ACLU Statement on House Vote to Add $70 Billion to ICE and Border Patrol’s Bloated Budget

House passes bill to give ICE and Border Patrol $70 billion following months-long standoff in Congress, widespread opposition

June 9, 2026 5:30 pm

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WASHINGTON – The House passed a reconciliation bill today that would provide an additional $70 billion in taxpayer funds for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Border Patrol without any meaningful reforms to limit violent and abusive tactics by federal agents.

The vote comes just days after the Senate voted to pass the bill and after a months-long standoff between members of Congress over whether to include reforms in any bill to fund ICE and Border Patrol, prompting Republicans in Congress to bypass normal procedures and use an obscure hyper partisan process called reconciliation. During that time, more than half a million people joined the ACLU in urging their members of Congress to reject any blank checks for ICE and Border Patrol’s lawlessness.

In response to this news, Kate Voigt, senior policy counsel at the American Civil Liberties Union, had the following reaction:

“It is unconscionable that the House would vote to write yet another blank check for ICE and Border Patrol’s campaign of chaos without any reforms. Over the past several months we’ve seen these abusive agencies kill our neighbors, harass and racially profile people, and tear thousands of families apart.

“Once again, the House has shown that it is more committed to standing in President Trump’s good graces than fighting for the needs of the constituents they were elected to represent. The ACLU – and the more than half a million supporters who wrote their members of Congress to demand they reject this bill – will not forget how our members of Congress chose to abandon that responsibility.”

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