Senator Ted Cruz
As the partial shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) stretched past a month, Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) made a pointed gesture: he asked the Senate's financial office to hold his paycheck.
In a formal letter to the Financial Clerk of the Senate, Sen. Cruz requested that his salary be withheld for pickup at the Disbursing Office rather than deposited as usual.
His reasoning was straightforward. "It's not right for Members of Congress to be paid during a partial shutdown if the working men and women of the Department of Homeland Security aren't," he wrote.
Cruz echoed the sentiment publicly on X, placing blame squarely on the opposing party. "Due to the Democrat's Shutdown, I've asked the Financial Clerk of the Senate to hold my salary," he posted.
The DHS partial shutdown, which began on February 14, has caused noticeable disruptions for everyday Americans, including lengthy lines at airport security checkpoints.
Thousands of DHS employees have gone without pay for over a month, caught in the middle of a congressional impasse over the agency's funding.
However, the core disagreement centers on immigration enforcement.
Democrats have refused to approve DHS funding unless Republicans agree to a series of conditions, such as stricter warrant requirements, a prohibition on agents wearing masks, and mandates for body cameras and visible identification.
Republicans have so far rejected those terms.
In an attempt to break the deadlock, Senate Republicans floated a new proposal Tuesday that would fund most of DHS while carving out Immigration and Customs Enforcement's (ICE) deportation operations, effectively allowing Democrats to avoid a direct vote on funding those efforts.
Nevertheless, the plan faces a steep climb.
Republicans hold 53 seats in the Senate but would need at least seven members of the Democratic caucus to join them in clearing the 60-vote threshold required to overcome a filibuster.
President Donald Trump, briefed on the proposal by Republican senators at the White House on Monday, said: "I think any deal they make, I'm pretty much not happy with it," he told reporters Tuesday.
Whether the shutdown is resolved through compromise or continues to drag on, Cruz's decision to decline his paycheck ensures he remains visibly tied to its outcome, a symbolic stand that keeps pressure on both parties to reach a deal.
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