By Danielle Owen and Meghan Castellano Shea
Read this blog from The Corps Network’s Government Relations Team about recent updates from Washington and what they mean for the Service and Conservation Corps community.
2:42 p.m. ET on February 3, 2026
On the afternoon of February 3, the House passed an updated Fiscal Year (FY26) funding package that includes appropriations for the Labor, Health, and Human Services (LHHS), Defense, State-Foreign Operations, Transportation-HUD, and Financial Services bills, along with a two-week continuing resolution for the Homeland Security bill. The LHHS bill funds AmeriCorps and the Department of Labor, while the Homeland Security bill funds Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). The package now awaits the President’s signature. Once enacted, eleven of the twelve annual federal funding bills for FY26 will have been completed.
Now that the updated package, including the two-week CR for the Homeland Security bill, has been passed, Congress has just under two weeks to put together a final full-year FY26 Homeland Security funding bill that can garner enough support to pass both chambers and be signed into law.
On Monday night, the House Rules Committee met and voted along party lines to advance the funding package. Late Tuesday morning, the House adopted the rule governing debate, with Republicans voting 217 to 215 to move the package forward. Rep. Thomas Massie (R-KY) was the only Republican to oppose the procedural vote. After one hour of debate on final passage, the House voted to pass the updated funding package by a vote of 217 to 214. 21 Democrats voted in support of the measure AND 21 Republicans voted against it.
Also on Monday, several House Republicans discussed attaching the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) Act to the package. The bill would require individuals to show proof of citizenship in person to register to vote in federal elections. Although the House passed the SAVE Act in April 2025, it has not passed the Senate. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) stated that attaching the SAVE Act would jeopardize the package’s chances in the Senate. President Trump similarly posted on Truth Social that the package should be sent to his desk “WITHOUT DELAY” and that there should be “NO CHANGES at this time.” As a result, the proposal to attach the SAVE Act did not advance.






































































