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CCP-connected millionaire allegedly bankrolls Minneapolis agitator groups through dark money network

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As agitators and federal law enforcement continue to clash in Minneapolis, the funding behind the groups fueling the anti-U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) unrest is beginning to come to light.

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One of the alleged financial backers of these agitators is a Chinese Communist Party advocate traced to a multitude of dark money organizations known to fuel far-left, CCP-influenced extremism in the U.S. and across the globe.

Earlier this week, a Fox News Digital investigation found several organizations are acting as lead voices in physically mobilizing agitators in Minneapolis, as well as communicating through multiple channels to encourage agitators to take to the streets in Minnesota and other cities. The Party for Socialism and Liberation and The People’s Forum are two of the core groups who allegedly have been behind facilitating and pushing agitators to organize on multiple occasions.

Both organizations are largely subsidized by American former tech mogul Neville Roy Singham, according to reports and congressional probes. Despite Singham facing federal investigations stretching back decades, a former federal prosecutor tells Fox News Digital that the multi-millionaire’s move to China essentially shields him from being subpoenaed by U.S. authorities.

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As unrest escalates in Minneapolis, investigators are uncovering a network of far-left activist groups allegedly bankrolled by a wealthy U.S. expat in China with reported ties to Chinese Communist Party–aligned propaganda efforts. (ROBERTO SCHMIDT / AFP via Getty Images / Photo by Dave Kotinsky/Getty Images for V-Day)

Singham, therefore, remains virtually untouchable as his dark money networks continue to wreak havoc on U.S. soil, the former prosecutor added.

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Singham sold his IT consulting company in 2017 for $785 million and moved to Shanghai was the focus of a 2023 New York Times exposé that unveiled his alleged connections to the CCP and his determination to finance extremist groups to embolden his radical ideology. The Times reported that Singham has funneled over a quarter-billion dollars to dark money organizations in the U.S. with little to no footprints, and some of these organizations are vaguely named with office addresses under suspicious locations like general UPS mailboxes. 

The 71-year-old U.S. citizen turned Shanghai resident reportedly shares office space with the Maku Group, a Chinese media company that is funded by Singham and is associated with pro-CCP propaganda, including a mission to «tell China’s story well.»

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Singham’s first run-in with federal investigations dates back to 1974, when the FBI investigated him for potentially being «engaged in activities inimical to U.S. interests.»

Fast-forward several decades to 2025, when Singham and the organizations he funded face a slew of congressional investigations from multiple committees in both the House and the Senate. Committee chairs also sent multiple letters to top administration officials under the Biden and Trump administrations pushing for further examination of Singham’s dark money network.

Last June, the House Oversight Committee, led by Rep. James Comer, R-Ky., launched an investigation into Singham for his alleged involvement in funding the anti-ICE riots that took place in Los Angeles last summer.

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Law enforcement puts out a fire during LA riots

Anti-ICE riots raged in Los Angeles last summer, and Oversight Committee Chairman Comer pointed to Singham as a potential benefactor for rioters. (AP Photo/Ethan Swope)

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«Mr. Singham, who resides in the People’s Republic of China, has a long track-record of assisting far-left entities, such as Code Pink, that oppose U.S. interests and support U.S. adversaries,» committee lawmakers wrote in a letter to Attorney General Pam Bondi.

The Oversight Committee noted that the Party for Socialism and Liberation, one of the organizations behind the current riots in Minneapolis, «has organized and is affiliated with a series of destructive protests and civil unrest,» and pointed to Singham’s involvement with the group.

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The Party for Socialism and Liberation did not respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

THE FAR-LEFT NETWORK THAT HELPED PUT ALEX PRETTI IN HARM’S WAY, THEN MADE HIM A MARTYR

Last April, the House Ways and Means Committee, led by Rep. Jason Smith, R-Mo., sent a letter to then-IRS Commissioner Daniel Werfel, inquiring about «specific tax-exempt organizations that promote CCP propaganda and related initiatives,» including The People’s Forum, another organization that has allegedly been organizing agitators in Minneapolis. 

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Protest in Minneapolis

Tensions escalated between agitators and federal agents following an immigration enforcement operation on Tuesday, June 3, 2025, in Minneapolis. (Kerem Yücel/Minnesota Public Radio via AP)

«Mr. Singham is actively fueling CCP propaganda and financing indoctrination efforts abroad by providing hundreds of millions of dollars to groups that mix progressive advocacy with CCP talking points,» the letter read. «Despite this foreign activity and engagement with CCP-tied organizations across the world, Mr. Singham’s American-based nonprofit organizations continue to do business as usual, supporting political activity and pro-CCP propaganda.»

In July 2024, then-Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., who now serves as President Donald Trump’s secretary of state, and Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., wrote a letter to then-Attorney General Merrick Garland requesting information regarding any investigations into organizations Singham is associated with, including The People’s Forum.

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The People’s Forum did not respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment. 

While there have been numerous investigations launched by lawmakers, Singham’s residence in China has built a barrier between him and any subpoena that would bring him before Congress for questioning. 

Socialist and communist groups sprang to action with protests after a killing in Minneapolis.

Propagandists for socialist groups, including BreakThrough News, the Party for Socialism and Liberation and the Freedom Road Socialist Organization, sprang to action to demonize federal officials after a killing in Minneapolis. (BreakThrough News/X, Party for Socialism and Liberation/X, Freedom Road Socialist Organization, X)

«A subpoena can’t be enforced essentially outside of our borders,» former federal prosecutor Andrew Cherkasky told Fox News Digital. «It is very difficult to get somebody who is overseas to sit in front of Congress or in some cases to participate in criminal proceedings.»

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AGITATORS SWARM TIM WALZ’S OFFICE IN MINNESOTA CAPITOL TO DEMAND IMMIGRATION JUSTICE

«That said, if you’re an American citizen, hold an American passport, [then] the State Department does have certain capabilities to essentially force you back to the homeland,» Cherkasky added. «If there’s a criminal prosecution, an indictment, an arrest warrant, it can cause all sorts of extradition and return to the United States.»

Cherkasky, a former Air Force JAG, also said there is no question that demonstrations taking place in Minneapolis are without organized, targeted support. 

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«It’s undeniable that the protests that are going on in Minneapolis are supported by organizations or groups of people that are essentially collaborating to get these folks out there and engage in what turns out to be repeated acts of criminal misconduct,» Cherkasky added.

DOJ SERVES GRAND JURY SUBPOENAS TO MINNESOTA DEMS IN INVESTIGATION OF ICE OBSTRUCTION: SOURCES

One of the key questions surrounding Singham’s alleged ties to the CCP and involvement in American agitators and riots is that the Shanghai resident is not registered under the Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA). 

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Nearly all the senators and representatives who have called for further investigation into Singham’s alleged vast dark money network noted his lack of FARA registration is a cause for concern. 

In a letter to Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, the House Oversight Committee said they are «investigating CCP influence operations that may fall within the purview of [FARA] 22 U.S.C. § 611 et seq and other federal laws.»

Rep. James Comer

House Oversight Committee Chairman Rep. James Comer, R-Ky., has been pushing for further investigation into Neville Roy Singham’s finances. (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

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Cherkasky told Fox News Digital that Singham’s lack of registration could have serious implications, but that it’s difficult to prove Singham’s string of donations and funding due to ambiguity and lack of reporting requirements from organizations like The Party for Socialism and Liberation and The People’s Forum.

«When it comes to 501(c)(3)s, the influx of that money isn’t reportable,» Cherkasky said. «In the same way, when you donate to a charity, those charities don’t have to keep a list of the people who are donating, and so they set up these charities that are really not doing anything specific, it seems.»

«The people who are funding those organizations try to distance themselves from the actual conduct of the organizations because they’re just giving money,» Cherkasky added. «They don’t know what the end goal is, and they try to claim clean hands in that.»

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Party for Socialism and Liberation immediately published protest graphics

The Party for Socialism and Liberation turned Alex Pretti into a poster boy for its protests in quick graphics for its anti-ICE efforts. (Party for Socialism and Liberation/X)

ANTI-ICE AGITATORS CLASH WITH FEDERAL AGENTS AT MINNEAPOLIS HOTEL, AS AGENTS DEPLOY TEAR GAS, FLASHBANGS

Individuals on the ground are typically tight-lipped about whether they are being paid by an outside organization to be in attendance, despite groups like The Party for Socialism and Liberation and The People’s Forum allegedly facilitating the actual events.

Fox News’ Laura Ingraham, while on the ground in Minneapolis, questioned a woman who was shouting at her. Ingraham asked if the agitator had a job.

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«I’m getting paid right now,» the woman answered.

Singham did not respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment. 

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Preston Mizell is a writer with Fox News. Story tips can be sent to Preston.Mizell@fox.com and on X @MizellPreston

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Donald Trump echó a su ministra de Justicia, Pam Bondi, enojado porque no hubo más acusaciones contra sus rivales políticos

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El presidente Donald Trump echó este jueves a Pam Bondi de su cargo como ministra de Justicia (fiscal general de Estados Unidos), en medio de tensiones con la funcionaria porque no hay avances en las investigaciones de los adversarios políticos del jefe de la Casa Blanca y por su manejo del caso Epstein.

Es el segundo miembro del gabinete en las últimas semanas en perder su puesto, después de que Trump destituyera a la secretaria de seguridad nacional a Kristi Noem el mes pasado. En su red Truth Social dijo que es “una Gran Patriota estadounidense” y una “amiga fiel” y que se irá a trabajar al sector privado.

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El despido de Bondi, de 60 años, pone fin a un turbulento mandato de 14 meses como fiscal general en el que intentó desesperadamente apaciguar a un jefe que exigía control sin obstáculos del Departamento de Justicia para llevar a cabo investigaciones políticamente motivadas contra objetivos elegidos por él, incluso cuando los fiscales advertían que no había pruebas para hacerlo.

El fiscal general adjunto Todd Blanche ocupará su cargo momentáneamente. El principal candidato a sucederla es Lee Zeldin, el jefe de la Agencia de Protección Ambiental, con quien el presidente se reunió el martes.

Fuentes señalaron a CBS que el presidente siente cariño por Bondi, que era fiscal general de Florida, y la elogiado públicamente por mucho tiempo. Pero Trump no está conforme en cómo su funcionaria había llevado a cabo las investigaciones penales sobre oponentes políticos del mandatario.

El presidente está frustrado porque no se han producido más acusaciones ni detenciones de sus adversarios políticos, incluso cuando fuentes dijeron que actualmente hay nuevos esfuerzos para procesar a la exasesora de la Casa Blanca Cassidy Hutchinson y al exdirector de la CIA John Brennan.

Pero Trump está insatisfecho por los casos que no han avanzado. Un juez federal desestimó el pasado otoño las acusaciones contra el exdirector del FBI James Comey y la fiscal general de Nueva York, Letitia James, tras determinar que el fiscal federal que presentó los cargos fue nombrado ilegalmente. Las investigaciones sobre el senador demócrata Adam Schiff, el representante demócrata Eric Swalwell y la miembro de la Junta de la Reserva Federal Lisa Cook no han dado lugar a cargos hasta la fecha.

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También los esfuerzos para investigar al presidente de la Reserva Federal, Jerome Powell, y a seis demócratas del Congreso que publicaron un vídeo instando a miembros militares a desafiar órdenes ilegales también fracasaron, con un juez federal que anuló las citaciones contra Powell y un gran jurado que rechazó por unanimidad los cargos penales contra los legisladores.

Algunos aliados de Bondi creen que la falta de procesamientos contra los enemigos de Trump está impulsada por el fiscal general adjunto Todd Blanche, quien no les ha presionado demasiado debido a preocupaciones políticas y preocupaciones sobre su futuro tras su etapa en el gobierno.

El apoyo del presidente a Bondi ha ido disminuyendo desde el año pasado, cuando sus primeros tropiezos en la gestión de la publicación de los archivos de Epstein provocaron críticas hacia Trump entre un segmento de sus seguidores.

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Bondi fue citada para testificar ante el Congreso el 14 de abril sobre la publicación por parte del departamento de millones de páginas de material de la investigación de Epstein, en lo que sería su tercera aparición en el Capitolio para tratar el asunto desde que el Departamento de Justicia comenzó a publicar los registros de Epstein el año pasado.

Los legisladores han criticado a Bondi y a su departamento por su gestión de la liberación de los documentos, entre otras cosas por no haber censurado información relacionada con la identidad de algunas víctimas. El Congreso aprobó el año pasado una ley que obligaba a la administración Trump a publicar los documentos, pero el Departamento de Justicia no hizo públicos la mayoría de sus archivos hasta mucho después de la fecha límite de diciembre.

También, dijeron fuentes a The New York Times, Trump se ha quejado de sus supuestas deficiencias como comunicadora y poco manejo televisivo, una cualidad importante para el presidente.

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Bajo la administración de Bondi, el Departamento de Justicia ha sufrido fuertes cambios con el cierre de varias oficinas y el éxodo masivo de miles de abogados federales que renunciaron o fueron despedidos. La mayoría estaban involucrados en casos que investigaban a Trump, por ejemplo por sus esfuerzos para revertir los resultados de las elecciones de 2020

Zeldin, ex congresista y candidato para suceder a Bondi, tiene muy poca experiencia legal, lo que podría provocar una crisis de confianza en el departamento tanto entre funcionarios de carrera como los de rango político.

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Jewish communities on high alert as Passover begins amid rising security threats nationwide

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As Jewish families across the United States celebrate Passover, an intensifying threat environment is shaping how communities approach the holiday and beyond. Tensions tied to the war with Iran, attacks against Jews and Jewish institutions have led to concerns over the community’s safety and security.

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From Miami to New York, officials are responding to what they describe as a sustained and evolving threat landscape. At a pre-Passover security strategy briefing at the NYPD, Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch told Jewish community leaders, «It is clear that we will be in a heightened state of alert for the foreseeable future,» a warning that comes as policymakers and security experts point to a widening gap between the level of threat facing Jewish communities and the federal resources available to protect them.

Despite security fears, funding for houses of worship in the United States remains below what experts say is needed to meet the current threat, even as antisemitic incidents continue to rise.

NYC BOOSTS PATROLS AMID ‘HEIGHTENED THREAT ENVIRONMENT,’ AFTER GUNMAN RAMS TRUCK INTO MICHIGAN SYNAGOGUE

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Aftermath of the attack on Temple Israel synagogue in West Bloomfield, Michigan. An attacker rammed into the building on Thursday, March 12, 2026. (Temple Israel)

According to data from the Federal Bureau of Investigation, anti-Jewish hate crimes have consistently accounted for the largest share of religion-based crime incidents in the United States in recent years.

The gap between risk and resources has become a central concern for those working directly with affected communities. Scott Feltman, Preventative Security Analyst and Executive Vice President at One Israel Fund, said no religious group should have to choose between remaining open and ensuring safety.

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«No one should feel unsafe walking into a synagogue, church, mosque or temple in New Jersey or anywhere in America,» Rep. Josh Gottheimer, D-N., told Fox News Digital, who in recent weeks has been advocating for an increase in federal Nonprofit Security Grant Program (NSGP) funding to $1 billion in fiscal year 2027, a proposal currently under consideration in Congress.

Recent attacks underscore the urgency. In Michigan, a man rammed a vehicle into a synagogue in West Bloomfield and opened fire while more than 100 preschool children were inside. In California, two Jewish men speaking Hebrew were reportedly assaulted in a restaurant while the attacker shouted antisemitic slurs.

Jesse Arm, Manhattan Institute vice president for external affairs, told Fox News Digital, «What the latest attempted massacre made clear — when an Islamist from Dearborn via Lebanon tried to ram an explosive-laden truck into a synagogue preschool in my hometown of West Bloomfield, Michigan — is that security works. The presence of trained, armed guards helped save the lives of 140 American children and their caretakers.

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«But the broader lesson for the Jewish community is that safety cannot be outsourced entirely to the federal government or to any administration. It requires a cultural shift: normalizing lawful firearm ownership and training, hardening facilities at every level, and investing in the day schools, camps and identity-forming institutions that build communities confident and rooted enough to defend themselves.» 

Arm had praise for the administration in its fight against antisemitism: «President Trump has been a godsend for American Jewry. His administration has been unambiguous in its commitment to Jewish safety — naming antisemitism as a serious national security threat, taking a hard line on campus radicalism and prioritizing the kind of border security and counter-jihadist vigilance that the previous administration routinely soft-pedaled. American Jews should recognize that and be immensely grateful for it.»
 

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Leo Terrell with President Donald Trump

Leo Terrell, chairman of the DOJ Task Force to Combat Antisemitism speaks during a reception for Black History Month in the East Room of the White House on Feb. 20, 2026. (Pool via AP)

JEWISH SUMMER CAMPS RAMPING UP SECURITY MEASURES AMID RISING ANTISEMITISM — AND PARENTS ARE FOOTING THE BILL

The federal Nonprofit Security Grant Program, administered by FEMA, currently allows at-risk institutions to apply for up to $200,000 per location. In practice, however, many organizations receive less than that amount, often after delays that can stretch one to three years, and demand for the program has exceeded available funding in recent years, with applications far outpacing the number of grants awarded, according to federal data.

Security experts add that the delay between identifying a threat and receiving funding can leave institutions without the protections recommended by security professionals during periods of heightened risk.

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Antisemitic graffiti in LA

Antisemitic graffiti defaces Israeli-American Council HQ (The Israeli-American Council (IAC) national headquarters in Los Angeles)

To address those gaps, experts recommend layered security measures including trained personnel, reinforced entry points, surveillance systems, controlled access and emergency response training, which they estimate require between $400,000 and $500,000 in funding per location, roughly double the current federal cap. Security experts say both the funding level and the timeline for distribution have become central concerns as incidents continue to rise.

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Steven Ingber, CEO of the Jewish Federation of Detroit, said much of the financial burden for security continues to fall on the Jewish community itself rather than being fully addressed through government support.

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As that debate continues, officials are urging institutions to remain vigilant and maintain close coordination with local law enforcement, particularly during periods of increased tension tied to global events.

Fox News Digital reached out to FEMA for comment but did not receive a response.

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GOP rails against ‘s— sandwich’ deal as all eyes turn to House to end DHS shutdown

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The House is primed to end the record-breaking Homeland Security shutdown, but Republicans are still fuming over a «s— sandwich» deal from the Senate. 

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The Senate again advanced its partial Department of Homeland Security (DHS) funding bill on Thursday after being derailed by a House GOP rebellion. The frustration among House Republicans hasn’t gone anywhere, however, with lawmakers railing against House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., during a members-only call on Thursday afternoon.

The simmering anger comes after Johnson made a swift reversal, spurred by President Donald Trump, and backed Senate Majority Leader John Thune’s, R-S.D., on a two-track approach Wednesday that would pass the Senate’s partial DHS bill while funding Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Customs and Border Protection (CBP) in a forthcoming party-line reconciliation package.

A senior GOP aide told Fox News Digital that House Republicans wanted to see action from their Senate counterparts on reconciliation and were frustrated with how the upper chamber handled the DHS deal, which the source said amounted to a «s— sandwich.»

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House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., and Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., endorsed a two-track approach to end the shutdown on Wednesday, but Johnson is facing criticism from his conference over his previous rejection of the plan. (Getty Images)

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House Republicans are incensed at the Senate plan, which carves out funding for ICE and CBP. Still, the bill is expected to pass with bipartisan support.

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«People are mad at Johnson,» one source familiar with the call told Fox News.

But for now, House Republicans are in no hurry to return to Washington, D.C., to end the 48-day shutdown. The House is next scheduled to return on April 14. A source familiar with the call told Fox News Digital that leadership is not expected to ask members to return to Washington early to vote on the measure. 

A source told Fox News that there was «a lot of frustration» with the situation.

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«Does feel like whiplash,» the source said.

«Not happy,» another person familiar with the call said. «Not willing to vote for anything that defunds law enforcement absent tangible action from Senate. Thune should call Senate back today.»

Some House Republicans argued the chamber must fund the president’s immigration and border security efforts through reconciliation before considering the Senate bill — despite the budget reconciliation process expected to take months.

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This viewpoint was expressed by a broad group within the conference, not just the conservative flank, according to a source familiar with the call.

If Johnson proceeded first with the Senate bill, conservative opposition could determine how he brings the legislation to the floor. In the event he lacks conference-wide support for the upper chamber’s partial DHS bill, he could be forced to call up the Senate bill under suspension of House rules.

That strategy — requiring a two-thirds majority to pass — risks upsetting conservatives if the DHS bill relies on Democratic votes to clear the chamber.

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Mike Johnson looks at reporters during a press conference.

Some House members voiced frustration with House Speaker Mike Johnson’s, R-La., DHS shutdown strategy during a private call Thursday, sources told Fox News Digital.  (Getty Images)

HOUSE REPUBLICANS PASS RIVAL DHS PLAN, SETTING UP SENATE FIGHT AS SHUTDOWN SET TO BECOME LONGEST IN HISTORY

House lawmakers could have used the same fast-track process Thursday to pass the DHS bill that was done in the Senate, but opted not to. 

Thune said Thursday that he didn’t know when the House would move on the bill, but noted that when they did, Republicans would begin a sprint to complete the budget reconciliation process.

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«My assumption is, at some point, hopefully they’ll move it,» Thune said. «And you know, [with] the understanding that we’re going to come behind it with the Recon bill. I mean, I think this whole — where we are is just a regrettable place.» 

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer’s, D-N.Y., demanded that the House GOP immediately take up the bill and accused them of now owning «the longest government shutdown in history.» 

«The deep division and dysfunction among House Republicans is needlessly extending the DHS shutdown and hurting federal workers who are missing another paycheck,» Schumer said. «The Senate did its work twice to fund key parts of DHS without funding the lawlessness of ICE and Border Patrol.»

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President Donald Trump and Sen. Chuck Schumer shown in side-by-side images

President Donald Trump moved to pay all DHS employees who were reporting to work without pay during the shutdown, despite Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., vowing that Republicans would get the blame for a prolonged funding lapse. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images; Elizabeth Frantz/Reuters)

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But Trump has already teed up a counter, and plans to pay DHS employees through an executive order.

«Because the Democrats are fully and 100% committed to the Radical Left Policy of Open Borders and Zero Immigration Enforcement (which will hopefully cost them dearly in the Midterms!), allowing Murderers and Criminals of all types into our Country, totally unchecked and unvetted, I will soon sign an order to pay ALL of the incredible employees at the Department of Homeland Security,» Trump said on Truth Social.

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