Adam Schiff

03/12/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 03/12/2026 14:11

WATCH: Senate Republicans Block Sens. Schiff, Padilla’s Bill to Reopen FEMA

Schiff: "We reject the false choice that the Majority would give us - that we cannot reform ICE until we agreed to give ICE billions more… Let's pass this commonsense bill and reopen FEMA today."

Washington, D.C. - Today, Senate Republicans blocked the passage of U.S. Senators Adam Schiff and Alex Padilla's (both D-Calif.) legislation to renew funding for the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) and reopen the currently-shuttered agency. The California Senators called out Republicans' continued refusal to reopen FEMA - which is working to help put Californians back on their feet in the aftermath of the devastating wildfires in Los Angeles last winter - and other federal agencies under the Department of Homeland Security without also including more money for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Customs and Border Patrol (CBP).

The Senators condemned Republicans for insisting additional taxpayer dollars be provided to ICE or CBP without any new guardrails in place to protect Americans from abuses of power by these agencies, which have torn families apart and illegally detained citizens for days without medical care and other basic decencies.

Schiff emphasized that critical homeland security agencies - like TSA, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, and the Coast Guard - are working without pay while keeping Americans safe. He also reiterated his demand that Congress take up a supplemental disaster appropriations bill to aid continuing wildfire recovery efforts in Los Angeles.

"The agency whose job it is to provide financial assistance to families and aid the recovery process until houses can be rebuilt and families can move back into their homes, has no money from Congress to operate," said Senator Schiff on the Senate floor.

Watch his full speech HERE. Download remarks HERE.

Read the full transcript of his remarks as delivered below:

Just over a year ago, Los Angeles County fell victim to the worst natural disaster in my lifetime. The Eaton and Palisades Fires were unthinkable tragedies. Lives taken. Livelihoods incinerated. Old photographs, family heirlooms, childhood homes, gone forever. The homes of more constituents, friends, staff, gone, along with the place where my wife and I got married. Whole blocks of neighborhoods razed, with indiscriminate and random destruction.

In the year since, alongside Senator Padilla, I have worked to help the families impacted by these fires in every way I can. I visited recovery efforts in the earliest days of the fire, meeting with survivors and lending a hand where I could, to help families grieving what these fires took from them.

My team and I have facilitated federal, state and local connections for these communities - trying to ensure they have the resources they need to recover. I have introduced legislation to help families better protect their homes in the future, and to bring down insurance rates.

But so much work remains. It has been more than a year since the fires, and Congress has yet to move forward on much needed federal disaster aid for LA County.

We have urged the President to act, we have called on Congress to act - just as we have with fires, hurricanes, and floods of the past in states red and blue - to pass a supplemental that gives us a fighting chance at building stronger than before.

And yet, for the first time, disaster relief is being apportioned not on the basis of need, but on the basis of political affiliation. As if these fires discriminate between homes that voted for the President and those that did not. We have called on the President and this Congress to drop discrimination against California or other states based on no more than its political leanings.

And we continue that call today. But the lack of a disaster aid for California and other states is not the only place where this Congress is failing to meet the needs of the American people.

Right now, the very federal agency we call upon to facilitate disaster recovery, FEMA, is shut down. The agency whose job it is to provide financial assistance to families and aid the recovery process until houses can be rebuilt and families can move back into their homes, has no money from Congress to operate.

As a result, this critical agency - already understaffed - has even more diminished capacity to help do these critical jobs. This has gone on for weeks and is unacceptable. And this is what we are here today to change.

With this legislation, we could reopen FEMA today. We could give paychecks to the people whose job it is to get Los Angeles and communities across the country back on their feet. We can remove unnecessary slowdowns in approval processes, in recovery applications, because of the lack of staffing. We can put ourselves on a pathway to finally passing a financial disaster aid package.

Now this is not the first time we have tried to reopen FEMA. Senate Democrats have tried to call up and pass legislation to reopen this agency multiple times in recent weeks.

But we have been told no. And why?

Because my colleagues across the aisle insist that this agency and others, like TSA and Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, and the Coast Guard, cannot reopen until we pass another multi-billion-dollar infusion of dollars for ICE and CBP.

Senate Democrats have been clear: not another dime for these immigration enforcement agencies until we see real reforms.

Until they take off the masks and put on the body cameras. Until they are held to the same standard as a neighborhood cop on the beat. Until their standard of, 'no judicial warrant, no problem' is torn out of the training manual.

That is not too much to ask. In the aftermath of Americans watching DHS storming city apartment buildings like they were behind enemy lines…

Or ICE dragging citizens from their homes…

Or CBP gunning down Americans. In cold blood. In the street.

This cannot be too much to ask.

We're seeing families torn apart. Citizens detained without medical care. Fathers and mothers. Grandfathers and grandmothers. Aunts and uncles. Children. Detained because of the color of their skin, or the language they speak, or where they work.

We see DHS spending one hundred and forty million dollars on assault weapons, Glocks and Tasers. And countless more on building massive new detention centers.

And so, we are insisting on reform. We reject the false choice that the Majority would give us - that we cannot reform ICE until we agreed to give ICE billions more. These cannot be the only two choices.

Let's pass this commonsense bill and reopen FEMA today. Let's get disaster recovery efforts moving forward. We can do both. We can help Californians in need. And others across the country.

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Adam Schiff published this content on March 12, 2026, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on March 12, 2026 at 20:11 UTC. If you believe the information included in the content is inaccurate or outdated and requires editing or removal, please contact us at [email protected]