








ABC News anchor Jonathan Karl dismantled Democrat Sen. Chris Van Hollen's (MD) messaging on the partial government shutdown Sunday, exposing a contradiction at the heart of his party's strategy: Democrats are blocking Department of Homeland Security funding to protest ICE operations, but ICE already has its money.
The exchange on "This Week" laid bare what conservatives have argued for weeks. The Democratic blockade isn't hurting the agency they claim to oppose. It's hurting everyone else.
Karl didn't let Van Hollen hide behind talking points. He outlined the situation with surgical clarity:
"I guess what's confusing here is you have fought and blocked the funding for the Department of Homeland Security because you object, as you just outlined to what ICE has been doing, and you wanted to force changes."
Then he twisted the knife:
"And yet, the only thing that has been assured throughout all of this is that ICE already has the money, because as you said, $75 billion passed in the budget bill last year. So you're holding up the entirety of the Department of Homeland Security because you object to ICE and you want changes to ICE. But through it all, ICE continues to have the money it needs."
Van Hollen called this "a false statement," claiming Democrats "have continuously advocated for funding" TSA, FEMA, and the Coast Guard. But when Karl pressed him on the core point, the senator's defense collapsed in real time.
Van Hollen interrupted Karl, insisting Democrats weren't "holding up all of the money" for DHS. Karl held firm. Van Hollen then conceded the game:
"Unless it doesn't include money for ICE, a very reformed ICE. That's right."
Karl's response was three words: "That's just a fact."
Here is the absurdity of the Democratic position, stated plainly. Following the GOP-backed One Big, Beautiful Bill Act's passage in July 2025, ICE and CBP are the only two agencies within DHS that have funding. Democrats voted against a full-year appropriations bill for DHS. Every Democrat except Pennsylvania Sen. John Fetterman.
So TSA agents are working without pay. Airport lines are growing. FEMA sits unfunded. The Coast Guard operates in limbo. All because Democrats want to punish ICE, the one agency that doesn't need the money they're withholding.
Van Hollen said Democrats are "not prepared to give ICE another $10 billion on top of the monies they already have and are using in many of these lawless operations." Set aside the loaded phrase "lawless operations," which Democrats deploy to describe enforcing immigration law. The math still doesn't work in his favor. ICE has $75 billion from the budget bill. Blocking DHS funding doesn't touch that. It starves the agencies that screen your bags at the airport and respond to hurricanes.
This is the equivalent of refusing to pay your electric bill because you're mad at your cable company. It doesn't punish the target. It just leaves you in the dark.
The partial shutdown isn't an abstraction. TSA agents are showing up to work without paychecks. President Trump's administration deployed ICE agents on Monday to support TSA agents, a creative workaround that highlights both the severity of the staffing problem and the administration's willingness to act where Congress won't.
Democrats have spent months framing ICE as the villain, particularly after the fatal shootings of Alex Pretti and Renee Nicole Good in January. But their legislative strategy doesn't target ICE. It targets the tens of thousands of DHS employees who have nothing to do with immigration enforcement. The people screening passengers. The people coordinating disaster relief. The people patrolling American waterways.
Van Hollen wants voters to believe Democrats are taking a principled stand against an out-of-control agency. What they're actually doing is defunding airport security to make a political point about immigration, a point that doesn't even land because ICE remains funded regardless.
It's worth noting that John Fetterman was the sole Democrat to support the full-year DHS appropriations bill. Fetterman has increasingly broken with his party on issues where progressive posturing collides with common sense. His vote here is telling. Even within the Democratic caucus, there is at least one senator who recognizes that holding TSA and FEMA hostage over ICE funding that already exists is not a strategy. Its performance.
The rest of the caucus chose the performance.
Credit where it's due: this was not a friendly interview on a conservative outlet. This was ABC's Sunday show, and the anchor refused to let a Democratic senator dress up obstruction as principle. Karl identified the logical flaw, stated it clearly, and didn't flinch when Van Hollen tried to redirect.
The Democratic position on DHS funding fails on its own terms. They say they want to rein in ICE. They chose a method that doesn't touch ICE's budget. They're causing visible, tangible harm to agencies Americans interact with daily, from airport security to disaster response, while the agency they oppose continues operating at full capacity.
Every traveler stuck in a long airport line, every TSA agent working without a paycheck, every Coast Guard operation running on fumes exists in that condition because Senate Democrats chose a strategy that punishes everyone except the target.
Van Hollen called it a "false statement." Karl called it a fact. The math sides with Karl.



