Trump signed a nearly $70 billion immigration enforcement package into law on June 10, 2026, giving a major funding boost to ICE, Border Patrol and DHS through the rest of his term.
Trump signed a nearly $70 billion immigration enforcement package into law on June 10, giving his administration a major boost for the rest of his term.
The bill emerged from a months-long congressional fight and was signed in the Oval Office after a narrow House vote. According to AP, the package includes about $38 billion for Immigration and Customs Enforcement, $26 billion for Border Patrol and $5 billion for unexpected DHS costs.
The law now locks in one of the largest immigration enforcement funding increases of Trump’s second term. It comes after lawmakers already cleared the measure in Congress and moved it to the White House for final approval.
The new money is set to fund immigration enforcement through the end of Trump’s term, making the signing a significant policy and political win for the administration.
Further official implementation details could still follow from the White House or the Department of Homeland Security, but the core legislative fight is now over.
Revision note
Initial automated publication.