And then comes the line that matters: Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Customs and Border Protection have “separate funding” from last year’s tax law that “could be tapped” to avoid missed paychecks and continue operations.¹
In other words, the enforcement core can continue functioning even while the agency is formally “shut down.”
Reuters fills in the contrast. TSA workers may be required to work without pay. Security lines may lengthen. Travelers may feel the disruption.²,³ Deportations and enforcement programs, however, can continue under alternate funding streams.³
The public feels inconvenience. The enforcement apparatus feels continuity.
Once you see that split, shutdown coverage looks different.
Congress traditionally exerts leverage through the purse. A lapse in appropriations constrains executive action. But if enforcement functions are insulated through prior funding streams or statutory authorities, the visible consequences of a shutdown migrate toward services rather than coercive capacity.
The fight remains loud. The machinery keeps running.
Inside DHS, the picture grows murkier. The Journal has described internal upheaval that resembles a performance contest as much as a bureaucratic overhaul. Roughly 80 percent of career ICE field leadership in place when new political leadership arrived were reportedly fired or demoted.⁴ Public-profile metrics and television appearances were tracked alongside enforcement numbers.⁴
Institutional turbulence makes oversight harder to trace. Lines blur. Authority recenters.
Back in the Everglades, the dispute over access to counsel remains unresolved.¹ The lawyers describe procedural barriers. The state insists systems are functioning. The court waits.¹ No dramatic violence. Just friction.
A right that exists in statute but is difficult to exercise in practice has not been erased. It has been managed.
Zoom out.
In Minneapolis, federal officials framed an enforcement surge as a response to crime.¹ Public messaging emphasized violent offenders. Yet CBS News, analyzing internal ICE data covering nearly 400,000 arrests over a year, reported that fewer than 14 percent involved individuals accused or convicted of violent crimes, and fewer than 2 percent involved homicide or sexual assault charges or convictions.⁵ FactCheck.org summarized similar findings, noting violent convictions accounted for roughly 7 percent in one review.⁶
Definitions vary. Timeframes matter. Agencies control classifications. But the measurable pattern is clear: rhetoric concentrates on violent threat; arrest distributions reflect a much wider net.⁵,⁶
Meanwhile, according to Journal reporting, residents organized neighborhood monitoring efforts, blocking vehicles and blowing whistles to warn when ICE approached.¹ That is adaptation to enforcement as a constant, not an event.
The shutdown debate, viewed through this lens, becomes less about institutional breakdown and more