Moreno questions TSA nominee on DHS funding lapse affecting 260,000 workers
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Topics in This Edition
Summary
The clip shows Sen. Bernie Moreno (R-OH) questioning TSA Administrator nominee David Cummins during a Senate Commerce Committee confirmation hearing. Moreno highlights a partial DHS funding lapse that left roughly 260,000 employees, including TSA screeners, working without paychecks for weeks or longer. He contrasts private-sector payroll obligations with congressional actions, recounts constituent stories of financial hardship, and accuses Democrats of using workers as pawns while refusing to pass a clean continuing resolution. Moreno references prior instances of similar funding standoffs in 2026 and claims Democrats block efforts to tie congressional pay to resolution of the impasse. The segment ends with committee remarks and a call for Democrats to support funding measures.
Editorial Assessment
The broadcast accurately conveys the scale of the DHS funding lapse and its documented impact on TSA and other essential personnel who continued working without immediate pay, with backpay guarantees applying later. Viewers miss that essential federal workers receive retroactive pay by law, that both parties proposed and blocked targeted funding measures during negotiations, and that the impasse centered on broader appropriations and policy riders. The framing presents Democratic obstruction as the sole cause without equivalent scrutiny of Republican demands or voting records. Emotional anecdotes and moral language amplify partisan messaging over procedural details of how appropriations lapses occur.
Key Moments
Democrats had no problem not paying 260,000 DHS members for 43 days
DHS and multiple outlets confirmed ~260,000 affected employees during the partial 2026 funding lapse that exceeded 30 days.
Democrats objected to bill withholding lawmakers' pay during shutdown
Moreno and others advanced such measures; later Senate action passed a version unanimously, but timing and objections in this specific standoff not detailed.
This is the third time Democrats have done this in 2026
DHS statements and reporting reference repeated funding lapses affecting TSA pay within months.
Democrats prefer shutdown as political tool to blame Republicans
Motives are asserted without primary evidence; negotiations involved competing proposals from both parties.
Notable Concerns
- One-sided attribution of shutdown responsibility without countervailing votes or proposals from either side
- Unsubstantiated claims about Democratic motivations and priorities
Sources Consulted
- Sen. Bernie Moreno calls Democratic colleagues 'disgraceful' over shutdown leaving 260,000 workers without pay
- TSA Administrator Nominee David Cummins Testifies at Confirmation Hearing
- Democrats' Reckless DHS Shutdown is Forcing TSA Officers to Work Without Pay
- Trump signs order to pay TSA employees after Congress fails to agree on DHS funding
- Senators approve withholding their own pay during future government shutdowns
- Moreno Rips Democrats for Holding DHS Funding Hostage