Rep. Huffman Re-Introduces Bill to Protect Health Care Consumers from Predatory Practices

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Jared Huffman Representing the 2nd District of California

April 30, 2025

Washington, D.C. – Today, U.S. Representative Jared Huffman (CA-02) re-introduced legislation to protect consumers from Health Care Sharing Ministries’ deceptive practices and expand access to accurate information about health coverage options. The Health Care Sharing Transparency Act would help ensure consumers receive clear and truthful information before enrolling in a health share plan. By holding Health Care Sharing Ministries – also known as Health Share plans – accountable for inaccurate or untimely disclosures and by ensuring providers offer clear information regarding care, this bill helps address some of the dangerous health care practices plaguing consumers across the country.

“Health Care Sharing Ministries prey on people in search of medical coverage, leading them to purchase inadequate medical coverage when they may need it most,” said Rep. Huffman. “Through deceptive marketing tactics and overt appeals to religion, certain providers lure consumers into purchasing plans that can leave patients without the care they need or lead them into deep medical debt. We need to combat these unethical tactics with serious federal action. My legislation would help protect consumers from Health Share plans’ predatory practices and ensure consumers have access to clear, accurate information about their health care options when making important decisions about coverage for themselves and their loved ones. As more and more Americans fall victim to misleading and unregulated Health Care Sharing Ministries, it’s more important than ever that we respond with proper reform.”

Health Share Caring Ministries are a limited form of health coverage that require members – who must share a common set of religious or ethical beliefs – to submit monthly payments to cover the qualified expenses of other members. Health Share plans do not have to comply with the consumer protections of the Affordable Care Act, provide limited benefits for their members, and do not guarantee payment for medical claims. Recent data shows Health Share plans deem only half of members’ health expenses eligible for reimbursement. They also exclude coverage altogether for services such as abortions, contraception, mental health, substance use disorders, chronic conditions, certain preexisting conditions, and even maternity care. 

With more for-profit administrators taking advantage of loopholes to market Health Share plans to broader audiences through deceptive practices, roughly 1.7 million Americans have now enrolled in one of these plans and are at serious risk of being denied necessary treatments and services.

The Health Share Transparency Act would:

  • Empower consumers with the knowledge to distinguish between comprehensive, regulated health insurance products and Health Shares by requiring Health Shares to disclose clear information during the enrollment process. 
  • Provide new data for regulators to assess the threat Health Shares pose to public health – including rates of service denials, enrollment, service area, average out of pocket expenses for Health Share Members, and the contents of complaints received by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC). 
  • Ensure health insurance brokers selling Health Shares inform consumers if they are eligible for better, more comprehensive forms of health coverage – including the ACA, Medicaid, or Medicare – and accurately describe the scope of benefits provided by Health Shares.

“We know that quality health insurance is essential for cancer patients. But too often, people – including cancer patients – enroll in a health sharing ministry, thinking they are covered, only to find out later that they can’t access the care they need. We applaud Rep. Huffman for introducing this important legislation which will help us learn more about health coverage that frequently leaves patients exposed to both physical and financial harm,” said Dr. Gwen Nichols, Executive Vice President & Chief Medical Officer at The Leukemia & Lymphoma Society.

“FFRF Action Fund strongly supports the Health Share Transparency Act, and we thank Rep. Jared Huffman for reintroducing this vital legislation and making this bill a priority for the Congressional Freethought Caucus. Access to health care should never be conditioned on someone’s religious belief — yet healthcare sharing ministries routinely exploit religious exemptions to avoid accountability while misleading consumers. This bill is a crucial step toward protecting the public and upholding the separation of state and church,” said Annie Laurie Gaylor, President of FFRF Action Fund.

“Everyone deserves health care coverage that is comprehensive and transparent about its policies, and unfortunately health care sharing ministries can’t offer either,” said Fish Stark, Executive Director of the American Humanist Association. “Too often, health care sharing ministries’ deceptive practices leave American families in unanticipated medical debt with nowhere to turn for relief–all in the name of religion. This issue demands federal attention. We are proud to throw our full support behind the Health Share Transparency Act, and we applaud Congressman Huffman for his leadership in shepherding forward this critical legislation.”

The bill is endorsed by AiArthritis, AIDS Institute, American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network, American Lung Association, American Humanist Association, Arthritis Foundation, Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America, CancerCare, Crohn’s & Colitis Foundation, Center for Freethought Equality, Epilepsy Foundation of America, FFRF Action Fund, Hemophilia Federation of America, Immune Deficiency Foundation, Leukemia & Lymphoma Society, National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI), National Coalition of Cancer Survivorship, National Health Council, National Patient Advocate Foundation, National Psoriasis Foundation, Secular Coalition for America, and Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation.

Cosponsors include Representatives Jamie Raskin, Sean Casten, Eleanor Holmes Norton, Rashida Tlaib, Mark Pocan, Seth Moulton, Steve Cohen, Jan Schakowsky, and Maxwell Frost.

Full bill text can be found here.

A summary of the bill is available here.

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Pressley Applauds Release of Mohsen Mahdawi, Renews Call for Release of Rümeysa Öztürk, Mahmoud Khalil, and Others

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Ayanna Pressley (MA-07)

Yesterday, Pressley Rallied With Colleagues at State Dept. to Demand Mahdawi’s Release and Due Process for All

Pressley Recently Met with Constituent Rümeysa Öztürk, Mahmoud Khalil at ICE Detention Centers in Louisiana

WASHINGTON – Today, Congresswoman Ayanna Pressley (MA-07) issued the following statement applauding the release of Mohsen Mahdawi, Columbia University student and lawful permanent resident who was detained on April 14 after his naturalization interview in Vermont. Yesterday, at a rally outside the State Department, Congresswoman Pressleyjoined Congresswoman Becca Balint (VT-AL)and their colleagues to call for Mahdawi’s immediate release and demand due process for all. Congresswoman Pressley recently met with constituent Rümeysa Öztürk and Mahmoud Khalil, two students who have been unlawfully detained by ICE and transported to Louisiana from their homes in retaliation for their protected speech.

“Mohsen’s release is an encouraging step in the fight to defend our democracy and the constitutional rights that Donald Trump is working overtime to rip away,” said Rep. Ayanna Pressley. “Due process and free speech are fundamental rights. I am relieved and encouraged that Mohsen was released from detention today, and I continue to demand the immediate release of my constituent Rümeysa Öztürk, as well as Mahmoud Khalil, and the residents across the nation who may not have made headlines but similarly have been unjustly detained by this hostile administration. We have not forgotten about you and we will fight for your rights daily.”

Mahdawi, a Vermont permanent resident for the last ten years, was abruptly arrested earlier this month by masked, hooded ICE agents without being charged with a crime. In response to his arrest, Rep. Balint, Rep. Pressley, and 66 other House Democrats demanded to know the Administration’s alleged reason for his arrest from Secretaries Rubio and Noem and received no response. 

A full transcript of her remarks at yesterday’s rally is available below and video is available here.

Transcript: Pressley Colleagues Demand Due Process for All at “Free Mohsen Mahdawi” Rally
U.S. State Department
April 29, 2025

We keep using the word shame, and this is a shame that we find ourselves here. 

And it is also a sham. 

These extremist acts to disappear people from society have nothing to do with immigration. They have nothing to do with law and order. They have everything to do with power.

And Donald Trump is abusing power. That is what dictators do. Dictators mean to silence any dissenting voices – and the only way to beat a dictator is with defiance, and that’s what brings us all here today. 

I’m so glad that you all are awake. The other side wants you to be asleep. They’re anti-woke because they want a citizenry that is ignorant and uninformed, that is indifferent to the suffering of their neighbors, and that is inactive. 

So you’re already winning, and you give me hope and make it easier to practice the discipline of hope – because you could have been anywhere else today, but you chose to be here to say that these abuses of power will not go unchecked.

I know that I am speaking to the choir as I go to refer to my notes and enumerate these facts, but I preach to the choir for one reason, because I need the choir to sing. 

When you leave here, I need you to sing about these injustices. I need you to sing about the fact that this is not about whether or not we can weather the next four years, that this is about shaping the next one hundred.

I need you to sing about the fact that this is the moment and the opportunity to be better ancestors than descendants. 

Who is Mohsen?

Mohsen was raised in a Palestinian refugee camp in the occupied West Bank. He is a man who loves and is loved, who is connected to family, who is connected to community.

Mohsen is a green card holder and lawful permanent resident of the United States.

Mohsen is a scholar, a senior at Columbia University and co-founder of Columbia’s Palestinian Student Union.

And now, shamefully, Mohsen is a political prisoner. 

Instead of celebrating his graduation and preparing for his Master’s program in the fall, he was on the verge of becoming a US citizen, after 10 years of living and learning and contributing in the United States. 

Instead, his life has been upended, and he is awaiting his future from the confines of a detention center. Shameful.

In Donald Trump’s America, Mohsen’s story is becoming shamefully all too familiar to all of us. 

He was whisked away and disappeared off of the streets, just like my constituent, Somerville resident and PhD student, Rümeysa Öztürk.

Make no mistake, these abductions are not isolated. 

They are part and parcel of Trump’s precise, intentional, and coordinated attack on our democracy and our constitutional rights. 

They serve no purpose other than to silence dissent, restrict due process, and to sow fear in our communities – which is exactly how a dictator operates. 

But again, we will not allow these abuses of power to go unchecked or unanswered. 

Last week, I went to conduct some real-time oversight. I visited our sister Rümeysa Öztürk and our brother Mahmoud Khalil in Louisiana at the ICE detention facilities where they are being held. 

Allow me to digress for a moment to remind people that this is a for-profit carceral system, and the same way that there are billionaire corporations that benefit from for-profit prisons and mass incarceration, the same billionaire corporations are benefiting from for-profit detention centers and the disappearing of immigrants. These things are all connected. 

So if someone at home is saying, “Why should I care about this?”

If you care about mass incarceration, you need to care about mass deportation. If you care about mass deportation, you need to care about mass incarceration. 

So last week, I went for a wellness check, which also again, was real-time congressional oversight. What I saw and heard from Rümeysa and Mahmoud was harrowing, heartbreaking, and infuriating. 

Mahmoud spoke of growing up in Syria under Assad. He said, “I know what an authoritarian regime looks like – and this is it.”

Rümeysa thanked me for being there, along with my colleagues in our CODEL and said the women at this detention facility have questioned if God has forgotten about us, if the world has forgotten about us.

They are being denied proper medical care, deprived of sleep. They’re not receiving nutritious meals, no religious accommodation. A nurse, without consent, removed Rümeysa’s hijab.

The cruelty is the point. 

Look family, what’s happening to Mohsen, Rümeysa, Mahmoud and so many others is a damning injustice. They’ve been charged with no crimes, and are being detained simply for exercising their right to free speech, for speaking out about the Israeli government’s genocide in Gaza. 

Now let me be clear, regardless of your position on that issue or any other, this should outrage everyone and anyone with a moral conscience. 

I do not journey to rural Louisiana because I am a Democrat. I journeyed to rural Louisiana because I’m a human being who gives a damn about other human beings. 

In America we have a fundamental right to freedom of speech, and that’s what makes us who we are. So this blatant, flagrant violation of our First Amendment rights through these abductions should outrage everyone, regardless of your personal beliefs. 

And as I close, because our freedoms and our destinies are tied, in his letter to Angela Y. Davis, James Baldwin wrote, “If they take you in the morning, dear sister, they will surely be coming for us that night.” And that is the truth. 

Today, it is Mohsen, it is Rümeysa, it is Mahmoud, and tomorrow it could be you. 

It could be you for reading a banned book. It could be you for suffering a miscarriage. It could be you for practicing Diversity Equity and Inclusion. 

So today, we refuse to accept these abuses as inevitable. We demand due process and accountability for all, and we will keep working to protect our Constitution and everyone who calls this country home. 

Free Mohsen Mahdawi. Free Rümeysa Öztürk. Free Mahmoud Khalil. Save our democracy.

This is not about weathering the next four years. This is about shaping the next one hundred.

Congressman Danny K. Davis Reflects on President Trump’s First 100 Days of His Second Term

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Danny K Davis (7th District of Illinois)

April 30, 2025

CHICAGO, IL — Today, Congressman Danny K. Davis (D-IL-07) issued the following statement reflecting on the first 100 days of President Donald J. Trump’s second term:

“As President Trump marks his 100th day in his second term, I reflect not only on what has transpired but on what is at stake for the American people. These first 100 days have been defined by a clear agenda to roll back hard-fought gains in healthcare, civil rights, social services, and economic protections for working families.

The administration’s attempt to privatize Social Security and raise the retirement age is a direct attack on seniors who have spent a lifetime paying into the system. Their efforts to weaken Medicaid and repeal key elements of the Affordable Care Act threaten millions of Americans—particularly in communities of color and rural America—who depend on access to affordable healthcare.

In education, we’ve seen proposals to slash funding for public schools while diverting resources to unregulated private institutions. Meanwhile, student debt relief programs are being dismantled, leaving our young people burdened and betrayed.

With regard to criminal justice, the White House’s abandonment of reentry programs, elimination of funding for Second Chance initiatives, and return to punitive incarceration policies represent a disturbing setback for restorative justice and rehabilitation efforts that are critical to reducing recidivism and creating opportunity.

The administration’s failure to adequately address climate change, gun violence, and economic inequality has exposed its priorities—and they do not lie with everyday Americans. Instead, tax cuts for the ultra-wealthy, deregulation of corporate interests, and divisive political rhetoric have taken center stage.

Yet, I remain hopeful because the American people are resilient. We are organizing, marching, voting, and demanding a future that honors equity, truth, and justice. As a senior Member of Congress and Co-Chair of the Congressional Reentry Caucus, I will continue to fight to protect our social safety net, expand access to opportunity, and resist any effort that undermines the dignity of our democracy.”

House Republicans Reject Nadler Transit Safety Amendment Despite Bad-Faith USDOT Threats to Withhold Funding from Transit Agencies

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Jerrold Nadler (10th District of New York)

WASHINGTON, DC –  Today, Republican members of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee voted down—on a party-line basis—an amendment offered by Congressman Jerrold Nadler (NY-12) to provide substantial funding for transit safety and security.

The vote came just weeks after Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy issued letters threatening to withhold federal funding from agencies like the MTA and WMATA over alleged safety concerns. Nadler’s amendment would have provided dedicated capital grants—fully authorized under existing law—to upgrade safety infrastructure, expand staffing, and better protect both passengers and frontline transit workers.

“Secretary Duffy claims to care about safety. But when Republicans were given the chance to support real solutions, they turned their backs on the very transit agencies they’ve been scapegoating,” said Congressman Nadler. “It’s clear that their threats to withhold federal funds from the MTA aren’t truly about safety—they’re about undermining New York’s increasingly popular congestion pricing program.”

Public transit remains one of the safest ways to travel, with the National Safety Council reporting it is ten times safer than driving. In New York, felony crime on the subway is at a 30-year low, and assaults on transit workers have dropped more than 30 percent, thanks in part to federal investments in cameras, de-escalation training, and safety teams. This amendment would have built on these gains by providing substantial funding to expand proven safety interventions nationwide. The federal government can and should do far more to help improve transit safety by investing in the infrastructure, staffing, and technology that protect both riders and workers.

“Riders don’t need threats from Washington about cutting vital transit funding—they need real investment in safety, reliability, and respect for the communities who rely on public transportation every day,” Congressman Nadler continued. “That’s what this amendment offered. Instead, Republicans chose politics over public safety.”

Kelly, Panetta introduce bipartisan bill to boost retirement security through ESOPs

Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative Mike Kelly (R-PA)

WASHINGTON, D.C. — Today, U.S. Representatives Mike Kelly (R-PA), Chairman of the Ways & Means Subcommittee on Tax, and Jimmy Panetta (D-CA) introduced The Promotion and Expansion of Private Employee Ownership Act of 2025, legislation to grow and promote employee ownership through private ESOPs (Employee Stock Ownership Plans), a proven way to create stable jobs, build retirement wealth, and promote business growth.

“By expanding Employee Stock Ownership Plans (ESOPs), we can put more hardworking Americans on the path to financial prosperity and a secure retirement,” said Rep. Kelly. “This bipartisan, bicameral plan is a win-win for workers and businesses: it allows businesses to include employee ownership in the compensation package, and ESOPs often retain more employees as a result. This is great legislation for both the employer and employee alike!”

“Too many hardworking Americans are approaching retirement without financial security and peace of mind,” said Rep. Panetta. “By helping businesses become employee-owned through their retirement plans, this bipartisan bill would give workers a stake in their company and a stronger path to build savings. When employees have ownership, businesses do better, communities grow stronger, and our economy becomes more resilient.”

“Employee Stock Ownership Plans (ESOPs) empower hardworking Americans to achieve financial prosperity and secure their retirement while helping their companies grow and thrive,” said Stephanie Silverman, President and CEO of the Employee-Owned S Corporations of America (ESCA). “With job stability and economic growth a top priority for all workers, creating additional employee ownership opportunities is one way Congress can help more Americans retire with confidence and weather economic uncertainty.” 

The Promotion and Expansion of Private Employee Ownership Act of 2025 would encourage S corporation business owners to form an ESOP, especially when looking to transition ownership.

BACKGROUND

Additionally, the bill would:

  • Provide needed technical assistance for companies that may be interested in forming an ESOP;
  • Ensure small businesses that become ESOP-owned retain their SBA certification;
  • Create an Advocate for Employee Ownership at the U.S. Department of Labor.

At introduction, Representatives Kelly and Panetta were joined by six original cosponsors on the House Ways & Means Committee: Reps. Ron Estes (R-KS), Brad Schneider (D-IL), Carol Miller (R-WV), Danny Davis (D-IL), Blake Moore (R-UT) and Terri Sewell (D-AL).

Rep. Moore Condemns Persecution of Christians Abroad in First Speech on House Floor

Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative Riley Moore (WV-02)

Washington, D.C. – Earlier today, Congressman Riley M. Moore gave his first speech on the floor of the House of Representatives. In the speech, Rep. Moore condemned the persecution of Christians abroad and urged his colleagues to join him in calling out the brutal attacks taking place in several countries, including Nigeria, Syria, and Iraq.

Watch the full speech here.

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Latta Introduces REFINER Act to Increase U.S. Refinery Capacity

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Bob Latta (R-Bowling Green Ohio)

Today, Congressman Bob Latta (R-OH-5) re-introduced the Researching Efficient Federal Improvements for Necessary Energy Refining (REFINER) Act, to help increase energy refining capacity in the United States.  

Over the last several years, North America lost an estimated one million barrels of fuel per day due to low refining capacity. The REFINER Act would address this crisis by collecting critical information, including identifying factors leading to low refining capacity, and presenting lawmakers with recommendations to expand refining capacity to ensure an abundance of affordable and reliable energy in the United States. 

“As energy demand continues to rise we must ensure our refining capacity can keep pace to ensure American energy dominance,” Latta said. “The REFINER Act will give us the necessary data and insights we need to make informed decisions that strengthen our energy infrastructure and keep fuel affordable for American families.” 

Background on the REFINER Act: 

The REFINER Act would require the National Petroleum Council to submit a report to the Secretary of Energy and Congress, detailing: 

  • the role of petrochemical refineries in the U.S. and the contribution they make to the energy security of the United States, including the reliability of supply in the U.S. of liquid fuels and feedstocks, and the affordability of liquid fuels for consumers in the U.S.; 
  • analyses and projections for the capacity of petrochemical refineries in the U.S., opportunities for expanding capacity, and current risks to the refineries; 
  • an assessment of any Federal or State executive actions, regulations, or policies that have caused or contributed to a decline in refining capacity; and 
  • any recommendations for Federal agencies and Congress to encourage an increase in refining capacity. 

Congressman Scott Perry Introduces Eliminating the RFS and Its Destructive Outcomes Act

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Scott Perry (PA-10)

Washington D.C. – Today, Congressman Scott Perry (PA-10) announced the introduction of the “Eliminating the RFS and Its Destructive Outcomes Act,” a critical piece of legislation designed to eliminate the Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS) and its significant harm upon American consumers, workers, and the environment.

Eliminating the RFS is a vital step in preserving essential jobs and reducing inflationary pressures,” said Congressman Scott Perry. “By removing this mandate, we can curb the rising costs that are stretching household budgets to their limits.

While the RFS was intended to foster the use of environmentally friendly fuels, the environmental benefits of ethanol, particularly in replacing gasoline, are highly questionable. When evaluating the full environmental impact of increased corn production – including the water, land, and energy resources required – it’s clear that the RFS has produced net negative environmental consequences.

The RFS originally was enacted with the noble goal of reducing America’s dependence on foreign oil and promoting environmentally friendly fuel alternatives; however, it failed on both fronts. Its unintended consequences have had detrimental impacts on our economy, energy independence, and environment.

One of the most pressing RFS issues is its devastating effect on the American People, particularly due to the negative effects on the domestic refining industry. RFS created regulatory burdens that undermine US refining capacity, and forced many refineries to scale back operations or close altogether – which, in turn, increases our reliance on foreign oil and fuels inflation, and further drives up the prices of food and fuel for American families.

Speaker Johnson Presents Congressional Gold Medal to the Six Triple Eight

Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative Mike Johnson (LA-04)

WASHINGTON — Tuesday afternoon, Speaker Johnson hosted a bipartisan Congressional Gold Medal Ceremony to honor the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, commonly known as the Six Triple Eight. The battalion was the first and only all-Black, all-female unit to serve overseas in Europe during World War II. The Six Triple Eight, under the command of Lieutenant Colonel Charity Adams Earley, was instrumental in clearing the U.S. Army’s backlog of over 17 million pieces of mail in only three months, twice as fast as projected.

The ceremony was held in Emancipation Hall in the U.S. Capitol and featured remarks from Speaker Johnson, Leader Thune, Leader Schumer, Leader Jeffries, Senator Moran, Senator Rosen, Representative Moore, former Representative LaTurner, and Colonel Edna Cummings. Stanley Earley III and Judith Earley, children of Lieutenant Colonel Charity Adams Earley, accepted the medal on behalf of the 855 women who served in the Six Triple Eight.

Watch the Speaker’s remarks here

Read Speaker Johnson’s remarks below:

It’s a beautiful spring afternoon. We’re so happy to have you all, and I want to welcome my colleagues in Congress, of course, officials of the United States Army, distinguished guests. We’re so happy to have you at the United States Capitol today. We are honored to be joined by over 300 descendants and family members of the six triple eight.

What a testament this is to the enduring impact of these remarkable women that we honor today. This ceremony reflects one of the highest and most cherished traditions of our republic, one that’s roots stretch back all the way to General George Washington, Ulysses S Grant and the Wright brothers.

The Congressional Gold Medal is the highest honor this body can bestow. It’s reserved for those whose courage and service shaped our country and our nation’s story. It’s in this spirit that we gather to award this medal to the 6888, the Central Postal Directory. It’s 6888, but we call it the six triple eight.  

This battalion was the first and the only unit of African American women to serve overseas during World War II. As tens of thousands of Allied forces made their final push across Europe, the mail system was stretched thin from scarce resources. It was crippling under the weight of wartime logistics.

Then, just as today, letters of home were very, very important. They were lifelines that grounded the soldiers. They reminded our brave heroes of all they were fighting for, it was actually waiting back at home. Morale reports during the war underscore just how important mail was to the soldiers’ spirit, so much so that the phrase no mail, low morale became widespread. It was later adopted by the army as the official motto of the six triple eight yet for all the importance of mail, millions of undelivered letters piled up in dark warehouses across Europe, and those letters might well have stayed there, were it not for the work of the women that we celebrate today?

Under the command of Lieutenant Colonel Charity Adams Earley, the battalion – Parenthetically, I just want to note she sounds like a Marvel, hero, that name is so awesome. Charity Adams Earley. The battalion deployed to England and got to work on the on the backlog. They worked in three ships, around the clock, day in and day out, to sort through the literal mountains of mail that had accumulated, all while navigating troop movements that turned on a dime, incomplete addresses, illegible writing, and thousands of soldiers who shared the same names.

Listen to this. This is just one example. Okay, my name is Mike Johnson. Right, at this time, I know it’s sad. At this time, Michael was the ninth most popular name, and Johnson was one of the top five surnames. So, my staff did the math. They said, Sir, it’s pretty safe to assume that roughly 30,000 Mike Johnson’s served in World War II, and that’s enough to fill Fenway Park.

Now just imagine the challenge that these ladies have. They were trying to get the right letter to the right soldier, and that’s the kind of that’s the kind of challenge that they faced. With great ingenuity, they maintained a tracking system of 7 million ID cards to solve the issue of soldiers curing names. They didn’t have all the high-tech gadgets that we have today. They had to do it manually.

Processing roughly 65,000 pieces of mail per shift, they cleared the entire backlog in no less than three months.

Listen to this. By the war’s end, the Six Triple Eight had sorted over 17 million pieces of mail. They got the job done, even in the face of inadequate supplies and even in the face of discrimination, both for women within the Army and back home. These women were valiant members of our Greatest Generation, artists, academics, athletes, women who wanted went on to pursue higher education, to build families, to buy homes, and shape the very foundation of the American middle class.

We remember women like Margaret Sales, who enlisted on her 20th birthday. She enlisted on her 20th birthday, and she had dreams of pursuing music and teaching. We remember women like Romay Davis. She used the GI Bill to attend fashion school, and decades later, earned her black belt in her 70s. Tough ladies.

We also, of course, remember the incomparable Lieutenant Colonel Charity Adams Earley who guided her unit. She faced all those challenges and she guided her unit with unshakable grace and resolve. And even after earning her degree in mathematics, Latin and physics, she returned to her studies after the war, and she said this famously, “After handling 855 women, any course in college would be a cinch.”

We’re blessed that two members of the Six Triple Eight are still with us today, watching from home. They are, and we want to salute them from here in the chamber. Fannie McClendon, who hails from my home state of Louisiana, all right. She went on to serve her country as a Major in the Air Force. We also have Anna Mae Robertson watching at home. Just last month, she celebrated her 101st birthday. Ms. Anna Mae, you got a big group here.

Okay, these women and the entire Six Triple Eight, are great American patriots, loyal to a nation that, for far too long, failed to return that favor. And I’m glad to say that that’s changing, and we’re doing that here today.

This remarkable story has rightly captured imaginations, it has now inspired books and movies, stirred the conscience of millions of Americans who are just now hearing and sharing this incredible story. Today here in the people’s house, we add to that story. So, thank you all for being here. We are honored to host you and to celebrate these exceptional women. God bless you.

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New GDP Data Proves that Trump is Tanking the Economy

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Suzan DelBene (1st District of Washington)

New GDP Data Proves that Trump is Tanking the Economy

Washington, D.C., April 30, 2025

Today, Congresswoman Suzan DelBene (WA-01) released the following statement after new gross domestic product (GDP) data shows the economy shrank by 0.3% in the first quarter. 

“For all his broken promises, President Trump has accomplished one notable feat in his first 100 days – he tanked a strong economy and put us on the brink of a recession. Trump and Republicans promised to lower prices and grow the economy. The terrible reality is that 100 days in America is less affordable as a direct result of the president’s reckless tariffs and economic chaos. The next 100 could be even worse as Congressional Republicans plan to gut Medicaid and food assistance to pay for another round of massive tax cuts for the wealthy. It’s clear where the president and Republicans stand, and it’s not with American families.”