A Republican backed proposal seeking $1 billion in federal funding to finance a new White House ballroom along with allocations for Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Border Patrol is facing a growing list of obstacles that could ultimately derail the effort entirely.
The bill, which has been working its way through the Senate, hit its first major wall when Senate parliamentarian Elizabeth MacDonough flagged significant jurisdictional problems with the current draft. Her review found that the ballroom project, given its complexity and scope, requires coordination across multiple government agencies that fall under the authority of several different Senate committees not just the ones named in the bill.
That determination carries major consequences. Rather than moving forward through budget reconciliation, a process that allows certain measures to pass with a simple majority vote while bypassing the Senate filibuster, the bill would now require a 60 vote threshold to advance. That is a significantly higher bar, and one Republicans are unlikely to meet given current Senate numbers.
The redrafting scramble
Republican leaders have not walked away from the fight. A GOP leadership aide confirmed that Senate Republicans were already in the process of revising the bill’s language before the parliamentarian even issued her ruling. A spokesperson for the Senate Judiciary Committee Republicans also confirmed that internal conversations and revisions are actively underway.
Still, the path forward is narrow. Budget reconciliation rules require that the language in the bill originate specifically from the Senate Judiciary Committee and the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee. If the ballroom project is ultimately deemed to fall under a different committee’s authority, Republicans face a difficult choice either strip the provision from the bill or try to push it through with a 60-vote margin, which currently appears out of reach.
A spokesperson for Senate Majority Leader John Thune moved to frame the situation as routine, noting that resubmitting and revising provisions is simply part of the normal legislative review process known as the Byrd process, in which the parliamentarian examines reconciliation proposals for compliance with federal spending and revenue rules.
Democrats push back hard
Senate Budget Committee Ranking Member Jeff Merkley of Oregon has been among the loudest voices opposing the ballroom funding, calling it an inappropriate use of public money and vowing that Democrats would challenge any revised version of the provision that Republicans bring back to the floor.
His criticism echoes a broader sentiment among those who question whether a ballroom at the White House rises to the level of a national budget priority, particularly given that President Donald Trump had previously stated the project would be privately financed at an estimated cost of $400 million with no government dollars involved.
Cracks forming inside the GOP
The opposition to the funding is not coming only from Democrats. Several Republican senators have also raised concerns about the proposal, and at least two Rand Paul of Kentucky and Susan Collins of Maine have publicly said the project should be paid for with private funds, consistent with what Trump originally promised the public.
Senator Roger Marshall of Kansas acknowledged he still had unanswered questions about the proposal and was waiting for additional details before taking a firm position.
The White House has maintained that any taxpayer money requested through this bill would be used exclusively for security upgrades and structural adjustments directly tied to the ballroom construction not the ballroom itself. A funding breakdown presented to Republican senators earlier included $220 million for hardening the White House complex, $180 million for a visitor screening facility, and additional funds for Secret Service training and protectee security enhancements.
What comes next
The future of the ballroom funding remains genuinely uncertain. Republicans are working against both procedural constraints and internal party divisions, and the path to getting this provision into a final reconciliation bill let alone signed into law is anything but straightforward. Whether GOP leaders can thread that needle will become clearer in the weeks ahead as revised language is submitted for another round of parliamentary review.

