Senate Majority Leader John Thune and House Speaker Mike Johnson clashed over a DHS funding compromise, exposing deep rifts within Republican leadership.
Thune negotiated a Senate deal to fund most of DHS while deferring contentious provisions, but Johnson rejected it after President Donald Trump's support wavered.

Johnson claimed Thune excluded him entirely, stating, "The Senate did this without informing me or even all of their members or the White House." However, Thune contradicted this, confirming he had texted Johnson advance notice overnight.
House Republicans complained that Thune communicated via text rather than phone about such a significant deal. The clash reflects different political realities: Thune operates in the 60-vote Senate, enabling bipartisan compromise, while Johnson manages a paper-thin House majority threatened by hard-liners wielding the motion to vacate.
Both leaders ultimately face an unpredictable Trump, whose shifting positions destabilize the entire legislative process, leaving Republican leadership scrambling to adapt.
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