Rep. Estes Reintroduces Legislation Benefiting Nursing Homes In-House CNA Programs

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Ron Estes (R-Kansas)

WASHINGTON – Ron Estes (R-Kan.) and Rep. Josh Harder (D-Calif.)  reintroduced the Ensuring Seniors’ Access to Quality Care Act. This bill allows nursing homes to continue operating their in-house CNA training program even if they incur fines above a certain amount, so long as the fines are issued for reasons unrelated to direct resident care. 

“This common sense, bipartisan bill accounts for the current workforce challenges nursing homes face without compromising on a commitment to quality care for residents.” said Rep. Estes. “This bill ensures nursing homes continue to meet high standards without losing the staffing levels needed to provide high-quality care.”

Rep. Estes said, “The Seniors’ Access to Quality Care Act prevents an in-house CNA education program from facing suspension due to non-care related clerical violations.” “That’s a commonsense solution to help keep CNA education programs operational and assist nursing homes across the country with staffing levels.” 

“We should be doing everything we can to rebuild our workforce and make sure seniors get the consistent, high-quality care they deserve,” said Rep. Harder. “This bill will help grow the pipeline of caregivers. I’m grateful to Congressman Estes for his leadership on this issue.”

“We applaud Congressmen Estes and Harder for reintroducing the Ensuring Seniors’ Access to Quality Care Act to help develop more certified nursing assistants. As America’s population ages and demand for long term care grows, we strongly support this legislation and its goals to expand training pipelines and workforce capacity so that we can continue delivering high-quality, person-centered care. Addressing a key legislative priority of our Caregivers for Tomorrow initiative, this commonsense legislation represents the type of practical, collaborative policy solutions needed to support our caregivers and the people they serve,” Michael Bassett, Senior Vice President of Government Relations for American Health Care Association said. 

Background

 

Today, current surveys show about 94-96% of nursing facilities are still actively hiring or struggling to fill roles, and rural areas have reported having to limit admissions to their facilities close to 50% their full capacity due to these challenges. We are pleased that we were able to roll back the Biden administration’s nursing home staffing mandate which would have worsened workforce shortages across the country and required nursing homes nationwide already struggling to find staff to hire more than 100,000 additional nurses and nurse aides. One estimate suggested nearly 300,000 residents would lose access to care – more than one-fourth of all residents – as nursing homes slow admissions to comply with the mandate. Rep. Estes wrote about this rule and his CNA bill in a November 2023 op-ed in The Hill.

Under current law, Medicare prevents nursing homes from operating a Certified Nurse Aide (CNA) training program for two years if the facility is fined a certain amount. In making the decision to prohibit the training program, Medicare does not account for the seriousness of the underlying deficiency or activity the fine was related to. For example, a nursing home could be fined for a deficiency unrelated to direct resident care, like having expired crackers in a food pantry, yet would still be prohibited from operating a CNA training program for two years. While current law contains a waiver, it is seldom used and has proven inadequate. Rep. Estes’ legislation addresses this issue.

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Brownley Applauds FEMA Reversal on Soil Testing for Eaton Fire Victims

Source: United States House of Representatives – Julia Brownley (D-CA)

Washington, DC – Today, Congresswoman Julia Brownley (CA-26) joined Representatives Laura Friedman, Judy Chu, Nanette Barragán, Ted Lieu, and George Whitesides in welcoming FEMA’s reversal on post-wildfire soil testing. This reversal includes a commitment by FEMA to test lead levels at 100 homes destroyed by the Eaton Fire and comes after sustained pressure from members of California’s Congressional delegation.

“Ventura County and the Conejo Valley know all too well how devastating wildfires can be. They upend lives, destroy homes, and leave families with deep uncertainty about what comes next,” said Congresswoman Brownley. “As families work to recover, they deserve clear answers and the assurance that their homes and environment are safe. I have worked with my colleagues whose districts were impacted by the recent Los Angeles wildfires to urge FEMA to listen to community concerns about soil testing, and I am encouraged that they are now stepping up to cover testing for homes destroyed by the Eaton Fire. This is meaningful progress and an important step toward giving families long-overdue peace of mind. Together, we are pressing to ensure our communities receive the full federal disaster relief they need to recover safely and rebuild.”

“Even when FEMA refused to act, we kept fighting,” said Congresswoman Laura Friedman (CA-30). “We pushed because families deserve to know their land is safe. This reversal shows the power of never giving in to the Trump Administration, but testing 100 homes is not enough. We’re going to keep pushing for full soil testing, real cleanup, and the long-term relief that California families deserve.”

“Survivors deserve assurance that their properties are safe from toxic contaminants,” said Congresswoman Judy Chu (CA-28). “This testing is an important step forward, but it must be followed by real action if contamination is found. Survivors cannot be forced to bear the burden of paying out of pocket for their own remediation. I will continue standing with residents every step of the way and will not stop fighting until families can safely return home.”

“Families in LA should know for certain that their homes are safe to live in,” said Congresswoman Nanette Barragán (CA-44). “The Eaton fire has been one of the deadliest and most destructive events in recent Los Angeles County history, one that threatened the homes and lives of so many. I’m proud to have joined Rep. Friedman’s letter to push FEMA to test the lead levels of homes destroyed by the Eaton Fire, when FEMA was dragging its feet. Now the next step is to make sure that more than just 100 homes are tested, not just for lead, but for all possible dangerous toxins.”

“I’m pleased that FEMA has reversed its position on testing soil following the Eaton fires. For an administration that claims to want to ‘make America healthy again,’ its initial decision not to test for harmful toxins was mind-boggling. Thankfully, pressure from Congress and our community worked, and FEMA will be conducting the testing needed to ensure the land for 100 homes is safe to rebuild on. This obviously does not encompass the entirety of the soil that needs to be tested, but it’s a start. We will continue the fight, and I’m grateful for Congresswoman Friedman’s leadership on this issue,” said Congressman Ted Lieu (CA-36).

“After sustained pressure from our Congressional delegation in the year following the devastating Southern California wildfires, the announcement that FEMA will now cover post-wildfire soil testing in certain areas is an important step in rebuilding,” said Congressman George Whitesides (CA-27). “This action is critical for the health and safety of wildfire victims and is one of many actions needed to achieve comprehensive soil testing and cleanup. Our constituents deserve to return safely to their homes, neighborhoods, and lives, and we will not stop working to make that a reality.”

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Moolenaar: Gotion Reaches New Low

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman John Moolenaar (4th District of Michigan)

Headline: Moolenaar: Gotion Reaches New Low

Congressman John Moolenaar made the following statement in reaction to the report that Gotion intends to seek additional monetary damages from Green Charter Township over Gotion’s failed project: 

“Gotion has reached a new low as it seeks to bankrupt Green Charter Township. The people of Mecosta County, and the State of Michigan have thoroughly rejected it, but it is still trying to hold the town hostage. The CCP-affiliated company will stop at nothing to build a plant that no one wants.” 

Late last year, the State of Michigan placed Gotion, a CCP-affiliated company, in default on its agreement to build a battery component factory in Mecosta County.

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Ranking Member Jayapal Introduces Amendment to DHS Spending Bill Requiring ICE to End Targeting of US Citizens

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Pramila Jayapal (7th District of Washington)

WASHINGTON, DC — U.S. Representative Pramila Jayapal, Ranking Member of the Subcommittee on Immigration, Integrity, Security, and Enforcement, is submitting an amendment to the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) appropriations bill to add language that would formally block Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) from detaining or deporting U.S. citizens while conducting civil immigration enforcement.

“ICE has been terrorizing communities across this country, kidnapping and detaining immigrants and US citizens alike,” said Jayapal. “In the last few days, we have seen stark examples of this, including an elderly man being walked in the freezing cold without clothes on. At my field hearing in Minnesota, we heard from a woman who was detained and taken to a designated ‘US citizens’ cell in ICE detention. We also heard from a man who stated repeatedly that he was a US citizen as ICE arrested him and agents told him, ‘that don’t matter.’ All of this is illegal and outside the scope of ICE’s jurisdiction. We cannot pass the DHS funding bill without significant and meaningful guardrails to hold DHS accountable and stop their reckless and lawless actions. I hope to see this amendment seriously considered to protect Americans and further work done to overhaul this bill to rein in DHS.”

Reporting shows that ICE has detained hundreds of US citizens, as detention and death in detention have both skyrocketed to all-time highs. 

ICE has no authority to arrest, detain, or deport U.S. citizens. Their own internal guidance states, “As a matter of law, ICE cannot assert its civil immigration enforcement authority to arrest and/or detain a U.S. citizen.” U.S. citizens also cannot be deported under U.S. law.

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DeGette Introduces Bill to Protect NIH From Political Interference

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Diana DeGette (First District of Colorado)

Legislation comes one year into Trump administration’s unprecedented assault on biomedical research

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, Congresswoman Diana DeGette (CO-01), Ranking Member of the Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Health, introduced the Follow the Science Act to shield the National Institutes of Health (NIH) from political interference and protect the integrity of America’s biomedical research.

The legislation comes exactly one year after the start of the second Trump administration, which has undermined American science by abruptly canceling research grants, installing political loyalists in scientific positions, and injecting partisan politics into peer review processes that have driven medical breakthroughs for decades. Led by a cabal of unelected ideologues including Russ Vought, RFK Jr., Jay Bhattacharya, and Elon Musk, the second Trump administration has presided over the greatest destruction of medical research in American history. 

“Since the end of World War II, NIH has been the crown jewel of American biomedical research—discovering treatments, saving lives, and maintaining our global scientific leadership,” said Congresswoman DeGette. “But this administration has shown it’s willing to sacrifice science on the altar of politics. We cannot allow partisan interference to compromise the research that develops tomorrow’s cancer treatments, Alzheimer’s therapies, and lifesaving vaccines. The Follow the Science Act draws a bright line: science belongs to scientists, not politicians.”

The Global Leader in Research Funding

Since its establishment in 1887, the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the world’s premier public funder of medical research, has been responsible for countless biomedical innovations. NIH-funded science underpins nearly every new drug approval, from cancer immunotherapies to COVID-19 vaccines to treatments for Type 1 diabetes. 

Each year, NIH awards more than 60,000 grants supporting over 300,000 researchers across 2,500 institutions in every state. The economic impact is staggering: in fiscal year 2023 alone, NIH funding supported more than 410,000 jobs—including 10,000 NIH-supported jobs in some states—and fueled nearly $93 billion in economic activity. The return on investment is clear: every dollar appropriated to NIH generates more than two dollars in economic benefit.

The Problem: Politics Displacing Science

This centuries long success has relied on insulating scientific decisions from political pressure. For many years, NIH maintained just two political appointees: the NIH Director and the National Cancer Institute (NCI) Director. This structure ensured presidential administrations could set broad priorities while career scientists—experts in their fields—made day-to-day funding and research decisions based on merit and evidence.

Like much else under Donald Trump, that firewall has eroded. Today, a greatly expanded number of political appointees at NIH are injecting politics into scientific processes, adding red tape, and slowing America’s engine of innovation. The result: transformative research is being delayed or canceled not because of scientific merit, but because of political calculations.

Trump’s War on Science

In the year since taking office, the Trump administration has:

  • Terminated 1,389 awards and delayed sending funding to more than 1,000 additional projects as of April 2025. The agency awarded $1.6 billion less compared with the same period in 2024, a reduction of one-fifth.
    • By contrast, from 2015 to 2024, there have been fewer than 20 terminations a year, on average, at NIH.
  • In January 2025, less than 24 hours after coming to power, the administration suspended all external communications — such as health advisories and weekly scientific reports — across all HHS agencies, including NIH. This was followed by a hiring and travel freeze.
  • In March, the administration rescinded an NIH policy designed to maintain the use of science in decision making and protect scientific research from political interference.
  • In July, Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Director Russ Vought directed the NIH to withhold — illegally, according to the Government Accountability Office — an estimated $15 billion in grants for outside research projects.

This political interference doesn’t just waste taxpayer dollars—it undermines trust in science, drives talented researchers overseas, and delays the discoveries that save American lives.

What the Follow the Science Act Would Do?

DeGette’s legislation would restore the proper balance between political leadership and scientific expertise by:

  • Capping the number of NIH political appointees, ensuring presidential administrations can set direction without micromanaging scientific decisions.
  • Prohibiting political appointees from participating in NIH grant review processes, leaving scientific decisions to scientists.
  • Prohibiting NIH from terminating grants without documented scientific cause, preventing politically motivated cancellations.

The Benefits

Together, these reforms would:

  • Improve trust in science by ensuring politics do not interfere in federally funded research.
  • Protect taxpayer dollars by ensuring merit, not politics, drives funding decisions.
  • Accelerate medical breakthroughs by allowing career NIH scientists to focus on science and improving Americans’ health rather than navigating political interference.

Original Cosponsors: Reps. Gabe Amo (RI-01), Andre Carson (IN-07), Troy Carter (LA-02), Kathy Castor (FL-14), Sean Casten (IL-06), Yvette Clarke (NY-09), Steve Cohen (TN-09), Danny Davis (IL-07), Suzan DelBene (WA-01), Maxine Dexter (OR-03), Debbie Dingell (MI-06), Sarah Elfreth (MD-03), Josh Harder (CA-09), Hank Johnson (GA-04), Julie Johnson (TX-32), Robin Kelly (IL-02), Greg Landsman (OH-01), Summer Lee (PA-12), Doris Matsui (CA-07), April McClain Delaney (MD-06), Betty McCollum (MN-04), Jennifer McClellan (VA-04), Kelly Morrison (MN-03), Kevin Mullin (CA-15), Eleanor Holmes Norton (DC-AL), Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (NY-14), Brittany Pettersen (CO-07), Kim Schrier (WA-08), Lateefah Simon (CA-12), Shri Thanedar (MI-13), Rashida Tlaib (MI-12), Lori Trahan (MA-03), Nydia Velázquez (NY-07), and Bonnie Watson Coleman (NJ-12).

Organizational Endorsements: American Public Health Association, Blood Cancer United (formerly Leukemia & Lymphoma Society), 27UNIHted, Science and Freedom Alliance.

Bonamici, Begich Introduce Bipartisan Bill to Strengthen Water Power

Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative Suzanne Bonamici (1st District Oregon)

WASHINGTON, DC [1/21/26] – Representatives Suzanne Bonamici (D-OR) and Nick Begich (R-AK) introduced bipartisan legislation to bolster water power technologies.

The Water Power Research and Development Reauthorization Act, H.R. 7129, would modernize the Department of Energy’s (DOE) water power research, development, and demonstration programs, including for marine energy, pumped storage, and hydropower technologies. Bonamici led the last reauthorization of these programs in 2020, when it was signed into law with bipartisan support.

“Water power technologies have tremendous potential to provide cheaper, cleaner, and more resilient energy,” said Congresswoman Suzanne Bonamici. “This legislation will spur innovation to leverage the power of waves, tides, and currents to create opportunities for more Oregonians and Americans to benefit from this promising energy source.” 

“Hydropower has long been a proven part of America’s baseload energy mix,” said Congressman Nick Begich. “This legislation will support the development of next-generation hydropower and marine energy technologies that can provide long-duration storage and critical grid services. By continuing to invest in innovation and performance validation, we’re ensuring water power remains a dependable solution that works for Alaska and helps build a more reliable energy grid nationwide. I’m proud to work across the aisle to advance energy policies that make sense for Alaska and for the nation.”

The Water Power Research and Development Reauthorization Act would:

  1. Reauthorize DOE’s Water Power Technologies Office research, development, demonstration, and commercialization programs for hydropower, pumped storage, and marine energy
  2. Strengthen grid reliability and resilience by advancing technologies that provide long-duration energy storage, ancillary services, and flexible generation
  3. Improve environmental performance of water power systems through research on fisheries, water quality, sediment movement, and cumulative impacts
  4. Support domestic manufacturing, advanced materials, and additive manufacturing for water power components and supply chains
  5. Expand marine energy research for resilient coastal and riverside communities, microgrids, desalination, disaster recovery, and critical infrastructure
  6. Sustain and expand National Marine Energy Centers as regional hubs for testing, demonstration, and workforce development
  7. Promote collaboration among national laboratories, universities, industry, Tribes, and federal agencies
  8. Authorize $300 million annually through FY2030 to support hydropower and marine energy innovation nationwide

Companion legislation, S. 3684, is led in the Senate by Senators Lisa Murkowski (R-AK) and Ron Wyden (D-OR).

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VIDEO: Pressley & Markey Hold Field Hearing on TPS for Haiti, Express Solidarity with Mass. Haitian Community

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

With Temporary Protected Status for Over 350,000 Haitian Nationals Set to Expire February 3, Lawmakers Uplifted Impact on Haitians in Massachusetts

Video (YouTube) | Photos (Dropbox)

BOSTON – Today, as Trump marked one year in office, Congresswoman Ayanna Pressley (MA-07), Co-Chair of the House Haiti Caucus, along with Senator Edward J. Markey (D-MA), held a field hearing at Jubilee Christian Church in Mattapan on the importance of extending Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Haiti. The hearing came with TPS set to expire on February 3, 2026, which would leave over 350,000 Haitian nationals at risk of deportation, including approximately 46,000 Haitians and Haitian-Americans across the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, over half of whom call the Boston metropolitan area home.

The lawmakers heard from panels of individuals, advocates, and community leaders impacted by Trump’s decision to end TPS for Haitians. Testimony from the hearing will be entered into the Congressional Record and inform immediate oversight and legislative efforts.

“This field hearing has made clear that terminating TPS for Haiti would be a death sentence for thousands of families living in Massachusetts and across our country, and devastating to the communities they enrich,” said Congresswoman Ayanna Pressley. “Haitians who have built their lives here and contributed to the Massachusetts 7th community for years are at risk of deportation to a country that remains entrenched in political, economic, and humanitarian turmoil. We should be doing everything we can to save lives and protect our neighbors, not tearing them away from their home and sending them to danger. While Trump demonizes immigrant families and begins his second year in office, I’ll continue standing with our Haitian neighbors, affirming that they belong, and pushing back against Trump’s harmful anti-immigrant agenda.”

“Haitian TPS holders are deeply rooted in our Massachusetts communities. They are our friends, our family members, our neighbors, our colleagues,” said Senator Markey. “The termination of Haiti TPS would be an abdication of the American promise as a land of freedom and a betrayal to the Haitian community, and we must not let it happen. I am proud to stand with Representative Pressley and the Haitian community every single day to organize, demand change, and keep fighting for Haiti TPS.”

Joining Congresswoman Pressley and Senator Markey at the hearing were: Congressman Seth Moulton (MA-06), and multiple organizations including: Immigrant & Family Services Institute – USA; Everett Haitian Community Center; Association of Haitian Women in Boston; Institute for Justice and Democracy in Haiti; Massachusetts Immigrant and Refugee Advocacy Coalition; National TPS Alliance; Massachusetts TPS Committee; American Business Immigration Coalition; Massachusetts Restaurants United; Laurel Ridge Rehabilitation & Skilled Care Center; LeadingAge Massachusetts; National Domestic Workers Alliance; SEIU 32BJ; SEIU 1199.

“Hearing directly from Haitian families and community advocates today made clear just how devastating the Trump Administration’s decision to end TPS for Haitian immigrants would be,” said Congressman Seth Moulton. “Deporting people back to a country facing extreme violence and instability like Haiti is both cruel and reckless. I look forward to working with my colleagues in the Massachusetts delegation to protect TPS and ensure that Haitian immigrants can continue to live and work safely in our communities without fear of deportation.”

“The ending of TPS is morally unjustifiable for nationals from any country in lethal turmoil, yet its effects on the senior care sector and on airport workers in Massachusetts—including over 100 of our members—shows that the ending of Haitian TPS is the most egregious example of the extraordinary harm that ending this protection causes to local businesses, to our economy, and to countless U.S. citizens, as well as to thousands of hardworking immigrants and their families,” said Kevin Brown, Executive Vice President 32BJ SEIU.

“The human consequences are already devastating our communities. We have seen deportations of Venezuelan community members, and heartbreaking deaths tied to the loss of TPS—a Honduran TPS holder died in immigration detention last Jan 4th, and here in Massachusetts a Honduran woman died after losing her TPS protections and could not continue her cancer treatment because she lost her healthcare protection due to the TPS cancelation. With the termination of TPS protections for Haiti set for February 3, 2026, we are warning everyone of a humanitarian and economic crisis this will create. More than one million people will be left unprotected, impacting not only TPS families, but also the stability of the economy of this country. Our lives are not temporary,” said Doris Landaverde, Coordinator of Mass TPS Committee.

“Terminating Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for the half a million Haitians who call the United States home is unconscionable and inhumane. These individuals, many of whom now call Boston and parts of Massachusetts home, have fled unimaginable violence and government instability for a better life, with thousands building those new lives in Massachusetts,” said Elizabeth Sweet, Executive Director of the MIRA Coalition. “Ending TPS for Haitians will strip legal status away from our neighbors, friends, family and coworkers, forcing them into an extremely dangerous situation where they could face deportation.”

“The American Business Immigration Coalition, along with the ‘Care for Seniors, Care for America’ campaign, calls on the public and the administration to acknowledge the impact TPS terminations would have on everyday Americans. Immigrants are the backbone of the care industry, comprising one in four long-term care workers and over 30% of nursing home support roles. To address this, we call for stable work permits: Congress should create reliable, long-term pathways for law-abiding, qualified immigrants who have contributed to our economy for years. We must protect the ‘Circle of Care’ by maintaining the legal ability to work for current caregivers, avoiding disruptions to the vital bonds between seniors and their providers. We can—and must—secure both our borders and our workforce to ensure a prosperous American future,” said Luis Zaldivar of the American Business Immigration Coalition.

“Ending Temporary Protected Status for Haitian nationals and individuals from other TPS-designated countries will have serious consequences for older adults and their families. This policy change comes at a critical moment, as long-term demographic trends driven by population aging are rapidly increasing the number of people who require ongoing care and support. Foreign-born workers are an invaluable component of the aging services workforce in Massachusetts and nationwide. Immigration policy should be leveraged to support essential workers, strengthen critical services, and address well-documented labor gaps. Terminating TPS and further restricting lawful employment runs counter to those goals. These actions will deepen workforce challenges and, by limiting older adults’ access to much-needed care and services, jeopardize their health and well-being,” said Elissa Sherman, President, LeadingAge Massachusetts.

“Hundreds of American senior citizens in the city of Everett and greater Boston of all races who are receiving much needed home health aide assistance from hardworking dedicated workers—taxpayers who graduated from ESOL and workforce training programs as well as the approximately 1,842 voiceless Haitian babies, children, senior citizens, adults, families and youths who arrived 15 years ago on TPS, excelling in sports and other areas important to our local U.S. economic infrastructure will be terribly impacted by the suspensions of TPS. The US is better than that. The US can do better than that—creating a pathway for these TPS holders to have their green cards and citizenship is more a sensical and responsible immigration policy. As a Christian nation, Scripture teaches us: ‘I was a stranger and you invited me in.’ – Matthew 25:35. Let’s invite people to the fold—not persecuting and deporting them,” said Rev. Dr. Myrlande DesRosiers Senior pastor and Director at EHCC. 

“The decision of President Trump to not renew TPS is a horrific blow to the Haitians and Haitian-Americans that puts an entire community at risk on many fronts: economically, socially, psychologically and physically! Many families and individuals with TPS experience real fear and anxiety, not knowing what their fate is or will be. When you talk about the social determinants of health, fear, anxiety, lack of access to services play a significant role in people’s mental health and eventually their physical health. They may end up in the hospital with various health issues,” said Rev. Dr. Eno Mondésir, Senior Pastor of a predominantly Haitian congregation in the United States.

Footage of the hearing is available here and photos are available here.

As Representative for the Massachusetts 7th Congressional District, Congresswoman Pressley serves as Co-Chair for the House Haiti Caucus and represents one of the largest Haitian diaspora communities in the country.

  • On June 28, 2025, Rep. Pressley condemned the Trump Administration’s abominable termination of Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Haiti.
  • On June 5, 2025, Rep. Pressley and Yvette D. Clarke (NY-09) condemned Donald Trump’s executive order that bans citizens of 12 countries, including Haiti, from traveling to the United States, and places partial restrictions on citizens of seven more nations.
  • On March 18, 2025, Rep. Pressley, Congresswoman Yvette Clarke (NY-09), and Senator Chris Van Hollen (D-MD) led 62 of their colleagues in the House and 23 of their colleagues in the Senate in a letter to Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem demanding the Trump Administration redesignate and extend Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Haiti, which the administration recently canceled on questionable legal authority:
  • On February 20, 2025, Rep. Pressley and her Haiti Caucus Co-Chairs issued a statement condemning the Trump Administration’s decision to end Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Haiti.
  • On November 14, 2024, Rep. Pressley and her Haiti Caucus Co-Chairs issued a statement condemning violence in Haiti and calling on the Biden Administration to halt all deportations to Haiti.
  • On September 25, 2024, Rep. Pressley and her Haiti Caucus Co-Chairs issued a statement condemning the false and dangerous lies about Haitian, Latino, and Asian immigrants.
  • On September 20, 2024, Rep. Pressley and her Haiti Caucus Co-Chairs joined colleagues and advocates at a press conference to stand in solidarity with Haitian immigrants in Springfield, Ohio and across America, and to demand accountability for the harmful and false narratives perpetuated by Republicans.
  • On June 28, 2024, Rep. Pressley issued a statement applauding the Biden-Harris Administration’s extension and redesignation of Haiti for Temporary Protected Status (TPS). 
  • On April 23, 2024, Rep. Pressley, alongside Co-Chairs Congresswoman Yvette D. Clarke (NY-09) and Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick (FL-20), led a group of 50 lawmakers urging the Biden Administration to redesignate Haiti for Temporary Protected Status (TPS), pause on deportations back to Haiti, extend humanitarian parole to any Haitians currently detained in Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s detention centers, end detention of Haitian migrants intercepted at sea, and provide additional humanitarian assistance for Haiti.
  • On April 18, 2024, Rep. Pressley and Haiti Caucus Co-Chairs led a letter to House Ways and Means Committee leadership emphasizing support for the early renewal of the Haitian Hemispheric Opportunity through Partnership Encouragement (HOPE) and the Haiti Economic Lift Program (HELP) Acts, commonly known as HOPE/HELP. 
  • On April 12, 2024, Rep. Pressley joined Haitian-led activists, organizations, and a directly impacted person in Haiti for a press call urging federal action to address the worsening humanitarian crisis in Haiti.
  • On March 27, 2024, Rep. Pressley joined Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) and her colleagues on the Massachusetts congressional delegation in urging the Biden Administration to expedite visa processing for Haitians, particularly  for relatives of U.S. citizens and lawful permanent residents.
  • On March 18, Rep. Pressley, Senator Markey, and the House Haiti Caucus led 67 lawmakers on a letter urging the Biden Administration to extend TPS for Haiti and halt deportations.
  • On March 12, 2024, Rep. Pressley and Haiti Caucus Co-Chairs Reps. Cherfilus McCormick and Yvette Clarke issued a statement on the resignation of Haitian Prime Minister Ariel Henry.
  • On March 6, 2024, Rep. Pressley issued a statement on the recent jailbreak and State of Emergency in Haiti.
  • On December 8, 2023, Rep. Pressley and Congresswoman Yvette Clarke urged the U.S. Department of State to withdraw U.S. support for an armed foreign intervention in Haiti and encourage negotiations for a Haitian-led democratic political transition.
  • On December 6, 2022, Rep. Pressley issued a statement applauding the Biden Administration’s extension and re-designation of Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Haiti.
  • On December 1, 2022, Rep. Pressley, Rep. Cori Bush, and Rep. Mondaire Jones led 14 of their colleagues on a letter to Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas urging the Department to extend and redesignate Haiti for Temporary Protected Status (TPS).
  • In September 2022, Rep. Pressley and Rep. Velázquez led 54 of their colleagues on a letter calling on the Biden Administration to immediately halt deportations to Haiti and provide humanitarian parole protections for those seeking asylum. The lawmakers’ letter followed the Administration’s resumption of deportation flights to Haiti as thousands of Haitian migrants continue to await an opportunity to make an asylum claim at the border. 
  • In September 2022, Rep. Pressley joined her colleagues on the House Oversight Committee in demanding answers regarding the inhumane treatment of migrants in Del Rio, Texas, by Border Patrol agents on horseback and pushing to Biden Administration to end the ongoing use and weaponization of Title 42.
  • On August 17, 2022, Rep. Pressley, along with Haiti Caucus Co-Chairs Reps. Val Demings, Yvette Clarke, and Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick (FL-20), called on President Biden to appoint a new Special Envoy to Haiti, a position that has remained unfilled since September 2021.
  • On July 7, 2022, Rep. Pressley and Haiti Caucus Co-Chairs Reps. Andy Levin (MI-09), Val Demings (FL-10) and Yvette D. Clarke (NY-09) released a statement marking the one-year anniversary of the assassination of Haitian President Jovenel Moïse.
  • On May 31, 2022, Rep. Pressley and Reverend Dieufort Fleurissaint, chair of Haitian Americans United, published an op-ed in the Bay State Banner in which they called on the Biden administration to withdraw support for de facto ruler of Haiti, Ariel Henry, and instead support an inclusive, civil society-led process to restore stability and democracy on the island. 
  • In April 2022, she joined her colleagues at a press conference reaffirming her support for President Biden’s decision to end Title 42. Full video of her remarks at the press conference is available here. Rep. Pressley applauded the Biden Administration’s end of Title 42 in a statement in April 2022.
  • On May 26, 2022, Rep. Pressley, along with with Representatives Jan Schakowsky (IL-09), Andy Levin (MI-09), Jim McGovern (MA-02), and Frederica Wilson (FL-24), led a letter to United States Agency for International Development (USAID) Administrator Power urging her to act to ensure food security in Haiti.
  • On March 16, 2022, Rep. Pressley and Rep. Mondaire Jones called on Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Rochelle Walensky to fully end Title 42, cease deportations of people to Haiti and affirm their legal and fundamental human right to seek asylum.
  • On February 16, 2022, Rep. Pressley joined Congresswoman Cori Bush (MO-01), Senator Cory Booker (D-NJ), and 100 House and Senate colleagues in urging President Biden to reverse inhumane immigration policies – such as Title 42, originally introduced under the Trump Administration – that continue to disproportionately harm Black migrants.
  • On February 14, 2022, Congresswoman Ayanna Pressley (MA-07), alongside Representatives Judy Chu (CA-27) and Nydia Velázquez (NY-07), led 33 other House Democrats on a letter to Rochelle Walensky, Director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, demanding answers about the agency’s justification for treating asylum seekers as a unique public health threat, how these expulsions are being coordinated, how asylum seekers being returned to dangerous situations are being cared for, and more.
  • On February 14, 2022, Reps. Pressley, Judy Chu (CA-27), and Nydia Velázquez (NY-07) led 33 other House Democrats on a letter to CDC Director Walensky demanding answers about the agency’s justification for treating asylum seekers as a unique public health threat, how these expulsions are being coordinated, how asylum seekers being returned to dangerous situations are being cared for, and more. Days later, Rep. Pressley once again called on the Biden Administration to reverse the Title 42 Order and other anti-Black immigration policies.
  • On January 12, 2022, Rep. Pressley and Haiti Caucus Co-Chairs Yvette D. Clarke (NY-09), Andy Levin (MI-09), and Val Demings (FL-10) released a statement on the 12-year anniversary of the catastrophic 7.0 magnitude earthquake that struck Haiti on January 12, 2010.
  • On November 21, 2021, Rep. Pressley and Senator Elizabeth Warren led the Massachusetts congressional delegation on a letter to the Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR) calling on them to coordinate with the government agencies of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts to assist newly arrived families from Haiti. 
  • On October 18, 2021, Rep. Pressley, and Haiti Caucus Co-Chairs Reps. Val Demings (FL-10), Yvette Clarke (NY-09), and Andy Levin (MI-09) issued a statement following the kidnapping of American and Canadian missionaries in Haiti.
  • On October 18, 2021, Rep. Pressley issued a statement on the civil rights complaint filed by Haitian families demanding a federal investigation into the heinous actions perpetrated by federal officials at the border.
  • On October 22, 2021, Rep. Pressley, along with Oversight Chairwoman Carolyn B. Maloney, Subcommittee on Civil Rights and Civil Liberties Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-MD), and Reps. Rashida Tlaib (MI-13), Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (NY-14), and Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-FL), sent a letter to Troy A. Miller, the Acting Administrator of U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP), demanding a briefing and answers regarding press reports of the inhumane treatment of migrants in Del Rio, Texas, by Border Patrol agents on horseback. 
  • On September 17, 2021, Rep. Pressley and Congresswoman Nydia M. Velázquez (NY-07) led 52 of their colleagues calling on the Biden Administration to immediately halt deportations to Haiti and take urgent action to address the concerns of the Haitian Diaspora after a 7.2 magnitude earthquake devastated Haiti.
  • On August 14, 2021, Rep. Pressley Yvette Clarke (NY-09), Andy Levin (MI-09) and Val Demings (FL-10) and Mondaire Jones (NY-17) released a statement regarding the recent earthquake in Haiti.
  • On July 14, 2021, Rep. Pressley and Haiti Caucus Co-Chairs Reps. Yvette Clarke (NY-09), Andy Levin (MI-09) and Val Demings (FL-10) sent a letter to U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas calling on him to take a series of steps to support the Haitian diaspora amid ongoing political turmoil in Haiti.
  • In July 2021, the Reps. Pressley, Clarke, Demings and Levin issued a statement condemning the assassination of President Moïse and calling for swift and decisive action to bring political stability and peace to Haiti and the Haitian people.
  • In May 2021, on Haitian Flag Day, Reps. Pressley, Levin, Clarke and Demings announced the formation of the House Haiti Caucus, a Congressional caucus dedicated to pursuing a just foreign policy that puts the needs and aspirations of the Haitian people first.

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Krishnamoorthi Moves to Block Trump’s Abuse of Power After Insurrection Act Threat Against Minnesota Protesters

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi (8th District of Illinois)

WASHINGTON — In response to President Donald Trump’s threat to invoke the Insurrection Act to deploy federal forces against anti-ICE protesters in Minnesota, Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi (D-IL) announced that he is offering an amendment to the defense funding bill to block any such deployment unless it is explicitly requested and supported by the governor of the affected state.

“Donald Trump’s threat to invoke the Insurrection Act in response to protests over federal enforcement actions is a reckless abuse of power that would only inflame an already volatile situation,” said Congressman Krishnamoorthi. “The National Guard can support local law enforcement in a lawful, limited role, but it must never be used for intimidation or political stunts. Turning the military on Americans shatters the constitutional balance on which our democracy depends.”

“That’s why I am offering an amendment to the defense funding bill to block any funds from being used to invoke the Insurrection Act unless the governor of the affected state explicitly requests and supports such deployment, ensuring we stop Trump’s abuse of power and protect our armed forces from being misused for intimidation, political theater, or unlawful escalation.”

Carter-led bill improving air quality standards passes out of House Committee

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Earl L Buddy Carter (GA-01)

Headline: Carter-led bill improving air quality standards passes out of House Committee

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Rep. Earl L. “Buddy” Carter (R-GA) today celebrated passage of his Clean Air and Economic Advancement Reform (CLEAR) Act, a bill to modernize out-of-date National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS), out of the House Committee on Energy and Commerce.

“For decades, states’ economic growth has been hampered by overly strict, outdated air quality standards,” said Rep. Carter. “My bill, the CLEAR Act, brings much-needed common-sense reform to this system by empowering states to reduce air pollution without getting in the way of prosperity. We are giving states a framework to work with, not burdensome red tape to work through.”

“Congressman Carter’s CLEAR Act takes a commonsense approach to establishing and implementing NAAQS, ensuring states are not bogged down by overly complicated standards that threaten economic prosperity. I am proud to see this bill advanced by the Energy and Commerce Committee and look forward to its consideration on the House floor,” said Rep. Rick Allen (R-GA).

The CLEAR Act will:

  • Make attaining clean air standards realistic, while giving states the time needed to comply.
  • Exclude natural disasters, wildfires, and actions to prevent wildfires that produce emissions from regulatory penalties.
  • Protect the environment while also paving the way for responsible economic development.

Read the full bill text here.

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Thompson Issues Statement on DOGE Illegally Accessing Social Security Data

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Mike Thompson Representing the 5th District of CALIFORNIA

Read my statement on DOGE employees illegally accessing and sharing Social Security data:

“Members of this administration continue to break the law, and they need to be held accountable. Two DOGE employees accessed and shared Americans’ Social Security data in an effort to undermine our elections and overturn the will of voters. That is not “cost-cutting.” It is an abuse of power and a direct threat to our democracy.

“No unelected group, billionaire-backed or otherwise, has the right to weaponize Americans’ personal data for political gain. These actions are illegal, violate the public trust, and endanger millions of people’s private information.

“Those responsible must be held fully accountable under the law. I urge my Republican colleagues to join Democrats in conducting rigorous oversight to protect Americans’ data and ensure that no one is above the law.”