The White House has requested an additional $58 million in security funding for the executive and judicial branches following the assassination of Charlie Kirk, a Republican congressional aide said.
The funding request is being āactively processedā in the context of a stopgap funding bill, the aide said. Lawmakers are facing a looming end-of-month deadline to fund the government and stave off a shutdown, with House GOP leaders expected to move this week on a bill.
The request, first reported by Punchbowl News, comes amid heightened concerns in Washington about security for public officials, including among members of Congress, in the wake of the Kirk assassination.
In July, following the fatal shootings targeting state lawmakers in Minnesota, the House increased security funding and resources for lawmakers in their home districts as part of a new program. House Speaker Mike Johnson previously said that approximately 60 Democrats and 20 Republicans took advantage of the program, and he wants to examine what worked and what didnāt.
On Sunday, Johnson said heās been working to reassure House members about their personal security and congressional leaders are looking at āall the optionsā to bolster it.
āIāve been talking with a lot of them over the last few days about that and trying to calm the nerves to assure them that we will make certain that everyone has a level of security thatās necessary,ā he said over the weekend on CBSā āFace the Nation.ā
The speaker echoed calls from leaders from both parties on Capitol Hill urging lawmakers to āturn down the rhetoric.ā
āThere are some deranged people in society, and when they see leaders using that kind of language so often now, increasingly, it spurs them on to action,ā he said, adding that heās āheartenedā to see āmany of my colleagues on both sides of the aisle are stepping up and saying that.ā
CNNās Alison Main contributed to this report.
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