Trump orders airport security paid as travellers face hours-long queues
President Donald Trump said he will sign an order to pay airport security workers, as air travellers across the US face hours-long queues during a partial government shutdown.
Trump wrote in a social media post that he was instructing the Department of Homeland Security "to immediately pay our TSA Agents in order to address this Emergency Situation", without providing details.
Hundreds of Transportation Security Administration (TSA) agents have quit since the shutdown began in February.
Here's what we know about the current situation.
Bloomberg via Getty ImagesWhy aren't TSA agents being paid?
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS), which oversees the TSA, has been unfunded since February after Congress failed to reach a budget agreement.
This triggered a partial government shutdown.
TSA agents are considered essential workers and are required to work without immediate pay during a federal shutdown.
Their salaries are dependent on congressional appropriations, which are tied to a funding agreement in the DHS budget.
Democrats are refusing to agree a funding deal without reforms to the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency.
With fewer TSA officers at airport security checkpoints, wait times have surged nationwide.
Compounding the strain, more than 450 TSA workers have quit since the partial shutdown began.
The TSA has around 50,000 agents who screen passengers.
How long have the waits been?
Travellers are experiencing the longest wait times ever in the TSA's 24-year history, the agency's acting chief, Ha Nguyen McNeill, told a congressional oversight committee on Wednesday.
Some of the worst delays were reported in Houston, where security wait times have stretched beyond four hours this week. At some major airports, queues have stretched as far as parking areas.
Earlier this week, nearly 40% of the security staff at the George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston did not show up for work - the highest such rate in the country.
On Thursday evening, a BBC correspondent returning from honeymoon via Houston airport reported that after waiting about two hours in a winding queue across one floor, frazzled travellers went up an escalator thinking they had reached the end - only to find another long line stretching towards security.
The airport is currently operating just one-third to 50% of its TSA checkpoints, said Jim Szczesniak, director of aviation for the Houston Airport System.
Major international airports like those in New York, New Jersey and Illinois are also facing significant disruptions.
When could TSA agents get paid again?
TSA agents will get paid once the government reopens and funding to the DHS is restored.
Agents missed their first full paycheque two weeks ago, but they must keep working because they are considered essential workers for public safety, even though there is no money to pay them.
Lawmakers in Washington have not been able to agree to a funding path forward in the weeks since they partially shut the government down.
Can Trump order the TSA to be paid?
Trump said in a social media post on Thursday that he would sign an order instructing newly confirmed Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin to "immediately pay our TSA Agents in order to address this Emergency Situation".
While Trump's order could provide temporary relief, it is unclear what authority the White House could invoke for such a move.
"It is not an easy thing to do, but I am going to do it!" he wrote on Truth Social.
But such payments could face a court challenge.
"I haven't seen any plausible assertion of a legal basis for paying TSA agents," Josh Chafetz, a professor of law and politics at Georgetown University, told the BBC.
"It seems to me pretty clearly a violation of the Antideficiency Act, which prohibits spending money that has not been appropriated by Congress."
Invoking the National Emergencies Act could free up funds for temporary TSA pay, the Wall Street Journal reported.
Why have immigration agents been sent to airports?
The Trump administration said earlier this week that hundreds of ICE agents had been sent to 14 airports in cities including New York, Atlanta and Houston to help fill the void left by absent TSA agents.
While TSA agents are not currently getting paid, ICE agents are because they are funded through a different appropriations package that Congress passed last year under Trump's One Big Beautiful Bill Act.
The president on Wednesday touted the success of the decisions, saying ICE was doing "an unbelievable job" at airports.
He also indicated he was considering sending the National Guard to airports "if we need to" in order to help the TSA and ICE.
Additional reporting by Christal Hayes
