayor said the incoming ICE personnel includes聽two groups: Enforcement and Removal Operations, whose officers focus on civil immigration enforcement, and Homeland Security Investigations, whose agents pursue a broad range of criminal investigations.

ICE will help TSA officials with tasks such as 鈥渓ine management and crowd control within the domestic terminals,鈥 said Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens. 鈥淔ederal officials have indicated that this deployment is not intended to conduct immigration enforcement activities.鈥

In Maine, immigrants have built community. Federal agents鈥 arrival revealed unexpected bonds.

Mr. Trump has suggested otherwise as he鈥檚 pitched the plan himself. He said he would move ICE agents into airports to provide security and to arrest unauthorized immigrants, 鈥渨ith heavy emphasis on those from Somalia.鈥 The president also said that border czar Tom Homan was in charge.

Amid long lines at security checkpoints, federal immigration agents patrol John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York, March 23, 2026.
Adam Gray/Reuters

Mixed reactions from officials

In Louisiana, where ICE personnel were sent to the international airport in New Orleans, Republican Gov. Jeff Landry said he would welcome the National Guard at airports in his state to ease security lines 鈥 with the president鈥檚 approval.

The White House appeared open to sending in troops.

If ICE isn鈥檛 enough, 鈥淚鈥檒l bring in the National Guard,鈥 Mr. Trump reporters on Monday.

In Chicago, Mayor Brandon Johnson said he has concerns about the federal deployment.

We will 鈥渦se every tool we have to ensure that people, no matter their immigration status, can travel to and from Chicago safely and without harassment from the federal government,鈥 Mayor Johnson said in a statement to the Monitor. He said Chicago鈥檚 O鈥橦are International Airport could expect around 75 ICE officers 鈥渁cross multiple shifts鈥 beginning on Monday, in support roles that did not include screening.

Officers have been 鈥渨alking through the parking lots, walking through the terminals,鈥 says Scott Mechkowski, a former deputy field office director at ICE. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e looking for security threats ... like unattended bags.鈥

Meanwhile, 鈥淚 know they鈥檙e enthusiastic鈥 about the airport plan, says Pete Stewart, another retired ICE officer, speaking of those with whom he remains in touch. He says the new assignment could boost enforcement numbers.

While checking IDs at airports, ICE officers will 鈥渂e able to get more arrests,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a lot easier. ... It鈥檚 not like you have to go pound on people鈥檚 doors and do traffic stops.鈥

Groups that advocate for immigrants pushed back, including the American Civil Liberties Union.

Sending ICE to airports is meant to 鈥渋nspire fear among families,鈥 said Naureen Shah, ACLU director of policy and government affairs for immigration, in a statement. 鈥淭his is the exact opposite of what the American people are clamoring for, which are real, enforceable changes to rein in ICE and Border Patrol鈥檚 cruel deportation and detention obsession.鈥

A union for TSA workers criticized the deployment of ICE personnel to airports 鈥 even as it reported that more than 50,000 employees have worked without pay for more than a month, and that hundreds have left.

鈥淧utting untrained personnel at security checkpoints does not fill a gap. It creates one,鈥 Everett Kelley, national president of the American Federation of Government Employees. TSA workers deserve to be paid, he said, 鈥渘ot replaced by untrained, armed agents who have shown how dangerous they can be.鈥

AFGE isn鈥檛 the only union to pan the plan. In a joint , flight attendant union leaders said dispatching ICE agents to airports 鈥渃reates contradictory missions, as attempts to question passengers about immigration status may distract them from ensuring airport security.鈥

Standoff situation

After DHS law enforcement personnel fatally shot Alex Pretti, a Minneapolis nurse, on Jan. 24, Senate Democrats refused to pass an annual funding bill, which would have allocated $64.4 billion to the department, without significant changes to hold ICE and聽Customs and Border Protection more accountable to the public.

Democrats鈥 demands include banning agents from ICE and CBP from wearing masks, and requiring them to obtain judicial warrants signed by a judge 鈥 instead of administrative warrants signed by department officials 鈥 to enter people鈥檚 homes. These two requests have been sticking points for Republicans, who say those measures will constrain immigration agents and expose them to doxing.

On social media on Monday, Mr. Trump ICE not to wear masks at airports, though he said he was a 鈥淏IG鈥 proponent of masks for agents dealing with violent criminals.

DHS has been shut down since Feb. 14. In addition to ICE and CBP, the shutdown affects other agencies housed within the department, including the Federal Emergency Management Agency and the TSA.

Even without renewed DHS funding, ICE and CBP have enough money, through last year鈥檚 Republican tax-and-spending bill, to continue immigration enforcement operations.

Democrats have repeatedly proposed bills to fund other parts of DHS while lawmakers negotiate reforms to ICE and CBP. Republicans generally say the agency must be funded as a whole, though some, including Sen. John Kennedy of Louisiana, have expressed support for voting to fund portions of DHS.

鈥淚 think it does start to weigh heavily on the psyche of voters back home that we鈥檙e lurching from one shutdown to another,鈥 says Kevin Madden, a GOP strategist and a former adviser for Mitt Romney's 2012 presidential campaign. He says Democrats in particular risk 鈥減aying a price鈥 with voters for refusing to fund the department.

Meanwhile, Mr. Trump has taken a central role in negotiations.

The president 鈥渉as done everything he can to own the shutdown at TSA and the lines at airports,鈥 says Jesse Ferguson, a Democratic strategist.

On Sunday, Senate Majority Leader John Thune proposed to Mr. Trump that Republicans could vote to fund other aspects of DHS and wait to pass funding for ICE and CBP in a separate budget bill. The president refused, demanding that Congress fund all of DHS and adding that they need to first pass the SAVE America Act, a bill that would mandate people prove their U.S. citizenship to register to vote, and to show ID at the polls. It faces strong opposition in the Senate.

The Associated Press reported early Tuesday morning that Republican and Democratic senators were discussing a deal similar to the one Senator Thune took to President Trump on Sunday: DHS, including TSA, would be funded, except for ICE's enforcement and removal operations. The potential deal emerged after some Republican senators met with Mr. Trump at the White House.