President Donald Trump is expected to sign a funding bill for the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to end a record partial government shutdown [1].
The move is critical because it restores essential operations for the Transportation Security Administration (TSA), the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), and the U.S. Coast Guard [2]. These agencies have faced significant operational disruptions during the funding gap.
The legislation, valued at approximately $1.2 trillion [3], follows a series of legislative efforts in Washington, D.C. [4]. While reports on the exact duration of the shutdown vary, some sources describe the event as a record 76-day partial shutdown [1]. Other reports indicate the shutdown lasted 75 days [5] or 59 days [6].
The funding bill is intended to stabilize the department after the longest shutdown of the DHS in history [2]. The process reached a critical point on Tuesday, April 14, 2026, as lawmakers moved to finalize the funding vote [6].
Despite the expected signing, reports on the current status of the bill differ. Some sources said that President Trump has already signed the legislation [3], while others said he is still expected to sign it [1].
The restoration of these services aims to eliminate the backlog and security risks created by the lack of federal funding. The DHS oversees a wide array of national security and emergency response functions that were hindered during the lapse in appropriations [2].
“President Donald Trump is expected to sign a funding bill for the Department of Homeland Security”
The resolution of this shutdown marks the end of a period of significant instability for U.S. national security infrastructure. The discrepancy in reported shutdown lengths—ranging from 59 to 76 days—highlights the complexity of tracking partial shutdowns where some essential services remain active while others are suspended. The scale of the $1.2 trillion package reflects the high cost of restoring operational capacity after a prolonged lapse in funding.




