House hardliners complicate ending government shutdown as Speaker Johnson moves ahead
Published Mon, Feb 2 2026
3:35 PM EST
Updated 33 Min Ago
Garrett Downs@in/garrett-downs-28528513b/@_garrettdownsWATCH LIVEKey Points
- President Donald Trump called on the House of Representatives to approve the Senate-passed spending package without making changes.
- Conservative Republicans in the House of Representatives are threatening to tank a bill to reopen the government unless it includes a controversial voter-ID measure known as the SAVE Act.
- The House is scheduled to begin taking up the Senate-amended bill on Monday after the upper chamber replaced a full-year Department of Homeland Security spending bill with two weeks of stopgap funding.
Representative Anna Paulina Luna, a Republican from Florida, during the Republican National Convention at the Fiserv Forum in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, July 16, 2024.
Al Drago | Bloomberg | Getty Images
House Speaker Mike Johnson is running into problems with his own caucus as he tries to advance a Senate-approved measure to reopen most of the government, which shut down on Saturday morning. Though opposition appears to be thawing after a White House meeting Monday with some of the holdouts.
The House Rules Committee is meeting Monday evening about the measure that would fund a wide swath of the government, the first step in getting the bill to the House floor. The bill cleared the Senate on Friday after Democrats there had funding for the Department of Homeland Security stripped and replaced with two weeks of stopgap funding for the agency â a change that requires the House to reapprove the measure.
Because Democrats are not helping Johnson and the GOP fast-track the measure, the speaker will likely have to work within his own razor-thin majority to advance the bill when it reaches the floor for a critical preliminary vote as early as Monday night. At least two Republicans so far have warned they will not support the bill unless it includes a controversial voter-ID measure known as the SAVE Act, a new hurdle for Johnson as he aims to end the shutdown. And the Republican majority shrunk Monday after Democrat Christian Menefee was sworn in to represent a Houston district after being elected Saturday in a special election.
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"I have been clear: the SAVE Act/Save America Act must be attached to the rule for these appropriations bills and sent back to the Senate for a vote," Rep. Anna Paulina Luna, R-Fla., said Sunday in a post to X. "This is my price for a 'yes' vote."
On Monday night, however, Luna said she was moving toward supporting the measure in a procedural vote after a meeting with the White House.
"Based on our discussions right now, we're moving towards it," Luna told reporters at the Capitol Monday night, saying she's comfortable with how the Senate might consider the voter-ID bill. "Frankly, we want a vote on voter ID in the Senate, and I think we're gonna get it."
But Rep. Eric Burlison, R-Mo., another holdout who called for the SAVE Act to be included earlier in the day, appears to be digging in.
"House Republicans shouldn't let Schumer dictate the terms of government funding," Burlison said, referring to Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y. "If Dems want to play games, no spending package should come out of the House without the SAVE Act attached â securing American elections must be a non-negotiable."
Later Monday, Burlison posted to X that "The Senate minibus is just as bad as it was when it left the Houseâfilled with Democrat earmarks and $5 billion in refugee welfare funding."
"I was a no then, and I'm a no now," he said.
President Donald Trump on Monday urged Congress to hurry up and send the spending package to him to sign into law.
"We need to get the Government open, and I hope all Republicans and Democrats will join me in supporting this Bill, and send it to my desk WITHOUT DELAY," he said in a post to Truth Social, saying the House should pass the Senate version without making additional changes.
At the White House on Monday, Trump told reporters he thinks Congress is "pretty close to a resolution."
But Democrats won't make the process easy. The House needs to approve the rule before the chamber can vote on the underlying measure and send it to the White House to be signed into law.
House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., on Monday said at a press conference he doesn't expect Democrats to support the rule when it advances to the floor from the Rules Committee. Democrats have called for more restrictions on immigration enforcement after federal agents in Minneapolis shot and killed two U.S. citizens.
"Republicans are in the majority in this institution," Jeffries said. "If they have some massive mandate, then go pass your rule."
The spending package won support from a key Democrat when House Appropriations Committee ranking member Rosa DeLauro, D-Conn., said Monday she would support the bill on the floor. However, she did not say whether she would support the rule.
"I will support this package," DeLauro said.
DeLauro said passing the bill would give Democrats "leverage" to secure changes to immigration enforcement that Democrats are seeking."If we do not do that, we will not be able to bring the kinds of pressure that is necessary," DeLauro said.
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said Monday afternoon in an X post that "every officer in the field in Minneapolis" would be equipped with body cameras. Democrats have pressed during the spending bill negotiations for body cameras.
The demands present Johnson with a tightrope walk. Without Democratic support, he will hold a minuscule one-vote majority to advance anything along party lines. But adding the SAVE Act to the measure would likely doom it in the Senate, where it would need to be reapproved with at least 60 votes to skirt the filibuster.
Schumer said the bill would be dead on arrival in the Senate if the SAVE Act is added.
"I have said it before and I'll say it again, the SAVE Act would impose Jim Crow type laws to the entire country and is dead on arrival in the Senate," Schumer said Monday in a statement. "If House Republicans add the SAVE Act to the bipartisan appropriations package it will lead to another prolonged Trump government shutdown."
This a developing story. Please refresh for updates.