Bilirakis and Veasey Introduce Legislation to Identify and Address Kids’ Vision Impairments

Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative Gus Bilirakis (FL-12)

Washington, DC: Earlier today, Congressional Vision Caucus Co-Chairs, U.S. Representatives Gus Bilirakis (FL-12) and Marc Veasey (TX-33), reintroduced the Bipartisan Early Detection of Vision Impairments for Children (EDVI) Act. The EDVI Act will establish grants for states and communities to improve children’s vision and eye health through screenings, early interventions, and coordinated systems of care. Despite the presence of numerous public health programs that support early childhood development, including children’s hearing and oral health, there is currently no federally funded program in the United States that specifically addresses children’s vision or that fosters a cohesive and integrated system of eye health for children.

As an American who has suffered from poor vision since childhood, I have a first-hand understanding of how critical early detection and treatment is when it comes to ensuring that all children have the best possible start in life,” said Rep. Bilirakis. “Our landmark bill will ensure all children get the screening and care they need at the right age by creating the first-ever federally funded program to address children’s vision and eye health. This legislation will empower states and communities, like mine, to improve systems of care for our youngest citizens and their families.”

When I was in elementary school, I struggled to see the board, and it made learning incredibly difficult. It wasn’t until I had a vision screening and got the right pair of glasses that everything changed for me,” said Rep. Veasey.I know from personal experience that vision issues can hold a child back, and how something as simple as a pair of glasses can unlock their potential. No child should fall behind simply because they can’t see. The Early Detection of Vision Impairments for Children Act will ensure all children, in Texas and across the country, have access to the screenings they need to see clearly and reach their full potential.” 

More than one in every four children in America, or roughly 19.6 million, have a vision problem requiring treatment,” said Jeff Todd, president and CEO of Prevent Blindness. “We know access to education, screenings, examinations, diagnosis, and treatment are critical to preventing vision loss, and this legislation is an important step in providing children and their families with those services and the healthcare they need and deserve.”

The EDVI Act promotes a strong system of care for children’s vision and eye health that fosters early detection and treatment, thus ensuring that children can access vision and eye care services that can set the foundation for a lifetime of good vision,” Dr. Stacey Coulter, OD Vice Chair, National Center for Children’s Vision and Eye Health.

Early detection of eye problems in children can improve treatment effectiveness, enable better outcomes and ensure children have their best chance of academic success and lifelong good vision. We applaud Rep. Bilirakis and Rep. Veasey for working to provide states and communities with resources to expand and improve vision screening programs,” said Michael Repka, MD, pediatric ophthalmologist, and President, American Academy of Ophthalmology.

“Pediatricians recognize the vital importance of early detection and treatment when it comes to supporting children’s overall health and development. The EDVI Act will help promote positive eye health in young people by catching vision concerns early so they can get the care they need to succeed, while supporting their lifelong vision health. We applaud Representatives Bilirakis and Veasey for introducing this important bipartisan legislation and urge Congress to pass it into law,”said Susan Kressly, MD, FAAP, president of the American Academy of Pediatrics.

Increasing awareness and identifying vision concerns early will save money in the long run and improve outcomes for patients throughout their lives. If left untreated, common vision disorders in childhood, such as amblyopia (lazy eye), strabismus (crossed eyes), myopia (nearsightedness), or hyperopia (farsightedness), may continue to affect health and well-being throughout the child’s life. State laws to address children’s vision vary widely in approaches and often lack the necessary resources to adequately capture data on rates of received eye care, leading to challenges in addressing and treating ocular disease and eye conditions in children.  

Under the EDVI Act, the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, will award grants and cooperative agreements for states and communities to implement approaches (such as vision screenings) for the early detection of vision concerns in children, referrals for eye exams, and follow-up mechanisms, establish a coordinated public health system for vision health and eye care diagnosis and treatment, and develop state-based data collection and performance improvement systems. Resources will also be made available through the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to provide technical assistance and guidance to states and communities to implement children’s vision screening and early intervention programs. Over 100 organizations nationally have endorsed the EDVI Act.

Congresswoman Maxine Waters and Senator Elizabeth Warren Call for Investigation of Commerce Secretary Lutnick

Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative Jenniffer González-Colón (Puerto Rico)

Washington, D.C – Yesterday, Congresswoman Maxine Waters (CA-43) and Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) sent a letter to the U.S. Office of Government Ethics demanding an ethics investigation into Commerce Secretary Lutnick for potentially violating federal ethics laws. This letter comes on the heels of Secretary Lutnick urging Fox News viewers to purchase Tesla Stock.

Executive Branch employees are barred from using their public position for their own private gain. In the letter, the lawmakers highlighted several ways that Secretary Lutnick potentially violated the law. Cantor Fitzgerald is Secretary Lutnick’s family firm, and it has hundreds of millions of dollars in Tesla stock.

“Perhaps more concerning, Cantor Fitzgerald upgraded Tesla stock to a “buy” rating the same day Mr. Lutnick urged the public to buy shares in the company. Mr. Lutnick’s apparent attempt to manipulate Tesla’s share price in a manner potentially benefiting his family’s and friend’s financial position could violate applicable ethics law,” wrote the lawmakers. 

The lawmakers conclude that ethics officials at the Commerce Department should investigate and take any appropriate disciplinary action against Secretary Lutnick.

Read the full letter here.

###

Rep. Aguilar Re-Introduces the No Hungry Kids in Schools Act

Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative Pete Aguilar (31 CD Ca)

Today, Rep. Pete Aguilar reintroduced the No Hungry Kids in Schools Act, which would expand access to meals for every student in America by allowing states to provide no-cost meal programs in public schools.
“As a father, the thought of any child going hungry in school is devastating,” said Rep. Pete Aguilar. “House Democrats believe that every child deserves a shot at a better life, and no kid can reach their full academic potential on an empty stomach. Meanwhile, the Trump Administration shows it doesn’t care about our children’s future by working to eliminate the Department of Education, which could force neighborhood schools to close and class sizes to increase, to pay for tax cuts for billionaires. We can make our community stronger and our children healthier by ensuring that no child in this country is hungry at school, regardless of their background or their zip code. That’s why I am proud to reintroduce the No Hungry Kids in Schools Act to help improve the health and academic performance of students in the Inland Empire and across America by ensuring that they do not go hungry.”
“We are pleased Rep. Aguilar has reintroduced the No Hungry Kids in Schools Act to allow states to adopt the Community Eligibility Provision statewide,” said Crystal FitzSimons, interim president of the Food Research & Action Center (FRAC). “Offering school meals at no charge to families is the future for school nutrition departments and for schools. The No Hungry Kids in Schools Act supports states that want to expand access to free school meals, fueling children’s health and learning while reducing stigma and shaming in the cafeteria. We urge Congress to pass this bill. Hungry children can’t wait.”
Currently, individual school districts can apply to serve free school meals to all students through the federal Community Eligibility Provision (CEP) if at least 25 percent of the student body is identified as low-income. The No Hungry Kids in Schools Act will enable states to remove the 25 percent threshold and allow all schools in a participating state to provide free meals to all students, regardless of the percentage of low-income students. The No Hungry Kids in Schools Act also would streamline the administration of school lunch programs in states that have existing universal free school meals, helping the students who are falling through the cracks, including nearly 2.5 million students in California and over 12.5 million students nationwide. 
In the United States, nearly 1 in 7 children is at risk of hunger. Expanding and protecting school meal programs is especially important amidst ongoing Republican efforts to cut billions from nutritional funding. The Trump Administration recently froze $1 billion in food assistance for food banks and schools, and the proposed Republican Budget includes $12 billion in cuts to critical nutrition programs, which would harm over 12 million children. 
Studies have shown that students at schools who participate in school meal programs benefit from better health and nutrition outcomes, higher test scores and better school attendance. Through CEP, more than 23 million children attending high-poverty schools were able to access free, healthy school meals in the 2023-2024 school year.
In addition to the Food Research & Action Center, The No Hungry Kids in Schools Act is endorsed by the National Education Association (NEA). 
Rep. Aguilar serves as Chair of the House Democratic Caucus and as a member of the House Committee on Appropriations.

Congressman Dr. Raul Ruiz and U.S. Senator Alex Padilla Announce Bill to Establish the César E. Chávez and the Farmworker Movement National Park

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Raul Ruiz (36th District of California)

WASHINGTON, D.C.  — On César Chávez Day, Representative Raul Ruiz (D-Calif.-25) and U.S. Senator Alex Padilla (D-Calif.) introduced bicameral legislation to create the César E. Chávez and the Farmworker Movement National Historical Park. This bill would preserve the nationally significant sites associated with César E. Chávez and the farm worker movement across California and Arizona. Senator Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) is cosponsoring the legislation.

César Chávez is a Latino icon and civil rights leader, labor leader, and community organizer whose legacy is deeply embedded in the story of California, the farm worker movement, and the push for worker and civil rights. Chávez empowered Latinos and farm workers to fight for fair wages, health care coverage, pension benefits, housing improvements, and countless other protections. His commitment to social justice has inspired generations, and fuels ongoing efforts to improve the lives of all people, regardless of their ethnicity or the color of their skin. 

“Having grown up as the son of farmworkers in the Coachella Valley, I remember the profound hope César Chávez instilled in our communities and farmworkers across the nation. His legacy continues to inspire me to this day,” said Representative Ruiz. “It’s vital that we amplify the voices of communities whose stories are too often left unheard. The César E. Chávez and the Farmworker Movement National Historical Park Act, aims to empower the National Park Service to honor and share these important stories, celebrating the diverse and vibrant history of our country.”

“On César Chávez Day, we commemorate the work and legacy of an iconic Latino civil rights leader. His example of defending workers’ rights across the country serves as a blueprint for overcoming some of our nation’s biggest challenges, demonstrating the immense power behind organized movements fighting against injustice,” said Senator Padilla. “Establishing the César E. Chávez and the Farmworker Movement National Historical Park would pay proper homage to César Chávez’s tireless work for the dignity, respect, and equal treatment of workers — priorities facing immense threats under the Trump Administration. Our National Park system should memorialize the diverse legacy and culture of all Americans and give farm workers the recognition they deserve.”

“Today, we honor the profound legacy and sacrifices of César Chávez — a civil rights activist who expanded and defended the rights of farm workers through the power of organizing. The designation of the César E. Chávez and the Farmworker Movement National Historical Park recognizes the countless contributions he made which paved the way for better wages and working conditions for millions of farm workers,” said Senator Schiff. 

The hundreds of sites that are part of the National Park system preserve our natural, historical, and cultural heritage while offering vital spaces for teaching, learning, and outdoor recreation. While the National Park Service (NPS) embraces their role as “America’s storytellers,” too few national park units primarily focus on women, communities of color, or other historically marginalized groups. The sites preserved by this bill would ensure that the National Park system better represents the diverse history of our nation. As a farm worker himself, César Chávez maintained a strong connection to the natural environment, and this bill uplifts his story and those of others whose contributions helped build the farm worker and civil rights movements that are pillars of American history.

Specifically, this legislation would:

  • Create the César E. Chávez and the Farmworker Movement National Historical Park, which would include the existing the César E. Chávez National Monument, which includes La Nuestra Señora Reina de la Paz in Keene, California.
  • Upon written agreement from the site owners, the National Historical Park would include the following sites: Forty Acres in Delano, California; the Santa Rita Center in Phoenix, Arizona; and McDonnell Hall in San Jose, California.
  • Conduct a National Historic Trail Study for the “Farmworker Peregrinación National Historic Trail,” the 300-mile march route taken by farm workers between Delano and Sacramento in 1966.

In 2008, Congress enacted bipartisan legislation from former Arizona Senator John McCain and former California Representative Hilda Solis to direct the NPS to conduct a special resource study of sites that are significant to the life of César Chávez and the farm labor movement in the western United States. In 2012, President Obama established the César E. Chávez National Monument in Keene, California. In 2013, the NPS transmitted the Special Resource Study to Congress. The study team evaluated over 100 sites significant to César Chávez and the farm labor movement in the western United States, finding that several were nationally significant and depicted a distinct and important aspect of American history associated with civil rights and labor movements that is not adequately represented or protected elsewhere. While the NPS included five potential management alternatives to protect these sites, they ultimately recommended that Congress establish a National Historical Park that would incorporate nationally significant sites in California and Arizona related to the life of César Chávez and the farm labor movement.

A map of the proposed park can be found here.

A list of endorsing organizations can be found here

Full text of the bill is available here.

Democratic Doctors Condemn Mass Layoffs at HHS, FDA, and CDC

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Raul Ruiz (36th District of California)

Firings affect divisions that respond to disease outbreaks, approve drugs, and provide health insurance coverage

Washington, D.C. – Today, the Congressional Doctors Caucus released the following statement condemning RFK Jr.’s proposed mass layoffs at the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), Food and Drug Administration (FDA), and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), warning of devastating consequences for public health and safety.

“Eliminating 25% of HHS staff, including scientists and researchers, weakens our ability to combat disease outbreaks, ensure food and drug safety, and advance life-saving medical innovations. These cuts come as we are facing active threats to our public health, including a rapidly expanding measles outbreak and a deadly bird flu outbreak. Weakening these agencies at such a critical time threatens public health, slows medical innovation, and puts millions of American lives at risk. The American people deserve a government that protects them, not one that abandons them.”

Background

According to an HHS fact sheet, the 20,000 eliminated positions include:

  • 3,500 FDA employees, reducing the agency’s capacity to review and approve life-saving medications, monitor food safety, and regulate medical devices.
  • 2,400 CDC employees, with the agency’s role drastically narrowed to epidemic response, undermining efforts to prevent chronic diseases, track opioid overdoses, and address vaccine hesitancy.

The Congressional Doctors Caucus is calling for an immediate reversal of these dangerous layoffs and for the Republican leadership in Congress to take action to protect Americans’ public health.

Members of the caucus include:

  • Ami Bera, M.D. (CA-06) – Internal Medicine
  • Herb Conaway Jr., M.D. (NJ-03) – Internal Medicine
  • Maxine Dexter, M.D. (OR-03) – Pulmonary & Critical Care
  • Kelly Morrison, M.D. (MN-03) – Obstetrics & Gynecology
  • Raul Ruiz, M.D. (CA-25) – Emergency Medicine
  • Kim Schrier, M.D. (WA-08) – Pediatrics

Norton Releases Statement After President Trump Calls for Immediate House Vote on Bill to Correct D.C. Budget Issue Caused by the CR

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton (District of Columbia)

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-DC) released a statement after President Trump called for the House to immediately take up a standalone bill giving the District of Columbia the authority to spend its local funds for Fiscal Year 2025 at its locally-enacted levels.

The recent continuing resolution (CR) omitted a longstanding provision that would allow D.C. to continue spending under its local fiscal year 2025 budget. The Senate passed a bill, introduced by Senator Susan Collins (R-ME), to correct the issue, but the House has yet to vote on it. 

“As surprised as I am to have an occasion to agree with President Trump, in this instance, we agree that D.C. should be able to spend its own local funds at its own locally-enacted levels,” Norton said. “I am grateful the Senate worked to correct this issue, and I will work with my colleagues to get the bill passed in the House.

“This ordeal, however, only helps to highlight the need for D.C. statehood so that D.C. can finally govern itself to the same extent afforded to the states, including making decisions about how to use its own local funds.”

###

Norton Introduces Resolution to Designate March 27, 2025 as “Tuskegee Airmen Commemoration Day”

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton (District of Columbia)

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-DC) introduced her resolution to designate March 27, 2025 as “Tuskegee Airmen Commemoration Day.”

“As an elite corps of African American pilots and crew, as well as others, who fought in World War II, the Tuskegee Airmen deserve this recognition,” Norton said. “It will be deeply meaningful to the veterans, their family members, and the succeeding generations of Black service members who surely deserve our thanks.”

The Tuskegee Airmen were pilots, ground crews and support personnel serving in segregated units of the U.S. Army Air Forces during World War II. Their service and valor paved the way for the desegregation of the U.S. military.

Norton’s resolution follows.

RESOLUTION

Expressing support for the designation of March 27, 2025, as “Tuskegee Airmen Commemoration Day”, and calling on each State, the District of Columbia, and each territory to recognize the Tuskegee Airmen for their heroism, valor, and exemplary service to the Nation.

Whereas the Tuskegee Airmen were Black pilots, aircrew, ground crew, and support personnel who served in the Army Air Corps from 1941 to 1949;

Whereas 992 Tuskegee Airmen graduated flight training at the Tuskegee Army Air Field in Tuskegee, Alabama, and 450 pilots deployed into combat overseas;

Whereas the Tuskegee Airmen faced enormous adversity, from overcrowded classrooms to bigoted officers and segregated facilities;

Whereas, during World War II, the Tuskegee Airmen flew over 15,000 combat sorties and saw extensive action in the European and North African theaters;

Whereas 84 Tuskegee Airmen were killed in action, 12 died during training and noncombat missions, and 32 were taken prisoners of war after their planes were shot down;

Whereas the Tuskegee Airmen earned 744 Air Medals, 14 Bronze Stars, and 8 Purple Hearts;

Whereas, in 1945, Tuskegee Airmen in the 477th Bombardment Group staged a nonviolent demonstration to desegregate the officers’ club at Freeman Field, Indiana, and their nonviolent direct action would inspire later civil rights protesters;

Whereas the Tuskegee Airmen’s battle against fascism abroad and racism at home has been called a “Double Victory” and led President Truman to issue Executive Order 9981, integrating the Armed Forces;

Whereas four Tuskegee Airmen, Benjamin O. Davis, Jr., Daniel “Chappie” James, Lucius Theus, and Charles McGee, later became generals in the Air Force;

Whereas, in 2006, a bill to award the Congressional Gold Medal to the Tuskegee Airmen “in recognition of their unique military record, which inspired revolutionary reform in the Armed Forces” was signed into law (Public Law 109–213);

Whereas, in 2008, the Tuskegee Airmen National Historic Site opened at Moton Field in Tuskegee, Alabama, to commemorate and interpret the heroic actions of the Tuskegee Airmen; and

Whereas very few Tuskegee Airmen are still alive today to share their story of courage and bravery with younger Americans: Now, therefore, be it

Resolved, That the House of Representatives supports the designation of “Tuskegee Airmen Commemoration Day”.

###

Trump Forcing Law Firms to Give Millions to His Political Organization

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Brad Sherman (D-CA)

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Recently, the Trump Administration issued multiple Executive Orders targeting individual law firms that have in the past represented clients opposing the administration or that have employed lawyers involved in investigations against President Trump and his billionaire friends. Trump’s message is clear: pledge allegiance and loyalty to Trump or be driven out of business. One law firm has already pledged $40 million in free legal services to causes chosen by Trump and his billionaire cronies in exchange for Trump rescinding the executive order targeted at that law firm. 

The impact of these executive extortions extends beyond the targeted firms. They create a chilling effect on the entire legal profession, potentially deterring lawyers from representing clients or causes that may oppose the administration.

“A $40 million fine payable to the U.S. government is oppression. But, $40 million payable to Trump’s political organization constitutes extorting a bribe,” said Congressman Brad Sherman. “Trump claims his political organization will help fight for veterans and against antisemitism, but then says ‘other projects’ – so the $40 million will go to whatever political effort Trump favors.”

This coercion sets a dangerous precedent for future administrations. If left unchecked, it could lead to a system where legal representation is contingent upon political allegiance, fundamentally undermining the impartiality of our justice system.

###

Pressley Slams Trump’s Attack on Unions, Collective Bargaining Rights for Federal Workers

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

“They know that an organized workforce is a threat to unchecked power, which is why they want to rip away the collective bargaining rights for hundreds of thousands of federal employees and continue firing them at will.”

Pressley, a Consistent and Strident Champion for Workers and Organized Labor, Spoke Out Against the GOP’s Union-Busting Efforts Earlier This Week

Video (YouTube)

WASHINGTON – Today, Congresswoman Ayanna Pressley (MA-07) issued the following statement slamming Trump’s executive order to end collective bargaining rights for hundreds of thousands of federal employees. As a parent, caregiver, and former hotel worker, Congresswoman Pressley has been a dedicated champion for workers and organized labor, and she has consistently advocated for policies that bolster workers’ rights and strengthen labor unions.

“Trump and Musk are attacking our labor unions because they don’t want workers to have power. They know that an organized workforce is a threat to unchecked power, which is why they want to rip away the collective bargaining rights for hundreds of thousands of federal employees and continue firing them at will. This is shameful and yet another attempt by this hostile administration to completely dismantle our democracy and harm the people who keep our country running.

“Unions have long been the backbone of this country – helping families thrive by winning better wages, benefits, and safer working conditions. Now more than ever, I’ll keep standing with our siblings in the labor movement and fight this every step of the way, because our destinies are tied and this attack on labor is an attack of all of us.”

Rep. Pressley has been a committed voice for federal workers pushing back against the Trump-Musk administration’s efforts to decimate federal agencies. In a House Oversight Committee hearing earlier this week, Rep. Pressley slammed Republicans for attempting to gut federal unions and weaken worker protections.

A full transcript of the Congresswoman’s remarks, as delivered, is available below and the full video is available here.

Transcript: Rep. Pressley’s Statement on Trump Revoking Collective Bargaining Power for Most Federal Employees
U.S. House of Representatives
March 25, 2025

Make no mistake, the bills we are considering today are a coordinated and shameful attack on federal workers and labor unions. 

This is not about efficiency. This is not about accountability. This is about silencing workers and stripping away their rights in the name of unchecked power. 

Let me be plain about what’s happening here. 

These bills would gut federal unions, weaken worker protections and strip employees of their rights to fight for fair wages, safe workplaces and the basic dignity they deserve. 

They are meant to intimidate, isolate and disempower the very people who keep our country running – the people who inspect our food, protect our veterans, process Social Security checks, and uphold services that millions of people use. 

It’s union busting. 

But instead of targeting corporations, Republicans are targeting our very own public servants. Let’s talk about what these bills actually do. 

Republicans want to eliminate official time – a tool that allows workers to report fraud, waste and abuse without fear of retaliation. Just to be clear, this would make it harder for workers to blow the whistle on corporate corruption and inefficiency. That doesn’t sound like it protects taxpayers to me. 

Republicans want to give the president unchecked power to tear up collective bargaining agreements at will, making every worker’s contract essentially meaningless. 

Imagine signing a contract for a mortgage only to have the bank come back six months later and say, “Never mind, we’re changing the terms, and you have no say in it.” That’s what they want to do to federal workers. 

Republicans also want to ban federal workers from deducting union dues from their paychecks, even though it’s completely voluntary and no different from deductions for retirement funds, health care or charitable donations. 

They are singling out unions here, not because it saves money, but because they don’t want workers to have power. 

So no, this isn’t about efficiency, and it certainly isn’t about protecting the taxpayer. 

If it were, the Republicans wouldn’t be rolling back whistleblower protections or forcing unions to provide representation for free. 

In reality, it’s about giving more power to Co-Presidents Trump and Musk, dismantling the one force that stands up against abuse and injustice in the workplace – unions. 

The right to unionize is not just about making a living – it’s about making a life, and a good one at that. 

In my district, MA-07, from Cambridge to Roxbury, median income drops by $50,000. we can’t address long standing inequities like this if workers aren’t empowered. 

Throughout our history, unions have fought for and won better wages and benefits and safer working conditions against the greed of big corporations and special interests. 

I’ve witnessed many of these victories firsthand from my early days on the picket lines with my mother – may she rest in power – who taught me early on that workers rights are human rights, and economic justice is workers justice. That truth has not changed. 

Now, more than ever, we need to support unions in protecting their workers. 

I’ll continue to do just that, and I urge my colleagues to vote against this bill. 

I yield back. 

###

VIDEO: At Roxbury Town Hall, Pressley Offers Message of Hope, Vision for Fighting Cruel Musk-Trump Agenda

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

Conversation with Constituents Covered Her Support for Federal Workers and Immigrants, Social Security and Medicaid, and How Community Members Can Join the Fight

ROXBURY – At a town hall at Roxbury Community College, Congresswoman Ayanna Pressley (MA-07) offered constituents a message of hope and laid out her blueprint for how Democrats and community members should fight the cruel and harmful Musk-Trump agenda.

The Congresswoman, who was joined by Massachusetts State Senator Liz Miranda and ACLU of Massachusetts Executive Director Carol Rose, took questions and discussed her support for our federal workers and immigrant neighbors, her defense of essential programs like Medicaid and Social Security, and more.

Congresswoman Pressley also outlined the key ingredients essential to any successful movement: imagination, strategy, and stamina.

A transcript with highlights from the Congresswoman’s remarks are available below (edited lightly for clarity), and video is available here.

Transcript: At Roxbury Town Hall, Pressley Offers Message of Hope, Vision for Fighting Cruel Musk-Trump Agenda
Roxbury Community College
March 22, 2025

From Rep. Pressley’s Opening Remarks: 

It’s good to be home. Look, y’all don’t know how to be anybody else but me, so let me just be transparent and a little vulnerable. As much as I have been looking forward to today to come in here and to be here in community with all of you, I’ve also been unsettled. Unsettled in my spirit, because these are deeply unsettling times, and because I know that so many of you are carrying with you into this room, fear, uncertainty, fear for your children, for your neighbors, for yourselves. 

I feel that too in my own life and in my own family, and although it is a deep blessing and honor to be your Congresswoman. It is a tremendous responsibility as well, and as I thought about sharing the space before you today, in light of what we’re facing, I was worried that what I would offer would fall woefully short of what you actually need in this moment, because the people of this district demand and deserve the very best, truly you do. 

I wake up every day humbled to serve in Congress in this role. I wake up every day pressing through adversity to do everything I can to do right by this district in ways big and small. I continue, in the midst of the chaos and the cruelty, to choose community, which is why we’re here today. 

Now we’re dealing with a hostile administration that seeks to divide us and impose wholesale harm. Daily, there is an executive order or horrifying headline and attacks on vulnerable and marginalized people, some days attacks that reverberate in the lives of every person who calls this country home, but I keep returning to the words of Dr King. “Where do we go from here? Chaos or Community?” 

Donald Trump has made it clear that this election was never about improving your quality of life or lowering the cost of your groceries, your rent or your pursuit of higher education. It was always about one thing: power. Gaining power, wielding power, abusing power, and ripping away our hard-won civil rights, our economic freedoms. 

They are coming after Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid.

They are coming after our neighbors in the LGBTQ+ community.

Black folks, they are coming after us. This administration is anti-Blackness on steroids. 

They are coming after our immigrant neighbors, undocumented or not. 

They are coming after our bodily autonomy. 

They are coming after our federal workers who administer essential services to our communities. 

Hell, Donald Trump is attacking everything but the one thing he said he would, and that’s the high cost of groceries.

Massachusetts 7th, these are unprecedented times. I don’t know about y’all, I’m ready for some precedented times, but these are unprecedented times in our nation’s history. Because, yes, our democracy is at stake. 

Republicans in Congress do not care about how this will hurt the American people, and they are co-conspirators, complicit in the harm.

As your Congresswoman, I promise to continue to fight like hell, because my district and our country depend on it, and you deserve it. 

Now, look, I don’t have all the answers, but I’ll work hard every day to find them. 

Let me be clear about what we do next. Democrats need to exhaust every lever and tool that is available to us when we have it. I believe we lost this election for so many reasons, but one of the reasons we’re in this situation is because the Democrats move with scared power. When we have it, we don’t use it. 

We cannot allow elected officials to squander moments like the leverage we had in the Senate on that government funding vote.

We have to fight with everything we have, and while daunting, we are winning in the courts, and that is why I asked Carol Rose to be here today to relay how essential a tool that is in our resistance and in our defensive strategy. 

When an unelected billionaire, Elon Musk, is raiding the private information of the American public—that doesn’t sound like a democracy to me.

As a member of the House Committee on Oversight and Reform, Republicans have blocked our request to have Elon testify in front of our committee for accountability and transparency—that doesn’t sound like justice to me. 

They are more concerned with dragging Democratic mayors to Washington to make a spectacle and instead it reaffirmed what we already knew, that Boston is one of the safest cities in the country, and our mayor is doing us proud.

When Trump is sending ICE to Chelsea, East Boston or Mattapan, demanding our neighbors prove they are in our country legally, and detaining people like Mahmoud Khalil for exercising his first amendment right to protest—that doesn’t sound like freedom to me. 

When Trump calls for impeaching a sitting federal judge because one of his executive orders violated the law—that doesn’t sound like democracy to me. 

These are instead the acts of a dictator. And what do you meet a dictator with? Defiance.

So indeed, I have been and I will continue to fight back. 

From Rep. Pressley’s Closing Remarks

In determining how to go forward, I keep looking back, because we are still very much in the Civil Rights Movement. And so I keep going back to a blueprint laid out for us in the early chapter of the Civil Rights Movement. 

And in every successful movement, you need three things, imagination. So we want to do radical work, but we have to still radically dream. We still need a North Star. People were saying to me, why are you still talking about reparations? Why are you still talking about universal childcare? Why are you still talking about paid leave? Why are you still talking about Medicare for All? Because at the end of the day, our argument cannot be just “we ain’t them.”

While we are doing the work of blunting the harms of this hostile administration, in the midst of this hostile government takeover, we still need to advance an affirmative vision for the more equitable and just world we all believe is possible. 

So that is why you all need to stay informed and engaged. Before radical work, there is a radical dream. We still need a North Star. So you need imagination. 

The second thing you need is strategy. And we have to be innovative and nimble, and look, the rhetoric is hitting different, the policies are hitting different, we have to move different. We have to be disruptive of the status quo way of things that we’ve always done. So we have to be nimble and innovative in our strategy. 

And this is no easy task y’all, because the Republicans have this massive communications ecosystem that billionaires are funding. So we are out-matched. We are trying to build it in real time, but social media is the new news. So we have to get into all of these spaces. 

So imagination, strategy, and here’s the hardest essential ingredient to a successful movement, stamina. I need stamina from all of you, and I know that is challenging when you are fearful, when you are worried, when you are overwhelmed, when faith is shallow and boycotts are short lived, but we need stamina. 

So those are the three things I would ask you to keep with you. And get involved. Look, get to know your neighbors, y’all. These are going to be some challenging times. You don’t know who you’re going need to borrow toilet tissue from. Or food or anything else.

I’m serious. A number of people are starting to initiate having, you know, old school conversations in living rooms and organizing in that way, that’s what we’re going to have to do in this moment. 

And then finally, I would say this, not only is the challenge before us overwhelming and daunting, y’all feel like you have to fix everything. I know I feel that responsibility and that stressor as well, but all you have to do is bring what your unique gift is. 

Some people are going to pick up a microphone, some people are going to pick up a lawmaking pen. Some people are going to spit a rhyme or a bone. Some people are going to lead the march. Some people are going to make the signs for the people in the march. Some people are going to pack the food and make the food for people in the march. Somebody’s going to be doing the production and effect so we can make sure we’re reaching more people.

All you have to do is bring your unique gift to this moment. But you have to bring it. You have to bring it, because we are not going to get out of this just with 436 people that have a comma and a title after their name. 

It’s going to take all of us, and I’ll close here. Cecile Richards, I don’t know if all of you know who that is. A personal shero of mine, daughter of the great Texas governor, Ann Richards, former head of Planned Parenthood, an incredible champion and leader in the work of reproductive rights and freedom. 

She recently died from brain cancer, and when she was in the midst of that fight, she was still showing up. She was still resisting, she was still agitating, she was still organizing. And someone came up to her and said, what are you doing here?

And she said, the question will be asked in the future, what did you do? What did you do when everything was at stake for our country? And the only acceptable answer is everything that I could.

Thank you everyone for being here today.