White House Says Trump Orders Back Pay From Shutdown to All Homeland Security Employees

WASHINGTON, April 3 (Reuters) – U.S. President Donald ⁠Trump ⁠on Friday signed ⁠an emergency order to pay “each and every” employee ​at the Department of Homeland Security the equivalent of compensation and ‌benefits lost during the ‌partial shutdown of the agency, according to a memo ⁠published by ⁠the White House.

Trump said the funds would have a “reasonable ​and logical nexus” to DHS functions, possibly alluding to legal questions surrounding the potential reallotment of funds appropriated by Congress for specific ​purposes.

U.S. lawmakers have failed to agree on legislation to ⁠fund the ⁠agency in the wake ⁠of ​deadly shootings by immigration agents earlier this year.

Tens of thousands of ​civilians at the ⁠U.S. Coast Guard, Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, Federal Emergency Management Agency and other agencies have not been paid since the government funding standoff began in February.

The U.S. Senate ⁠cleared the way early on Thursday for the House of Representatives ⁠to pass a DHS funding bill through September 30 that would end a nearly seven-week partial shutdown. The U.S. House of Representatives met on Thursday but did not vote to approve a funding bill.

On Monday, 50,000 Transportation Security Administration airport security officers began getting paid after Trump signed an order last week to pay ⁠them.

The standoff led to daily absences of 10% or more of TSA workers and brought chaos and long security lines to U.S. airports.

(Reporting by Ismail Shakil in ​Ottawa and Douglas Gillison in Washington; Editing by ​Edmund Klamann and David Gregorio)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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