U.S. Republican Senator John Kennedy on Wednesday said there was insufficient support in ​the Senate to spend $1 billion on a planned White House ‌ballroom and related security measures, and that the proposal would not be included in a $72 billion immigration enforcement bill.
Speaking to reporters after leaving a meeting of Republican ​senators, Kennedy, of Louisiana, said: “We were told that, and again, I ​haven’t looked at the text, but we’re told that the ⁠ballroom money is out.”

Senate Majority Leader John Thune told reporters that ​there were “a couple snags” that his 53 Republicans were trying to iron ​out. “I think there are issues related to the East Wing modernization project,” he said.
President Donald Trump has had the East Wing of the White House demolished, to be ​replaced by a 90,000-square-foot ballroom that he says could seat up to ​1,000 people.
Trump originally said the project would involve no federal funding. But that has ‌changed ⁠several times, culminating in congressional Republicans seeking $1 billion in taxpayer money that they argued would provide security enhancements for the ballroom and other Secret Service projects.

Thune said one of the unresolved issues was whether around $780 million ​in additional Secret ​Service spending would ⁠be maintained even if the ballroom was not going forward.
While the controversy of spending federal money on what ​Democrats call a “gilded vanity project” for Trump has been ​the focus ⁠of attention in the past few weeks, the $72 billion for Department of Homeland Security immigrant deportations has also been roiling Congress as the midterm election ⁠campaigns ​get underway.
Democrats argue that the DHS is ​already well funded and have demanded new restrictions on the department’s law enforcement operations, which Republicans ​have rejected.