Wasserman Schultz Secures $1.3 Billion in 2026 Federal Funding in House Bills, Including $461 Million for Everglades Restoration and $11 Million in Community Projects

Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative Debbie Wasserman Schultz (FL-23)

“I’m so proud to secure $461 million in Everglades funding to continue this critical project to restore and protect our River of Grass. Since coming to Congress, I’ve proudly worked with my colleagues from Florida to secure record funds for this South Florida treasure, which protects drinking water for millions of families and businesses. It’s work that my Everglades Caucus Co-Chair Mario Diaz-Balart and fellow Appropriator Lois Frankel take tremendous pride in,” said Wasserman Schultz. “This year I was also able to request and secure $1.29 billion in vital funds and community projects that will benefit all of South Florida, from cutting-edge medical research, local water projects and algal bloom eradication, to keeping children safe from internet predators and helping homes remain weather resilient.”

Washington, DC – Today, U.S. Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (FL-25) secured $1.29 billion in federal funding in H.R. 6938, the Commerce, Justice, Science; Energy and Water Development; and Interior and Environment Appropriations Act of 2026. This includes $461 million for Everglades restoration and preservation secured by Wasserman Schultz. The combined bills now move to the Senate. 

“I’m so proud to secure $461 million in Everglades funding to continue this critical project to restore and protect our River of Grass. Since coming to Congress, I’ve proudly worked with my colleagues from Florida to secure record funds for this South Florida treasure, which protects drinking water for millions of families and businesses. It’s work that my Everglades Caucus Co-Chair Mario Diaz-Balart and fellow Appropriator Lois Frankel take tremendous pride in,” said Wasserman Schultz. “This year I was also able to request and secure $1.29 billion in vital funds and community projects that will benefit all of South Florida, from cutting-edge medical research, local water projects and algal bloom eradication, to keeping children safe from internet predators and helping homes remain weather resilient.” 

During the Biden Administration, Wasserman Schultz secured record investment in the Everglades. Today’s House funding victory is another historic step to continue this long-standing bipartisan spending and policy priority. 

“Nearly a third of Floridians rely on the Everglades for clean drinking water, which is why I will never give up the fight to fund its restoration and protection, and will never let it become a site for oil drilling,” said Wasserman Schultz.

In the House Energy & Water Appropriations Bill, Wasserman Schultz helped secure:

  • $461M for Everglades Restoration through the U.S. Army Corps Construction Account;

  • $12.7M for South Florida Ecosystem Restoration under the Corps’ Operation & Maintenance Account;

  • $18.5M Central & Southern Florida under the Corps’ Operation & Maintenance Account;

  • $8.5M for Harmful Algal Blooms;

  • $14M for Coastal Ocean Data Systems at the Army Corps of Engineers; and

  • $369M for weatherization funds at the Department of Energy.

In the House Commerce, Justice, and Science Appropriations Bill, Wasserman Schultz helped secure:

  • $33.5M for National Ocean Service’s Coral Reef Program;

  • $80M for National Sea Grant College Program at the Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research;

  • $56M for the Integrated Ocean Observing System (IOOS) support disaster response, weather forecasting and hurricane prediction, forecasting of freshwater and marine water quality, detection of harmful algal blooms (HABs), and safe maritime operations; and

  • $105M for Missing and Exploited Children programs including Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) Task Force grants, missing and exploited children activities.

In the House Interior and Environment Appropriations Bill, Wasserman Schultz helped secure:

  • $2M for coral reef monitoring;

  • $2M for Holocaust education;

  • $28M for USGS Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Units; and

  • $91M for the USGS National Geospatial Program, which provides vital data for disaster response, infrastructure planning, flood risk mapping, and water resource management across the country.

Wasserman Schultz also secured $11 million in vital Community Project Funding across all the bills passed in the House today, including:

  • $1.09 million for a City of Sunrise Southwest Wastewater Treatment Plant.

  • $535,000 for Broward County Sheriff’s Office ICAC Technology Support Project to track down and prosecute internet child predators.

  • $1.031 million for Florida Atlantic University’s NeuroInnovate Center, for research Alzheimer’s, brain cancers, addiction, and chronic disease research.

  • $3.1 million to Florida International University to advance precision medicine and imaging studies for hard-to-treat cancers.

  • $1.09 million to aid Hallandale Beach’s NE 7th Street water main project.

  • $1.09 million to aid a City of Hollywood Boulevard Heights sewer project, from Johnson Street to Fillmore Street from N. 70th Way to N. 72nd Avenue.

  • $1 million to the City of Dania Beach for wastewater improvements.

  • $1.09 million to Cooper City for a wastewater treatment headworks facility. 

  • $1.03 million for Nova Southeastern University’s work on drug delivery for brain cancer treatment.

Wasserman Schultz is Ranking Member of the Appropriations Committee Military Construction, Veterans Affairs, and Related Agencies Subcommittee, the Dean of the Florida Democratic Delegation, and Co-Chair of the House Democratic Steering & Policy Committee.

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Wasserman Schultz Votes to Reduce Healthcare Costs, Pass Critical Affordable Care Act Tax Credit Extension

Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative Debbie Wasserman Schultz (FL-23)

Wasserman Schultz Votes to Reduce Healthcare Costs, Pass Critical Affordable Care Act Tax Credit Extension

Washington, January 8, 2026

“Republicans have made life too expensive. From burger and coffee prices, to rent, home insurance and utilities, costs keep soaring,” Wasserman Schultz said during debate on the House floor. “We can’t add to cost burdens by forcing families to pick between seeing a doctor or buying groceries.”

Washington, DC – Today, U.S. Representative Debbie Wasserman Schultz (FL-25) voted to pass a three-year extension of Affordable Care Act tax credits that will help millions of families avoid lost coverage and soaring premium increases. The enhanced premium tax credits extension was only possible because Democrats forced a floor vote on it through a discharge petition signed by all House Democrats and four Republicans. The measure now goes to the U.S. Senate.

“Republicans have made life too expensive. From burger and coffee prices, to rent, home insurance and utilities, costs keep soaring,” Wasserman Schultz said during debate on the House floor. “We can’t add to cost burdens by forcing families to pick between seeing a doctor or buying groceries.”

Watch her full remarks here. The tax credit extension passed in a 230 to 196 vote.

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Rep. Chu Votes Yes on Spending Package that Delivers over $6 Million to CA-28 for Fire Recovery, Public Safety

Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative Judy Chu (CA2-27)

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, the U.S. House of Representatives voted 397-28 to pass H.R. 6938, the FY26 Commerce-Justice-Science, Energy and Water, and Interior-Environment appropriations minibus, a three-bill funding package that invests in science, public safety, energy and water infrastructure, and environmental protection for communities nationwide, including Southern California. Rep. Chu (CA-28) released the following statement: 

“While I would have liked to see even stronger investments, this bill makes progress toward rejecting the Trump administration’s draconian cuts and reinvesting in American communities. It restores Congress’s role in deciding how taxpayer dollars are spent, and helps relieve cost pressures on families. Democrats successfully put limits on agency changes that would weaken the federal workforce or threaten important programs, and pushed back against the Trump administration’s deepest proposed budget cuts, ” said Rep. Chu. “However, while I am glad this package rejects the White House’s plan to gut science funding and reinvests in NASA and the National Science Foundation, I am deeply disappointed that it supports their plan to cancel the Mars Sample Return mission led by Jet Propulsion Laboratory in my district. We cannot afford to lose more of our Mars experts, which is why I plan to continue working with NASA and my colleagues in Congress to protect JPL and bring these samples back., Despite this disappointment, and while no single bill can undo the harm caused under President Trump, this legislation represents meaningful progress at restoring some of our federal government’s most important functions..”

Within the bill, Rep. Chu secured more than $6 million in funding for six projects that will directly benefit residents of California’s 28th District. These include:

  • $1,092,000 for the Los Angeles County Department of Public Works’ Altadena Public Sewer Enhancement Project
    • This funding will expand public sewer service to approximately 600 properties in Altadena, an unincorporated area of Los Angeles County that currently rely, or previously relied, on septic systems prior to the January 2025 Eaton Fire.
  • $1,031,000 for the Sierra Madre Public Safety Improvement Project
    • Will equip the Sierra Madre Police Department with modern public safety tools, including upgraded radio communications, mobile data computers, emergency response vehicles, and tasers.
  • $1,031,000 for the City of South Pasadena to upgrade police communication systems
    • This funding will modernize police radios and dispatch equipment so officers can communicate more clearly, meet federal safety standards, and better coordinate with neighboring cities during emergencies.
  • $1,031,000 for the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s helicopter
    • This funding will be used to purchase a helicopter to help law enforcement quickly respond to emergencies, locate and apprehend fugitives, serve high-risk warrants, and support critical public safety operations, including in the Angeles National Forest.
  • $1,031,000 for the Upland Police Department
    • This funding will upgrade the department’s computer-aided dispatch and records management systems, improving response times, coordination, and access to critical information for officers and dispatchers.
  • $1,031,000 for the City of Pasadena’s Regional Public Safety Communications Upgrade
    • This funding will modernize radio and repeater site technology to increase system capacity and reliability, improving communication among first responders and essential personnel and strengthening public safety across Pasadena and the surrounding region.

“I am proud to have secured $6,247,000 in Community Project Funding in this bill to support projects across my district, from Altadena to Upland,” Rep. Chu continued. “These investments will strengthen public safety, improve public health, and modernize critical infrastructure as we recover from the Eaton Fire.”

The bill also: 

  • Reasserts Congress’s power of the purse through mandatory staffing thresholds, notification requirements, and funding tables
  • Helps address higher energy costs and rising utility bills, increasing investment in electric grid infrastructure by $375 million
  • Helps keep our communities safe by increasing funding for Violence Against Women Act grants by $7 million
  • Invests in water infrastructure and climate resilience by increasing funding for the Army Corps of Engineers by $1.8 billion ($10.4 billion total)
  • Rejects the White House’s effort to eviscerate funding for scientific research by providing sustained funding for science agencies including NASA, the National Science Foundation, the Department of Energy Office of Science, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and more.
  • Provides $3.1 billion for Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy funding, repudiating the Trump administration’s crusade against clean energy
  • Protects the environment with $8.8 billion in EPA funding – nearly double the White House budget proposal

One Year After the Eaton Fire, Rep. Chu Remembers Victims and Continues Fight for Disaster Aid

Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative Judy Chu (CA2-27)

WASHINGTON, D.C. – One year ago, the Eaton Fire forever changed the communities of Altadena and Pasadena. The second most destructive wildfire in California’s history, it scorched 14,000 acres, destroyed over 9,000 structures, most of them single-family homes, and took the lives of 19 of our loved ones, neighbors, and friends. An additional 440 individuals died across Southern California in the month following the fire due to toxic air quality and delays in medical care. Those we lost made a profound impact on their communities, and the void their absence has left can never be filled.

Today, Rep. Chu spoke on the House Floor to honor the victims and demand federal disaster assistance on the one-year anniversary of the fire. 

Rep. Chu delivers floor speech on Eaton Fire, click HERE or above to watch

Rep. Chu also partnered with Rep. Brad Sherman (D-CA), Senator Adam Schiff (D-CA), and Senator Alex Padilla (D-CA) to introduce a resolution honoring all the lives lost in the Eaton and Palisades Fires, commending the heroic actions of first responders, and underscoring Congress’s commitment to helping Southern California communities rebuild.

Joining Reps. Chu and Sherman, this resolution is cosponsored by all 41 additional House Democrats from California. 

While tremendous progress has been made in our community’s recovery, we need federal disaster assistance to support our long-term recovery. Families have already waited a year while rebuilding costs rise, housing shortages deepen, and displacement assistance expires.

President Trump and congressional Republicans have a duty to help communities devastated by natural disaster, whether that be California, Texas, or North Carolina. Rep. Chu is working with bipartisan Members of Congress from California to urge President Trump to immediately and fully deliver Governor Newsom’s $33.9 billion supplemental request. She joined Sen. Alex Padilla (D-CA), Sen. Adam Schiff (D-CA), Rep. Ken Calvert (R-CA), Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-CA), and the entire bipartisan California delegation in a letter to the President supporting assistance for our recovery. This funding is essential to ensuring that our communities can continue to recover, rebuild, and heal. 

Today, Rep. Chu also co-led a letter with Rep. George Whitesides (D-CA) to President Trump demanding he work with Congress to deliver disaster supplemental for California. 

To reinforce the need for this assistance and to commemorate the one-year anniversary of the LA fires and the lives they took, Rep. Chu also hosted a press conference with members of the California delegation to underscore the dire need for President Trump to act with urgency and provide disaster aid to California as he promised to do so directly one year ago. 

Rep. Chu leads California delegation in press conference marking the 1 year anniversary of the Eaton Fire, click HERE or above to watch

Every day that President Trump and congressional Republicans refuse to take up Governor Newsom’s disaster supplemental request, survivors will continue to suffer. That is why Rep. Chu introduced H.R.6842, the Disaster Survivors Tax Relief and Recovery Act, to codify the tax provisions of Governor Newsom’s request to address critical gaps in the federal tax code that are impeding recovery for survivors of the Eaton Fire and other major disasters.

Specifically, the Disaster Survivors Tax Relief and Recovery Act would:

  • Ensure the wildfire disaster settlements are excluded from taxation
  • Remove penalties for survivors who withdrew up to $100,000 from their retirement plans and double the amount survivors can withdraw from their employer plans (401K, etc.) without being penalized from $50,000 to $100,000
  • Provide an infusion of Low-Income Housing Tax Credits (LIHTC) to spur rebuilding in impacted communities
  • Providing survivors a more generous refundable Child Tax Credit and/or Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) by allowing them to use their 2024 income if it is lower than their 2025 income.
  • Increases charitable deduction limitations for qualified disaster relief donations and contributions.
  • Allow survivors to claim disaster-related losses without the standard income limitations 

This bill is cosponsored by: Reps. Pete Aguilar (CA-33), Nanette Diaz Barragán (CA-44), Julia Brownley (CA-26), Salud O. Carbajal (CA-24), Jim Costa (CA-21), Mark DeSaulnier (CA-10), Laura Friedman (CA-30), John Garamendi (CA-08), Robert Garcia (CA-42), Sara Jacobs (CA-51), Sydney Kamlager-Dove (CA-37), Mike Levin (CA-49), Sam T. Liccardo (CA-16), Ted Lieu (CA-36), Zoe Lofgren (CA-18), Doris O. Matsui (CA-07), Dave Min (CA-47), Kevin Mullin (CA-15), Jimmy Panetta (CA-19), Nancy Pelosi (CA-11), Scott H. Peters (CA-50), Luz M. Rivas (CA-29), Raul Ruiz (CA-25), Linda T. Sánchez (CA-38), Brad Sherman (CA-32), Eric Swalwell (CA-14), Mark Takano (CA-39), Mike Thompson (CA-04), Derek Tran (CA-45), George Whitesides (CA-27). 

Trump Administration Transmits Biden's Mining Ban to Congress, Paving Way for Overturn

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Pete Stauber (MN-08)

WASHINGTON D.C. — Today, Congressman Pete Stauber issued the following statement regarding the Trump Administration’s transmittal of Public Land Order (PLO) 7917 to Congress:

“I commend the Trump Administration for correcting the Biden Administration’s failure to properly notify Congress of this mineral withdrawal in the Superior National Forest. Under the Federal Land Policy and Management Act (FLPMA), the Secretary of the Interior is required to notify Congress of such a withdrawal. Now that it has been properly submitted to Congress under President Trump’s leadership, I plan to introduce a resolution under the Congressional Review Act (CRA), to disapprove of and nullify the Biden Administration’s illegal mineral withdrawal that banned mining in Northern Minnesota, locking up the Duluth Complex. This dangerous and illegal mining ban was thrust upon my constituents and our way of life in Northern Minnesota and put our nation’s mineral security in jeopardy. Northern Minnesota mined the iron ore the won this nation two World Wars and we will mine the copper, nickel, and other critical minerals that will allow the United States to compete and win in the 21st Century.”

Background: In January 2023, the Department of the Interior, at the direction of former President Joe Biden and former Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland, issued Public Land Order (PLO) 7917, instituting a 20-year mineral withdrawal covering 225,504 acres in the Superior National Forest in Northern Minnesota. This mineral withdrawal banned mining and other responsible resource extraction in a strategically significant area of the Duluth Complex, which is the largest untapped copper-nickel deposit in the world. Under the Federal Lands Policy and Management Act (FLPMA), the Department of the Interior is required to notify Congress of public land orders impacting an excess of 5,000 acres. The Biden Administration failed to properly transmit PLO 7917 to Congress in January 2023.

Under the Congressional Review Act (CRA), Congress has the authority to review and disapprove of federal actions within 60 Senate session days of the action’s submission to Congress. If a CRA joint resolution of disapproval addressing a federal action is passed by both chambers and signed by the President, it is nullified and ceases to have effect (or is treated as never having taken effect). Additionally, under the CRA’s substantially similar provision, when a federal action is successfully disapproved of by Congress, the executive branch is prohibited from taking a substantially similar action in the future. PLO 7917 is now eligible for Congressional review under the CRA.

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Statement from Rep. Omar and Congressional Tri-Caucus on Minneapolis Shooting by ICE Agents

Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative Ilhan Omar (DFL-MN)

The Chairs of the Congressional Tri-Caucus—Congressional Hispanic Caucus (CHC) Chair Rep. Adriano Espaillat (NY-13), Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus (CAPAC) Chair Rep. Grace Meng (NY-06), and Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) Chair Rep. Yvette Clarke (NY-09)—along with Congressional Progressive Caucus Deputy Chair Rep. Ilhan Omar (MN-05), released the following joint statement today in response to the deadly shooting by ICE agents in Minneapolis.

“We are deeply saddened and outraged by the deadly ICE shooting that occurred yesterday. Renee Nicole Good should be alive today. Instead, her wife, children, and family are left to carry unimaginable grief and loss.

“This tragedy was not inevitable. It is the result of deliberate choices made by Donald Trump and his administration. Over the past month, the president has repeatedly inflamed tensions, espoused hateful rhetoric, and intensified attacks on Minnesota and immigrant communities. That rhetoric, coupled with ICE’s increasingly violent actions and unchecked operations, created the conditions that led directly to this death. 

“We stand united in demanding real, immediate accountability for this agency, including calling for ICE operations to be suspended in Minnesota.”

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Crow Introduces War Powers Resolution to Rein in Trump Military Action in Venezuela

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Jason Crow (CO-06)

WASHINGTON — Congressman Jason Crow (D-CO-06), a combat veteran and member of the House Armed Services Committee, today introduced a War Powers Resolution to rein in the Trump Administration’s unilateral, unauthorized military action in Venezuela.

Following a classified Congressional briefing by Administration officials, Crow warned that the Trump Administration risks plunging the U.S. into another forever war in Venezuela. He highlighted Americans’ lack of appetite for more foreign intervention and underscored the need for leaders to focus on bringing down costs for every American.

Crow was joined by Representatives Jim McGovern (D-MA-02), Pat Ryan (D-NY-18), Chrissy Houlahan (D-PA-06), Maggie Goodlander (D-NH-02), Jimmy Panetta (D-CA-19), and Joaquin Castro (D-TX-20).

Watch Congressman Crow’s remarks here, and find a transcript of them below.

In his remarks, Crow said:

“As a three-time combat veteran, I get pretty damn hot when a five-time draft dodger like Donald Trump and soft-handed elites like Stephen Miller, bang the war drums in Washington, D.C., and talk about sending our troops on the ground and how tough they’re gonna be.

“Because what I learned years ago as a Ranger and a paratrooper is that when elites here, bang the war drums and pound their chest, it’s not them or their kids that they’re talking about. It’s working class kids and folks around this country, people like me and who I grew up with, that have to grab a rifle, get into a helicopter, get into a ship and do the thing. 

“America is done with that. Americans are done with sending our sons and daughters, our brothers and sisters to fight endless quagmire nation building wars on behalf of elites and oil executives, and to shed blood year, after year, after year. 

“As we sat there in Iraq and Afghanistan, every year, the generals and the admirals would say, one more year, one more troop surge, one more new strategy, and we’ll figure this out. Twenty years later, thousands of American lives and trillions of taxpayer dollars later, they ended in failure.

“The ghosts of those wars haunt us today. That’s what this is about, because nobody can ever tell me that if this body, the United States Congress, had done its job and constantly and every year debated, and voted, and went back to town halls, and high school gymnasiums, and rotary clubs around this country, and sat there in front of their constituents and said, ‘This is why you should spend trillions of dollars. This is why we should spend thousands of Americans to go and die,’ that they wouldn’t have ended earlier and differently.

“This is that moment for the Congress to retake its power, and its authority, and do its damn job. And if our colleagues are not willing to do their damn job, then they should go home. And if later on, when they’re called for a vote, they still aren’t willing to do their damn job, then later this year, we will send them home.

“America has had enough. We are stepping up to lead. We will stop the insanity. Americans deserve affordable healthcare, good infrastructure, affordable homes, and a strong and smart foreign policy and national security. They do not deserve the endless adventurism and corruption of Donald Trump and his administration. We are here to end it.”

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Crow Blasts Trump Venezuela Strategy

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Jason Crow (CO-06)

WASHINGTON — Congressman Jason Crow (D-CO-06), a combat veteran and member of the House Armed Services Committee, today said he has no confidence in President Trump’s plan for Venezuela.

Speaking after a classified briefing for Congress by administration officials, Crow warned that America will be less safe and prosperous if it extorts foreign countries for oil and tries to be a part of more nation-building efforts overseas.

Crow was joined by fellow veteran Representatives Seth Moulton (D-MA-06), Pat Ryan (D-NY-18), Ted Lieu (D-CA-36), Mike Thompson (D-CA-04), Chrissy Houlahan (D-PA-06), Chris Deluzio (D-PA-17), Eugene Vindman (D-VA-07), Maggie Goodlander (D-NH-02), Derek Tran (D-CA-45), Gil Cisneros (D-CA-31), and Jimmy Panetta (D-CA-19).

Watch Congressman Crow’s remarks here, and find a transcript of them below.

In his remarks, Crow said:

“Thank you, Jimmy, and thank you to my fellow veterans. It’s always an honor to stand with them in defense of our Constitution and our nation. 

“I must say, as a three-time combat veteran, I get pretty damn hot when a five-time draft dodger bangs the war drums, and talks about how easy it is to send boots on the ground in a foreign country. It’s a pattern of abusing our military, disrespecting our military, that continues to this day. 

“You know, I learned years ago that when elites bang the war drums and talk tough in Washington D.C., they’re not talking about them or their kids going to do the thing, they’re talking about kids like me, working class folks from around this country, where I grew up, that have to pick up a gun, jump into a helicopter, or a tank, or a ship, and go do the hard work. 

“And that’s why I bristle when elites once more in this town are so cavalier about the use of American lives and the use of American military power. Let’s also be clear that our job as members of Congress is not to be cheerleaders. You’ve seen all sorts of our Republican colleagues talking about how amazing this operation was, I agree with them. There’s no doubt that we have the ability to go almost anywhere in the world, and at the time and place of our choosing, kill or capture our adversaries or our enemies. That is true, but that’s not our job as members of Congress. Our job is to make sure that’s being done the right way, and for the right reasons, and we’re being stewards of the taxpayer dollar. 

“Here are some things we know to be true, there’s a lot we don’t know, but here are some things we do know to be true. This is not about drugs, and this will not stop the scourge of fentanyl and meth that is killing our children and devastating our communities, because none of those drugs actually come from Venezuela. The drugs that are actually killing our kids are coming from other places. 

“Here’s another thing we know to be true: this is not about democracy and freedom for the people of Venezuela, because you’ve just heard over and over again that the Maduro regime remains intact. In fact, it’s more oppressive sitting here today than it ever has been. 

“What this is is Donald Trump acting like an organized crime boss and using our military to shake down foreign leaders. Not only is that wrong and illegal, but it’s gonna undermine the safety and security of the American people. Because a smaller, weaker America with fewer friends means we have to go it alone. And when we go it alone, Americans have to suffer the consequences. 

“That’s what this is about. That’s what we will continue to fight back against. That is what our duty and our oath compel.”

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Casten Statement on Impeachment Vote

Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative Sean Casten (IL-06)

December 11, 2025

Washington, D.C. (December 11, 2025) — U.S. Congressman Sean Casten released the following statement regarding today’s vote on a motion to table articles of impeachment against President Donald Trump:

“Donald Trump should not be president. He has been impeached twice, and the only reason he is president today is because the Senate failed to uphold its duty and convict him after inciting a violent insurrection in an attempt to overthrow American democracy.

“Donald Trump has committed innumerable impeachable offenses in his second term. His administration is rife with lawless actions that meet the bar of high crimes and misdemeanors. He should be removed from office, and I by no means condone Republican arguments to the contrary.

“But to support an impeachment resolution today would be to put the Senate in a position to once again ignore its duty. It would allow Speaker Johnson to appoint Republican impeachment managers who would turn his Senate trial into an embarrassment to our country. The next attempt to impeach the president must be done only once Congress has taken the necessary steps to secure removal. That is the way forward.”

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Congressman Aderholt Applauds Funding for Guntersville Project in Commerce, Justice, Science; Energy and Water Development; and Interior and Environment Appropriations Act, 2026

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Robert Aderholt (AL-04)

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, the U.S. House of Representatives passed the FY26 Energy and Water; Commerce, Justice, Science; and Interior and Environment conference package, negotiated on a bipartisan, bicameral basis. This package includes funding for a project in the city of Guntersville in Marshall County, which Congressman Aderholt had directly requested.

The project receiving funds is an expansion of the sanitary sewer into the Warrenton area of Guntersville for $2,174,898. This growing area, with new subdivisions, is currently not connected to the city sewer system and relies on septic tanks. The conversion of septic tanks and field lines to grinder pumps and low-pressure force mains will reduce the potential for biological contaminants to Lake Guntersville.

Community Project Funding returns tax dollars directly to local communities, ensuring federal spending addresses local needs and represents constituents.

“Republicans are delivering America First results by restoring U.S. energy dominance, strengthening nuclear deterrence, bolstering public safety, and eliminating Biden-era policies. This is responsible, transparent work in action,” said Congressman Robert Aderholt. “Appropriators are committed to restoring regular order to the committee process and are doing exactly what we said we would for the American people. Delivering real results.”

Appropriators have worked hard negotiating and finalizing bills. This Appropriations package keeps the committee on track to complete all 12 FY26 Appropriations bills.