US Government PARTIAL Shutdown BEGINS January 31 at Midnight: DHS (Homeland Security) UNFUNDED = TSA, Customs, Border Patrol, ICE Work Without Pay Starting TODAY While 5 Major Agencies SAVED Last-Minute (Defense, HHS, Transportation, State, Financial Services) as Senate Passes 71-29 Deal Stripping Homeland Security Funding Over Minnesota ICE Shootings (Alex Pretti Nurse Killed January 24) + Democrats Demand Body Cameras, Mask Ban, Warrant Requirements—House Returns MONDAY February 3 to Vote on Reopening, OMB Director Russell Vought Says “It Is Our Hope This Lapse Will Be Short” Though Shutdown Coincides With Tomorrow’s REAL ID Enforcement Deadline Creating Double Crisis for 50,000+ TSA Screeners + 14,000 Air Traffic Controllers Working Unpaid Just 3 Months After 43-Day $6.1 Billion Shutdown October-November 2025, But ICE/CBP Operations Continue Under $165 Billion “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” Funding (Largest Immigration Enforcement Budget in History) Meaning Controversial Raids Proceed Despite Democrats’ Protest Vote

Published on : 31 Jan 2026

Official: US Government Shuts Down! Travel & Security Impact Guide

BREAKING AFTERMATH: US government entered partial shutdown at midnight January 31, 2026 after Congress failed to meet Friday deadline—but impact dramatically LIMITED compared to October-November 2025’s 43-day full shutdown ($6.1 billion economic loss, 850,000+ federal workers unpaid) because Senate voted 71-29 Friday night to pass five appropriations bills funding Defense Department, Health and Human Services, Transportation/HUD, State Department, Financial Services through September 2026 while STRIPPING OUT Department of Homeland Security (which oversees TSA, Customs and Border Protection, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, FEMA, Coast Guard, Secret Service) giving DHS only two-week stopgap extension at current funding levels—meaning 50,000+ TSA screeners + 14,000+ air traffic controllers + 60,000+ Customs/Border officers technically work without pay starting TODAY January 31 though OMB Director Russell Vought promised in statement “The Administration will continue working with Congress to address recently raised concerns to complete appropriations for Fiscal Year 2026—it is our hope that this lapse will be short” while House Speaker Mike Johnson scheduled Monday February 3 vote (when House returns from weekend recess) to pass Senate’s amended package expected to reopen government within 72 hours—creating WEEKEND-ONLY partial shutdown affecting primarily Homeland Security employees while Democrats successfully blocked DHS long-term funding over fatal Minneapolis ICE shooting of Alex Pretti (32-year-old nurse working at VA hospital killed January 24 by Border Patrol agents during immigration raid) demanding reforms including mandatory body cameras for ICE/CBP agents, ban on wearing masks during operations, stricter judicial warrant requirements, uniform use-of-force rules—though ironically ICE and CBP enforcement operations continue UNINTERRUPTED under massive $165 billion appropriation from December 2025’s “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” ($75 billion ICE + $65 billion CBP = far exceeding annual budgets) meaning Trump administration’s controversial immigration raids proceed despite Democrats’ protest, while shutdown timing creates awkward optics as tomorrow February 1 = REAL ID enforcement deadline forcing TSA to begin denying airport access to non-compliant passengers even as TSA screeners work unpaid creating morale/operational concerns.


Published: January 31, 2026, 8:00 AM EST
Shutdown Began: Midnight January 31, 2026 (6 hours ago)
Duration: Weekend only (expected 72-hour lapse)
Senate Vote: 71-29 (passed 5 bills, stripped DHS)
House Vote: Monday February 3, 2026
Agencies UNFUNDED: DHS (TSA, Customs, ICE, FEMA, Coast Guard, Secret Service)
Agencies FUNDED: Defense, HHS, Transportation, State, Financial Services (75% of budget)
TSA Screeners Unpaid: 50,000+ (work without pay starting today)
Air Traffic Controllers Unpaid: 14,000+ (essential employees continue)
ICE/CBP Funded Separately: $165 billion “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” (operations continue)
Root Cause: Alex Pretti shooting Minneapolis January 24 (ICE agent killed nurse)
Democratic Demands: Body cameras, mask ban, warrants, use-of-force rules
Recovery Timeline: “Short lapse hoped” per OMB Director Vought


What Happened: Timeline of the Shutdown

FRIDAY JANUARY 30 – Senate Vote Night:

Morning: Senate FAILS procedural vote 44-55 (need 60 votes)

  • 8 Republicans join Democrats blocking six-bill package
  • Democrats demand DHS funding stripped due to ICE shootings

Afternoon: Trump-Schumer deal struck

  • 5 bills pass through September
  • DHS gets 2-week extension only

Evening: Senate votes 71-29

  • Passes Defense, HHS, Transportation, State, Financial Services
  • DHS temporary extension by voice vote

11:59 PM: House adjourns for weekend WITHOUT voting

  • Speaker Mike Johnson announces Monday vote
  • Government funding expires at midnight

SATURDAY JANUARY 31 – Shutdown Begins (TODAY):

12:00 AM Midnight: Partial shutdown officially begins

Morning Status:

  • ✅ Defense Department: FUNDED through September
  • ✅ HHS (Medicare, Medicaid, NIH): FUNDED
  • ✅ Transportation (FAA, highways): FUNDED
  • ✅ State Department: FUNDED
  • ✅ Financial Services: FUNDED
  • DHS (TSA, Customs, ICE, FEMA, Coast Guard): UNFUNDED

Federal Offices: Most closed weekends anyway (minimal immediate impact)


MONDAY FEBRUARY 3 – House Vote Expected:

House Returns: Speaker Johnson plans vote

Expected Outcome: Passes with bipartisan support

  • Republicans hold 220-215 majority (5-seat margin)
  • Democrats likely provide votes to pass
  • Reopens government by Monday evening

If Passes: Shutdown ends after ~72 hours


Who’s Working Without Pay (Starting Today)

Department of Homeland Security – ALL Employees Affected:

TSA (Transportation Security Administration):

  • Employees: 50,000+ screeners nationwide
  • Status: “Essential” = must work WITHOUT PAY
  • Impact: All US airports continue security screening
  • Backpay: Will receive retroactive pay when shutdown ends

Customs and Border Protection (CBP):

  • Employees: 60,000+ officers, agents
  • Status: “Essential” = work without pay
  • Impact: Borders, ports of entry remain operational
  • BUT: Funded separately by $65 billion One Big Beautiful Bill Act

Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE):

  • Employees: 20,000+ agents
  • Status: “Essential” = work without pay
  • Impact: Enforcement operations continue
  • BUT: Funded separately by $75 billion One Big Beautiful Bill Act

FEMA (Federal Emergency Management Agency):

  • Employees: 20,000+ disaster response
  • Status: Emergency operations only
  • Impact: Reduced non-emergency services

US Coast Guard:

  • Personnel: 42,000+ active duty + 7,000+ reserves
  • Status: Military = work without pay
  • Impact: Search-and-rescue, maritime security continue

Secret Service:

  • Agents: 3,200+ protecting President, VIPs
  • Status: Essential = work without pay
  • Impact: Presidential protection continues

Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) – FUNDED:

Air Traffic Controllers:

  • Employees: 14,000+
  • Status:FUNDED (Transportation bill passed)
  • Impact: NO disruption to air traffic control

Difference from October-November Shutdown:

  • Last time: FAA unfunded, controllers worked without pay
  • This time: Transportation Department funded = ATC gets paychecks

The Minnesota ICE Shooting: Why Democrats Blocked DHS

Alex Pretti Killed January 24, 2026:

Victim:

  • Name: Alex Pretti, 32 years old
  • Occupation: Intensive care unit (ICU) nurse at Minneapolis VA Medical Center
  • Status: US citizen, uninvolved bystander

Incident:

  • Date: Saturday January 24, 2026
  • Location: Minneapolis, Minnesota
  • Agents: Border Patrol conducting immigration raid
  • Outcome: Pretti fatally shot by federal agents

Circumstances:

  • ICE/CBP conducting enforcement operation
  • Pretti reportedly near raid location
  • Agents fired, killing US citizen
  • Second fatal shooting in Minneapolis in 3 weeks

Previous Shooting: Renee Good (January 7, 2026):

Victim: US citizen killed by ICE agents early January

Pattern: Two US citizens killed by immigration agents in Minneapolis within 17 days


Democratic Response:

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer:

“Until ICE is properly reined in and overhauled legislatively, the DHS funding bill doesn’t have the votes to pass.”

Senator Patty Murray (D-WA), Appropriations ranking member:

“ICE and CBP are out of control, and we cannot approve that bill until common sense reforms are included. That’s what the vast majority of American people are demanding, and many Republicans now also say that must happen as well.”

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries:

“We have to deal with the issue of reining ICE and the Department of Homeland Security in with the fierce urgency of now. ICE, as we’ve seen, is out of control.”


Democratic Demands: 5 Reforms Required

Senate Democrats outlined specific reforms required before supporting DHS long-term funding:

1. Mandatory Body Cameras:

  • ALL ICE and CBP agents must wear body cameras during operations
  • Footage must be preserved and available for review
  • Modeled after: Local police departments nationwide

2. Ban on Wearing Masks:

  • Agents prohibited from covering faces during enforcement
  • Allows identification, accountability
  • Exception: Tactical situations only

3. Stricter Judicial Warrant Requirements:

  • Agents must obtain judicial warrants (not administrative warrants)
  • Higher standard for home entries
  • Current: ICE uses administrative warrants signed by ICE officials

4. Uniform Code of Conduct:

  • Standardized rules across all DHS agencies
  • Clear escalation procedures
  • Written policies on force usage

5. Use-of-Force Rules:

  • When agents authorized to use deadly force
  • De-escalation training mandatory
  • Independent review of shootings

House DHS Bill: Includes body camera funding + de-escalation training (passed last week 220-207)


Republican Response: “Never Been More Offended”

Senator Lindsey Graham (R-SC) – BLOCKED Deal Initially:

Graham’s Hold:

  • Refused to lift hold on spending bill Friday
  • Demanded “guaranteed vote” on sanctuary city bill
  • Wanted criminal penalties for state/local officials blocking federal immigration enforcement

Quote:

“I’ve never been more offended than I am right now of what’s being said about these folks [ICE/CBP agents].”

Eventually: Lifted hold allowing vote to proceed


Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-SD):

On two-week DHS extension:

“I wish they’d given us more time. I just think it’s going to be really, really hard to get anything done and then actually execute on the procedures and process we have in the Senate, even if there’s an agreement. There are some pretty significant differences of opinion.”

Translation: Skeptical Democrats and Republicans can agree on ICE reforms in 14 days


Senator Susan Collins (R-ME), Appropriations Chair:

Balanced response:

“There has understandably been a great deal of attention focused on the Homeland Security portion. [The Pretti shooting] must be thoroughly and impartially investigated. The DHS spending bill in its current form includes a provision that would make such incidents as less likely to occur.”

Collins voted FOR Bernie Sanders’ amendment to repeal $75 billion ICE funding increase (one of only 2 Republicans)


The ICE Funding Paradox: Operations Continue Despite Shutdown

“One Big Beautiful Bill Act” (December 2025):

Massive DHS Appropriation:

  • ICE: $75 billion
  • CBP: $65 billion (Customs and Border Protection)
  • Total DHS: $165 billion

Comparison to Annual Budgets:

  • Normal ICE annual budget: ~$8-10 billion
  • One Big Beautiful Bill = 7× normal ICE budget
  • Normal CBP budget: ~$15-18 billion
  • One Big Beautiful Bill = 3-4× normal CBP budget

What This Means:

ICE and CBP have MASSIVE funding regardless of shutdown:

  • Can continue ALL enforcement operations
  • No operational disruptions
  • Agents still conduct raids, arrests, deportations

Translation: Democrats’ DHS funding block is SYMBOLIC protest that doesn’t actually stop ICE/CBP operations because Trump administration already secured multi-year funding surge

Senator Bernie Sanders’ Failed Amendment:

  • Proposed repealing $75 billion ICE increase
  • Redirect to Medicaid
  • Vote: 49-51 (failed)
  • Only Collins + Murkowski joined Democrats

What This Shutdown Means for Travelers

TSA Screening – CONTINUES (But Unpaid):

Airport Security:

  • ✅ All TSA checkpoints OPEN
  • ✅ Security screening continues normally
  • ✅ 50,000+ screeners working (without pay)
  • ❌ Morale concerns (working unpaid again after October shutdown)

Tomorrow’s REAL ID Deadline:

  • February 1, 2026: TSA begins enforcing REAL ID Act
  • Non-compliant IDs = denied boarding
  • Awkward timing: TSA enforcing new rule while unpaid

Air Travel – NORMAL (FAA Funded):

Air Traffic Control:

  • FUNDED through Transportation bill
  • ✅ 14,000+ controllers GET PAYCHECKS
  • ✅ NO delays expected from shutdown
  • ✅ DIFFERENT from October shutdown (when ATC unpaid)

Flight Operations:

  • All flights operate normally
  • No cancellations expected
  • Weather = only concern (not shutdown)

Customs/Border Crossing – CONTINUES (But Slow):

International Travelers:

  • ✅ Customs officers working (unpaid)
  • ❌ Potential longer wait times (morale low)
  • ❌ Reduced staffing possible (officers call in sick)

Last Shutdown (October-November):

  • Customs wait times increased 30-50%
  • Officers staged “sick-outs” protesting unpaid work

FEMA Disaster Response – REDUCED:

Emergency Operations:

  • ✅ Active disasters = full response
  • ❌ Non-emergency programs paused
  • ❌ Training, planning reduced

Comparison: This Shutdown vs. October-November 2025

October-November 2025 Shutdown (43 Days):

Duration: October 19 – November 30, 2025 (43 days)

Scope: FULL government shutdown

  • ALL 12 appropriations bills unfunded
  • 850,000+ federal workers furloughed/unpaid
  • TSA, ATC, Customs ALL unpaid

Economic Impact: $6.1 billion

  • Lost productivity
  • Delayed contracts
  • Tourism losses
  • Airport delays

Cause: Trump vs. Democrats on immigration/border wall funding

Resolution: Temporary CR passed November 30


January 31, 2026 Shutdown (This Weekend):

Duration: ~72 hours (weekend only, expected Monday reopening)

Scope: PARTIAL shutdown

  • Only DHS unfunded (with 2-week CR)
  • Defense, HHS, Transportation, State, Financial Services FUNDED
  • 75% of government operating normally

Economic Impact: Minimal (most offices closed weekends anyway)

Cause: Minneapolis ICE shootings + Democratic demands for reforms

Resolution: House votes Monday, expected to pass


What Happens Next: Monday’s House Vote

House Returns Monday February 3:

Speaker Mike Johnson’s Plan:

  • Vote on Senate’s amended package
  • Pass 5 full-year bills (Defense, HHS, Transportation, State, Financial)
  • Pass 2-week DHS extension

Expected Outcome: PASSES with bipartisan support

Vote Math:

  • Republicans: 220 seats (5-seat majority)
  • Need: 218 votes to pass
  • Democrats: Likely provide votes if conservatives balk

Potential House Complications:

Conservative Holdouts:

  • Some Republicans oppose 2-week DHS “punt”
  • Want full-year DHS funding NOW
  • Could withhold votes on procedural rule

Democratic Demands:

  • Will Democrats vote for DHS extension WITHOUT reforms included?
  • Or insist on ICE accountability provisions?

Leadership Confidence:

  • Johnson told members Friday he expects Monday passage
  • “We’re very close” per House aides

After Monday (If Passes):

Government Reopens:

  • DHS funded for 2 weeks (through February 14)
  • Gives negotiators time for ICE reform talks

Then What?

  • February 14 deadline for long-term DHS funding
  • Democrats demand body cameras, masks, warrants
  • Republicans resist “handcuffing” ICE during enforcement surge
  • Another shutdown possible February 14?

The Two-Week Negotiation: Can They Agree?

Senate Majority Leader Thune’s Skepticism:

“I just think it’s going to be really, really hard to get anything done and then actually execute on the procedures and process we have in the Senate, even if there’s an agreement. There are some pretty significant differences of opinion.”

Translation: Two weeks likely NOT enough time


Democratic Bottom Line:

Senator Schumer:

“There will have to be strong, common-sense legislation that reins in ICE in order for Democrats to support long-term funding for DHS.”

Must include:

  • Body cameras
  • Mask ban
  • Warrant requirements
  • Use-of-force rules

Republican Bottom Line:

Trump Administration Position:

  • ICE enforcement is “top priority”
  • Agents need operational flexibility
  • Reforms would “tie agents’ hands”

Conservative Republicans:

  • Support Trump’s immigration crackdown
  • Resist Democratic “micromanagement”
  • Want clean DHS funding bill

Possible Outcomes February 14:

Scenario 1: Compromise reached

  • Body cameras funded (both sides support)
  • Some warrant/use-of-force reforms
  • DHS funded through September

Scenario 2: Another 2-week extension

  • No agreement reached
  • Kick can down road again
  • Repeat February 28

Scenario 3: Shutdown again

  • Democrats block DHS funding
  • Another weekend/short-term lapse
  • Pressure builds for deal

OMB Director’s Statement: “Hope This Lapse Will Be Short”

Russell Vought, OMB Director:

Full Statement:

“The Administration will continue working with the Congress to address recently raised concerns to complete appropriations for Fiscal Year 2026. It is our hope that this lapse will be short.”

Translation:

  • Acknowledges shutdown happened
  • Blames “recently raised concerns” (ICE shootings)
  • Optimistic about quick resolution
  • But no specific timeline

What Travelers Should Do

If Flying This Weekend:


Arrive 3 hours early (TSA unpaid = potential slowdowns)
Have REAL ID-compliant ID (enforcement begins tomorrow Feb 1)
Check flight status (weather, not shutdown, main concern)
Be patient with TSA (they’re working without pay)


If Traveling Internationally:


Customs will be SLOW (unpaid officers, reduced morale)
Have all documents ready (passport, declarations, etc.)
Expect longer wait times (especially major ports of entry)


If You’re a Federal Employee:


TSA/Customs/ICE/FEMA/Coast Guard: Work without pay (backpay when reopens)
Defense/HHS/Transportation: YOU’RE FUNDED, paychecks continue
Check OPM.gov for official guidance
Last shutdown: Took 2-3 weeks to process backpay


The Bottom Line

US government entered partial shutdown at midnight January 31, 2026—but impact DRAMATICALLY limited because Senate passed 5 of 6 remaining appropriations bills funding 75% of government (Defense, Health and Human Services, Transportation, State Department, Financial Services) through September while stripping out Department of Homeland Security giving DHS only 2-week stopgap over fatal Minneapolis ICE shooting of Alex Pretti (nurse killed by Border Patrol January 24, second US citizen killed by immigration agents in 3 weeks) as Democrats demand body cameras, mask bans, stricter warrants, use-of-force rules before approving long-term funding—meaning 50,000+ TSA screeners + 60,000+ Customs officers work without pay starting TODAY January 31 though air traffic controllers FUNDED (Transportation bill passed) preventing flight delays + ICE/CBP enforcement operations continue UNINTERRUPTED under separate $165 billion “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” appropriation making Democrats’ funding block largely symbolic protest that doesn’t stop controversial raids, while House Speaker Mike Johnson scheduled Monday February 3 vote expected to pass with bipartisan support reopening government within 72 hours creating weekend-only shutdown with minimal traveler impact beyond awkward timing as tomorrow February 1 = REAL ID enforcement deadline forcing unpaid TSA screeners to begin denying non-compliant passengers airport access.

For travelers: Airport operations continue normally this weekend—TSA screening, air traffic control, Customs all functioning—but expect longer security lines (unpaid TSA morale low), slower Customs processing (officers may stage “sick-outs”), and potential delays though most federal offices closed weekends anyway minimizing immediate disruption, with House vote Monday expected to reopen government quickly though February 14 deadline looms for long-term DHS funding creating possibility of ANOTHER shutdown if Democrats and Republicans can’t agree on ICE accountability reforms within two-week window.

The Minnesota shooting changed everything—what started as routine appropriations process became referendum on Trump immigration enforcement after two US citizens killed by federal agents in three weeks, with Democrats drawing line demanding reforms before funding agency responsible for controversial operations, though $165 billion separate appropriation means ICE/CBP continue raids regardless making shutdown more political theater than operational impact.

Bottom line: This is NOT October’s 43-day $6.1 billion crisis—it’s targeted 72-hour pressure tactic forcing ICE accountability conversation, with minimal traveler disruption but maximum political drama as Democrats leverage only power they have (withholding DHS funding) to demand guardrails on enforcement surge that already has multi-year funding secured.


Critical Resources

Government Shutdown Info:


🌐 OPM.gov: opm.gov (official federal employee guidance)
🌐 USA.gov: usa.gov/government-shutdown (public services status)

Travel Status:


🌐 TSA: tsa.gov (airport security updates)
🌐 FAA: faa.gov (air traffic control status)
🌐 CBP: cbp.gov (Customs/border wait times)

REAL ID Deadline (Tomorrow!):


🌐 DHS REAL ID: dhs.gov/real-id (compliance guide)
🌐 TSA REAL ID: tsa.gov/real-id (what you need)

Flight Status:


🌐 FlightAware: flightaware.com (real-time tracking)


Related Articles:


Posted By: Vinay

As a lead contributor for Travel Tourister, Vinay specializes in breaking government shutdown coverage for Tier 1 audiences (US, UK, Canada, Australia). His mission is to decode complex political crises into actionable traveler guidance—like January 31, 2026 partial shutdown where DHS unfunded (TSA/Customs work without pay) but 5 agencies saved (Defense, HHS, Transportation, State, Financial) limiting impact to weekend-only disruption compared to October’s 43-day $6.1 billion crisis, explaining Senate Democrats’ ICE accountability demands (body cameras, mask ban, warrants) after Alex Pretti Minneapolis shooting (nurse killed by Border Patrol January 24), analyzing $165 billion “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” paradox (ICE/CBP operations continue despite funding block), providing House Monday vote timeline (expected 72-hour reopening), warning about REAL ID deadline tomorrow (February 1 enforcement begins while TSA unpaid), and offering practical airport guidance helping travelers navigate political theater with minimal disruption.

Posted By : Vinay

As a lead contributor for Travel Tourister, Vinay is dedicated to serving our Tier 1 audience (US, UK, Canada, Australia). His mission is to deliver precise, fact-checked news and actionable, data-driven articles that empower readers to make informed decisions, minimize travel risks, and maximize their adventure without compromising safety or budget.

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