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US Senate Republicans move ahead with budget plan to Trump immigration enforcement

John Thune, Senate Majority leader, said that the U.S. Senate Republicans would move forward with a budget plan this?week to increase funding for?Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Border?Patrol for the?next?three?years.

Thune's comments come as the Republican-controlled Congress aims to end a partial shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security.

Thune, in an address to the Senate, said that the budget resolution we are considering this week would unlock funding for border law enforcement at DHS over the next three years.

The additional $70 billion outlined in the budget plan for DHS will be available until the end of President Donald Trump’s tenure as president on January 20, 2020.

Chuck Schumer, Senate Democratic Leader, attacked the bill. He said it would "pour money" into "ICE and Border Patrol 'without putting any restrictions on their rampant violence that is rogue agencies in our'streets."

Before signing off any new funds for ICE or Border Patrol (which operate under DHS), Democrats have pushed for a series of new restrictions. They have argued ICE and Border Patrol must follow the same rules as other police forces in the United States. This includes a requirement that judicial warrants are obtained before agents enter private homes.

The negotiations between Republicans and Democrats over a period of several weeks on such changes failed to bear fruit, leading to partial shutdowns at some DHS agencies.

Republicans now have chosen to "end the deadlock" and ram through new funding using a rarely-used procedure that allows budget-related legislation bypassing Democratic opposition.

To pass, most?bills require a supermajority?of at least 60 votes?in the 100 member Senate. Republicans control the Senate currently with a majority of 53-47.

The Senate and House of Representatives would need to pass this non-binding budget blueprint before it could become law. (Reporting and Editing by Katharine?Jackson and Richard Cowan, Editing By Doina?Chiacu, Editing By William Maclean).

(source: Reuters)