Smith Introduces Bill to Secure a Strong Financial Start for Future Generations 

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Adrian Smith (R-NE)

Today, Congressman Adrian Smith (NE-03) led his colleagues in introducing the Trump Accounts for All Generations Act to permanently extend the Trump Accounts contribution pilot program, created by the Working Families Tax Cuts, which is set to expire at the end of 2028. Smith’s legislation would ensure that every future American newborn can receive the $1,000 investment when opening a Trump Account while also indexing the $1,000 investment to inflation beginning in 2029.

The legislation is also co-led by U.S. Representatives Blake Moore (UT-01) and Brian Jack (GA-03).  

“The Trump Account contribution pilot program opened the door for parents to provide their children with a strong financial foundation from day one. But this historic investment is at risk of disappearing after President Trump leaves office. I introduced the Trump Accounts for All Generations Act to ensure that every future generation of Americans can have a strong financial start in life,”said Smith.  

“One of the most significant policies we enacted in the Working Families Tax Cuts was the creation of investment accounts for every American child. Trump Accounts will set our children up for financial stability and the $1,000 federal contribution for newborns will jumpstart their savings. I was proud to lead the original legislation that launched the program and I’m excited to introduce the Trump Accounts for All Generations Act to make this federal investment permanent for generations to come,” said Moore.  

“On Independence Day 2025, President Trump enacted one of the most significant laws in American history: the Working Families Tax Cuts, delivering the largest tax cut in American history and establishing the foundation for Trump Accounts.  I am proud to support the Trump Accounts for All Generations Act, which would make these tax-advantaged savings accounts permanent and ensure the next generation of Americans has the tools to build wealth, pursue opportunity, and create a better future for themselves and their families.  I commend President Trump for his leadership, and I look forward to advocating for this legislation throughout the Congressional process,” said Jack.  

BACKGROUND:

Under the Working Families Tax Cuts, Republicans created an opportunity for parents, guardians, and other authorized individuals to establish a new tax-advantaged savings account for their children, called Trump Accounts, with the ability to contribute up to $5,000 annually.

In addition to creating the Trump Accounts, Republicans authorized a pilot program contribution of $1,000 for any child who is a U.S. citizen with a valid Social Security number born between January 1, 2025, and December 31, 2028.

The Trump Accounts for All Generations Act would make the $1,000 Trump Account contribution permanent and index the investment to inflation starting in 2029.  

Click here to read the full text of the bill. 

Ranking Member Lofgren's Opening Statement at Scientific Publishing Hearing

Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative Zoe Lofgren (D-San Jose)

WASHINGTON, D.C. Today, the House Committee on Science, Space, and Technology is holding an Investigations and Oversight Subcommittee hearing titled, The State of Scientific Publishing: Assessing Trends, Emerging Issues, and Policy Considerations.

Ranking Member Zoe Lofgren’s (D-CA) opening statement as prepared for the record is below:

Thank you Chairman McCormick and Ranking Member Sykes for holding this hearing and good morning to the distinguished panel of witnesses. As some of you know, scientific publishing – and, in particular, open access – is a topic I have cared about and studied for a long time.

I have been a cosponsor of the Fair Access to Science and Technology Research – or FASTR Act – since it was first introduced in 2013. Prior to that, in 2010, I cosponsored the Federal Research Public Access Act. Both of these bills had the goal of accelerating free public access to the results of taxpayer funded research. Congress has failed to act on these bills. On the other hand, the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy under President Obama took a leap forward in Federal policy with Dr. John Holdren’s 2013 memo calling on agencies to implement a maximum 12-month embargo on all Federally funded research papers. In her 2022 memo, Dr. Alondra Nelson – as acting OSTP director under President Biden – carried the ball even further toward the finish line.

We can and should have a healthy debate about how we get to the goal of immediate and free access to the results of Federally funded research. I hope we do not disagree about the goal itself. I will remind anyone in the room who needs to hear this.

The research was paid for by the public. The intellectual value is created by the scientists and students doing the research. The peer reviewers are other scientists donating their time. 

To be clear, I also believe that publishers have long played a valuable role in the scientific communication ecosystem. In the 20th Century, it could have been argued they played an irreplaceable role. But this isn’t 1925 or even 1995 anymore, and we must be open to new frameworks for communication and new business models. To the credit of many in the publishing community – of their own accord or perhaps pushed along by the open access advocates – a lot has changed already. In particular, I recognize the multiples ways in which scholarly societies add value to the scientific ecosystem, from conferences, to mentoring and professional development for students and early career scientists, to public outreach.

Unfortunately, there are publishers who are doing a disservice to U.S. taxpayers, U.S. scientists and even to other publishers who are trying to do the right thing. These publishers are rapidly losing the overpriced subscriptions they long depended on for their massive profits, so they are implementing extortionist page charges instead. They are exploiting new ways to monetize the full research cycle – even information about scientists intended to be private. For example, a few years ago Elsevier bought an academic technology company called Interfolio so that they can repackage and sell information about Federally funded science and scientists back to Federal agencies. And for all we know, given the absence of any transparency or guardrails, they may be selling this same proprietary data to China.

I recognize that building new business models in the age of the internet and now AI is not easy for 100 plus year-old nonprofit organizations. I remain a ready and willing partner to nonprofit scholarly societies struggling to find their footing in this new world. But I will not stand idly by as a select few for-profit companies continue to exploit U.S. taxpayers, U.S. scientists and potentially put at risk U.S. economic and national security to line their own pockets.

This is an incredibly nuanced issue. Thoughtful advocates for open access have valuable recommendations for how open access can address the many challenges identified in this hearing scope. To that end, I request unanimous consent to enter into the record a letter from SPARC.

This hearing is wide-ranging in scope – all fascinating and important topics. I hope in addition to the breadth, we can go deep on at least some of these important topics. 

I yield back.

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LEADER JEFFRIES ON SQUAWK BOX: “GAS PRICES HAVE SKYROCKETED AS A DIRECT RESULT OF DONALD TRUMP’S RECKLESS WAR OF CHOICE”

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Hakeem Jeffries (8th District of New York)

Today, House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries appeared on CNBC’s Squawk Box, where he emphasized that Democrats will continue to demand that the reckless war of choice in Iran that is raising costs and wasting taxpayer dollars end immediately.

JOE KERNEN: Democrats pushing for an end to the Iran war with House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries saying that he will call for another War Powers Resolution vote. Leader Jeffries joins us this morning. Congressman, it’s good to have you on. Good morning.

LEADER JEFFRIES: Good morning, great to be on.

JOE KERNEN: Should we just end this immediately, in your view? Or, the next couple of days, according to the President, negotiations could resume and there could be some type of agreement with Iran that does accomplish certain objectives. How do you think that the President or the administration should approach it at this point?

LEADER JEFFRIES: Well, Donald Trump has gotten us into this costly, reckless war of choice with no plan, no clear objectives that he clearly communicated to the American people and no exit strategy. And so, the whole thing right now is a mess, and we’ve been spending billions of dollars dropping bombs in the Middle East from an administration and a President who are unwilling to spend a dime to actually make life more affordable for the American people. So it’s no surprise that this war is deeply unpopular across the country. And the real problem that we have in terms of where we find ourselves right now, no regime change, which the Trump administration argued was an objective, that hasn’t been accomplished. The nuclear material still remains in Iran’s possession. And so, that so-called objective hasn’t be accomplished. And Iran now controls the Strait of Hormuz. And as a result, gas prices have skyrocketed as a direct result of Donald Trump’s reckless war of choice.

JOE KERNEN: Mr. Speaker, Mr. Leader—I almost called you Speaker, I might be rushing things. I know what your plans are in November. That was classic Freudian slip, you probably liked that one. Leader Jeffries, we did have an expert on Iran—he was in the Trump administration—but he is now with the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies. And you know, I know that you’ve heard arguments from Republicans and from the administration about why this made sense. Just respond to what this gentleman, the points he made earlier in the show. Here it is.

RECORDING OF RICHARD GOLDBERG: If we still face an imminent nuclear threat and we face a looming imminent missile threat, both direct national interests to the United States, the question would then be, when do you want to confront those threats? Do you want to do it when they’re strongest? When China says, hey, close the Strait? You want to do it when they’ve actually achieved the nuclear weapon or when they have the ICBM? Or do you want to do it when they are at their potentially weakest point? If you have an imminent threat, it’s a clear national interest and your adversary’s at its weakest points, that’d be a good time to do something. And so, I think the President chose the right time, on his timeline, not on their timeline, not on China’s timeline, not on Russia’s timeline. And he’s done great damage to both the missile and nuclear program, but obviously still some things to achieve.

JOE KERNEN: There’s some of the rationale. And we are at this point now, you talk about some of the objectives that haven’t been, we haven’t actually accomplished yet. In your view, isn’t it possible that maybe we could accomplish them if we either go through negotiations or continue to put the pressure on? You think we should just unilaterally just stop?

LEADER JEFFRIES: I think that we have to end this reckless war of choice that Donald Trump never came to Congress to get authorized in the first place, and more importantly, never actually made the case to the American people. Now, this so-called expert does understand, should understand, that the administration has presented no evidence, zero evidence, privately or publicly, that there was an imminent threat to the United States of America in terms of Iran’s ballistic missile capacity, and that there was no threat that Iran was actually close to nuclear breakout or had demonstrated the intention to take steps to get to nuclear breakout. And so, the objectives that the administration allegedly is trying to achieve can’t be accomplished militarily. And there was no reason to go in in the first place, or if there was, the administration has actually failed in a classified briefing setting, or certainly failed to communicate that evidence to the public. Why? Because it does not exist.

JOE KERNEN: The War Powers Act, it’s been tried once already, you’re going to do it again. Do you actually think you could be successful this time? And I will give you credit, Leader Jeffries, in the past, I think you even criticized President Obama’s Libya campaign and all the way back to Kosovo, and you’ve never thought a regime change is possible. So you’ve been consistent as far as that goes. But, the interplay between Article I and Article II, there’s gray areas there. I mean, the President does have the authority as Commander-in-Chief to take action to protect the national interest.

LEADER JEFFRIES: Yeah, but the President, of course, has to exercise that judgment when he does it in a limited capacity, and it should be done in a way that is actually designed to improve the national security posture for the American people, or certainly to make life better for the American people. And the problem with this reckless war of choice is life has gotten more expensive. Gas prices are now more than $4 a gallon across the country in an environment where Donald Trump had already failed to bring down costs. And, the problem, Joe, that we confront right now is that what’s clear is thatDonald Trump and Republicans have made affirmative policy decisions that actually have made life more expensive for the American people. The Trump tariffs have made life more expensive for the American people. The refusal to extend the Affordable Care Act tax credits have increased health insurance premiums for more than 20 million Americans directly and millions more who get their insurance from their employer indirectly. And now, of course, with this reckless war of choice, costs have increased in terms of gas prices. And the likelihood is that we’re going to see food prices increase as well. And so, the whole thing has been a disaster in terms of the way in which Donald Trump has managed this economy. From our standpoint as Democrats, we want to focus on driving down the high cost of living, fixing our broken healthcare system, getting ICE under control and spending taxpayer dollars in ways that actually improve the quality of life of the American people.

JOE KERNEN: We just did see a Truth Social post, Leader Jeffries, from the President. Let you respond to it. ‘China is very happy that I am permanently opening the Strait of Hormuz. I am doing it for them, also, and the world. This situation will never happen again. They have agreed not to send weapons to Iran. President Xi will give me a big, fat hug when I get there in a few weeks.’ That might be a little TMI. ‘We are working together smartly and very well. Doesn’t that beat fighting? But remember we are very good at fighting if we have to, far better than anyone else. President DJT.’ Your response?

LEADER JEFFRIES: I mean, it’s a lot of bluster, and that’s what we continue to see from this President. Until we actually see tangible evidence that the Strait has been reopened, our view is that gas prices are going to continue to go in the wrong direction for the American people. In fact, the President himself just acknowledged yesterday that by the end of the year, gas prices may actually be right where they are right now, too high or even higher. And so, I don’t understand the confusion that the President is trying to put into the public domain other than he wants to fool the American people with his rhetoric. And so, I think this is a President that just actually should start focusing on the things that matter. And we’ve said from the very beginning as Democrats that we’ll work with anyone, anytime, anyplace who’s actually committed to doing something about the high cost of living in the United States of America, to standing up for working-class Americans and middle-class Americans and everyday Americans. But instead, this President has been more focused on posting deranged messages on Easter Sunday, then attacking the Pope of all people and then putting images into the public domain portraying Donald J. Trump as Jesus Christ. If that’s not blasphemy, I don’t know what is right now, Joe.

JOE KERNEN: Congressman, you know what we do here, and what we try to cover whenever possible, and that is the stock market. And there’s plenty of disagreement whether Wall Street and Main Street are always aligned, but at least we know that corporate profitability and the economy and profit margins are reflected in what happens in the averages. In other words, if we’re facing a recession, it’s unlikely for the stock market to be doing well. We can look at the bond market as well. So I just wanted to show you a couple of charts. One is the S&P. One is the NASDAQ. We’re back to all-time highs, basically, on most of the averages. You can see that when the tariffs were enacted, that’s in the middle of the chart, there was a sell-off, quick rebound and the same sort of situation happening now. Same with the NASDAQ. And then also, I just want to show you quickly the 10-year note or interest rates. Go back to the same period of time and, inflation is not where the Fed wants it, it’s not where anyone wants it, but you would normally see, if there was a true crisis, you would normally see some type of panic or angst in the bond market. So just in terms of Wall Street, you would not know things are going very poorly the way that you describe it. Things are going pretty well.

LEADER JEFFRIES: Well, actually, I talk to corporate leaders all the time, and they’re incredibly concerned with the instability and the uncertainty that Donald Trump and Republican policies have created. Because as you know, Joe, it’s impossible to make sound investment decisions when you have such an uncertain, unstable public policy environment, which Donald Trump has continued to put forward in terms of the way in which he’s conducted himself, and so, that’s highly problematic. And the reality is, at the end of the day, for the American people that we all are privileged to represent here in Congress, that, yeah, for the investing class under Donald Trump’s policies, including his One Big Ugly Bill, which enacted the largest cut to Medicaid in American history at the same time that these Republicans, my colleagues, provided massive tax breaks to their billionaire donors, the investor class is doing well. The problem is the working class is not. And Donald Trump promised to focus on making life more affordable for working-class Americans. And in that regard, all evidence indicates he has failed.

JOE KERNEN: In the One Big Beautiful Bill, it’s calculated that maybe refunds this year could be much better, much higher than before, 11 to 14%. No tax on tips, raises take-home pay for tip workers by $1,300 a year. There’s overtime, no tax on overtime, which helps quite a few people. And I know you always say it just benefits billionaires. I assume you’re talking also about corporations. Just listen to yesterday what J&J, the Johnson & Johnson CFO, said it did in terms of domestic investment and why they’re doing it here now.

RECORDING OF JOSEPH WOLK: In 2016, I was looking at a proposal to build a new facility that had a tax rate of 35% plus state tax here. That compared to other countries that were anywhere from 10 to 12% with additional incentives. It would have been a dereliction of duty on my part to say, yeah, that’s a good financial move. Now the game is equal.

JOE KERNEN: Leader Jeffries, J&J, because of those provisions, this, what we were talking about yesterday, is part of a broader $55 billion U.S. investment plan that the company is making to build factories here, creating tens of thousands of jobs that would never have occurred if the corporate rate hadn’t been brought down in the Big Beautiful Bill or Big Ugly Bill, as you call it.

LEADER JEFFRIES: Well, listen, the reality is that job creation under the Trump administration has been incredibly shaky. The numbers in that regard speak for themselves. And the fundamental question that everyday Americans are asking, has life gotten better for me under the presidency of Donald Trump, or has it gotten worse? And when you actually look at the dynamics around cost of living, housing costs are up. Utility bills are up. Health insurance premiums are up. Child care costs are up. Gas prices are up. And so, the reality is life has gotten more expensive for the American people. By the way, the cost of goods and groceries are up as well as a direct result of the Trump tariffs that he unilaterally decided to impose over a year ago. And so, life clearly has not gotten better for everyday Americans in terms of the Trump economy, life has gotten worse. And that’s a big problem for the American people. And we don’t view it politically, we view it from the lens of our job is to actually improve the quality of life of the people that we are privileged to serve. And that’s not what’s going on in the United States of America right now as a result of the extreme policies that Donald Trump and Republicans continue to try to jam down the throats of the American people.

JOE KERNEN: Leader Jeffries, thanks for your time this morning.

Full interview can be watched here.

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Carbajal Secures Over $4 Million in Federal Funding for SLO County Harbor Improvements

Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative Salud Carbajal (CA-24)

Today, U.S. Representative Salud Carbajal (D-CA-24) announced he secured significant funding for two harbor improvement projects in San Luis Obispo County. Morro Bay Harbor will receive $4,144,000 for its dredging project and Port San Luis will receive $23,000 for maintenance of the breakwater. The funding for both projects was secured through the Fiscal Year 2026 congressional funding and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Work Plan, an annual civil works initiative focused on infrastructure improvements.

“Both Morro Bay Harbor and Port San Luis serve important roles in San Luis Obispo County’s economy and emergency response services,” said Rep. Carbajal. “This federal funding will ensure both harbors have the resources they need to maintain key infrastructure so commercial, recreational, and emergency response vessels can continue to navigate safely.”

“On behalf of the City of Morro Bay, I want to thank Representative Salud Carbajal for his continued advocacy for our harbor and our community. This funding is vital to maintaining safe navigation in Morro Bay Harbor and protecting the commercial, recreational, and emergency response activities that are so important to our local economy and quality of life,” said Morro Bay Mayor Carla Wixom. 

“Port San Luis is grateful to Congressman Carbajal for securing Army Corps funds to maintain Port San Luis Harbor, which serves as a key hub for recreational and commercial fishing activity on the Central Coast,” said Will Friedman, Harbor Director.

Morro Bay Harbor and Port San Luis both serve as critical regional hubs for maritime commerce, tourism, and public safety operations. The Morro Bay dredging project will help keep the harbor at appropriate depths so that commercial vessels, recreational users, and emergency response ships can operate safely. The Port San Luis breakwater has been in use for over 100 years and requires regular maintenance to ensure it can continue protecting the port from heavy waves. 

Scalise in The Houma Courier: Louisiana Families are Already Seeing the Benefits of the Working Families Tax Cut

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Steve Scalise (1st District of Louisiana)

WASHINGTON, D.C.—House Majority Leader Steve Scalise (R-La.) wrote an op-ed in The Houma Courier marking the end of tax season and highlighting how the Working Families Tax is delivering bigger refunds, simpler tax filing, and more money in the pockets of hardworking Louisiana families. Read the full op-ed below or click here.Steve Scalise: Louisiana seeing benefits of Working Families Tax CutThis week marks the end of a historic tax season. As people file their taxes for the first time since the Working Families Tax Cut was signed into law, most hardworking Louisiana families are seeing more money in their pockets. Last year, I proudly worked with President Trump to write and pass into law the Working Families Tax Cut to deliver the largest tax refund season in America’s 250 year history! Since then, I’ve heard from Louisianans throughout our great state who are getting bigger refunds, helping them plan a vacation, save for their children, invest more, or cover day-to-day expenses. In fact, more and more people have told me that instead of owing money this year, they were surprised to actually see a refund for the first time in years.  This is exactly why we passed this historic legislation: to allow Americans to keep more of their hard-earned money. As this tax season comes to a close, it’s clear our policies are delivering: the average tax refund is up 11% from last year because of the Working Families Tax Cut.  Most Louisianans will benefit from the increase in the standard deduction. The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 doubled the standard deduction, and the Working Families Tax Cut made this tax relief permanent and increased it to $31,500 for families and $15,750 for individuals. With over 90% of filers claiming the standard deduction nationally, this provision allows millions of hardworking people to keep more of what they earn.  Additionally, many Louisiana families will have more money to spend on raising their kids because the Working Families Tax Cut increased the Child Tax Credit to $2,200 per child. The law is also providing expanded childcare access and Trump Accounts to create additional savings opportunities for any American child under the age of 18, with those born between 2025 and 2028 receiving a $1,000 contribution.  I’ve also heard from many seniors who were thrilled to see a refund this year because of a new deduction for those who are 65 or older. Because of the Working Families Tax Cut, most seniors who receive Social Security can claim a special deduction to offset their taxes – up to $6,000 for seniors filing individually or $12,000 if filing jointly.  The law also eliminated tax on tips and overtime for millions of workers. In fact, the no tax on tips provision is expected to boost individual incomes for qualifying tipped workers by $1,300, and the no tax on overtime provision is expected to boost individual incomes for qualifying workers by $1,400!  President Trump and Congressional Republicans delivered bigger refunds, simpler tax filing, and more money in the pockets of hardworking Louisiana families this tax season. These are just a handful of the many benefits Louisiana families are already seeing from the Working Families Tax Cut. We will continue fighting for policies that make American families more prosperous, with even more great wins ahead.

Norton Introduces Resolution Commemorating Emancipation Day, Which Falls the Day After 2026 Federal Tax Filing Deadline

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

WASHINGTON, D.C. — Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-DC) today introduced her resolution commemorating Emancipation Day, an official holiday in D.C., honoring the date in 1862 when President Abraham Lincoln freed 3,100 enslaved people in the District, nine months ahead of the Emancipation Proclamation. This year D.C. will observe the holiday one day after the filing deadline for federal taxes.

“Emancipation Day is all the more powerful for its timing this year, coming the day after the annual deadline for filing federal taxes,” Norton said. “D.C. residents were the first to be freed from slavery but are the last to enjoy full rights and freedoms as American citizens, paying more in overall federal taxes than 26 states while still being denied voting representation in Congress and fiscal autonomy, as we’ve seen several damaging examples of this Congress. Most outrageously, last year Congress passed a continuing resolution to fund the federal government that restricted D.C.’s 2025 spending to 2024 levels in the middle of the fiscal year, creating an initially projected $1.1 billion shortfall in D.C.’s budget. Those funds were the District’s, collected from D.C.’s local taxes, not federal dollars.

“Liberty is an empty promise without the power of the purse. Fiscal autonomy is central to liberty and self-determination, and true freedom requires the ability to make choices about how D.C. spends its own local funds.”

The text of the resolution follows.

RESOLUTION

Recognizing the enduring cultural and historical significance of emancipation in the Nation’s capital on the anniversary of President Abraham Lincoln’s signing of the District of Columbia Compensated Emancipation Act, which established the “first freed” on April 16, 1862, and celebrating passage of the District of Columbia statehood bill in the House of Representatives.

Whereas the District of Columbia has been a focal point of the Nation’s complex racial history, which has included slavery, the Civil War, killings, segregation, and disenfranchisement, among other violations of civil and human rights;

Whereas, on April 16, 1862, in the midst of the Civil War, President Abraham Lincoln signed the District of Columbia Compensated Emancipation Act, which freed the approximately 3,100 enslaved individuals in the District of Columbia and authorized compensation to their former enslavers;

Whereas, on January 1, 1863, President Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation, which established a “new birth of freedom” by legally emancipating millions of enslaved individuals in the 10 States of the Confederacy not under Union control, freeing the majority of the Nation’s enslaved individuals;

Whereas the Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, which reads “Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction. Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation”, was adopted on December 6, 1865, and effectively outlawed slavery in the United States;

Whereas the enslavement of persons of African descent endured for more than two centuries in what is now the United States, including the District of Columbia;

Whereas, in 2005, District of Columbia Emancipation Day, commemorating April 16, the date of the signing of the District of Columbia Compensated Emancipation Act, was made a legal public holiday in the District of Columbia to be celebrated annually on April 16;

Whereas the residents of the District of Columbia pay more per capita in Federal taxes than the residents of any State;

Whereas the residents of the District of Columbia, who pay the full freight of Federal taxes, serve in the United States Armed Forces, are subject to all of the requirements of citizenship, and otherwise have long made contributions to the life, culture, and leadership of the United States, still are denied voting representation in the Congress and independence from congressional interference in local matters in violation of the Nation’s founding principles of no taxation without representation and consent of the governed;

Whereas, on June 26, 2020, and April 22, 2021, the House of Representatives passed the Washington, D.C. Admission Act, the first and the second times in history, respectively, the D.C. statehood bill had been passed by either chamber of Congress;

Whereas H.R. 51, the Washington, D.C. Admission Act, has 206 cosponsors; and

Whereas S. 51, the Washington, D.C. Admission Act, has 43 cosponsors: Now, therefore, be it

Resolved, That the House of Representatives— 

(1) recognizes District of Columbia Emancipation Day, marking the anniversary of the end of slavery in the District of Columbia and symbolizing the aspirations of the residents of the District of Columbia for the same rights and freedoms afforded to residents of States; and

(2) calls on Congress to pass the Washington, D.C. Admission Act.

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Griffith Statement on Tax Day in Virginia’s Ninth District

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Morgan Griffith (R-VA)

Individual income tax returns are due to the federal government today, on what is known as “Tax Day.” Taxpayers in Virginia’s Ninth District could take advantage of new tax benefits thanks to the Working Families Tax Cuts reconciliation bill that became law in July 2025. U.S. Congressman Morgan Griffith (R-VA), who voted for this tax cuts package, issued the following statement:

“Virginia’s Ninth District is home to scores of communities working to make ends meet. I believe in making make life more affordable for people in Southwest, Southside and Central Virginia, which is why I voted for the Working Families Tax Cuts to help working Virginians keep more of their hard-earned money.

“Republicans in Congress helped make the standard deduction for individuals nearly $16,000! Other wins include no taxes on tips, no taxes on hourly overtime and a bonus $6,000 deduction for seniors.

“I will continue supporting policies that allow Ninth District communities to access pro-growth, pro-American worker tax relief.”

BACKGROUND

In January 2026, Congressman Griffith detailed the reconciliation bill tax provisions in a weekly e-newsletter. You can read it here.

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RELEASE: HILL, ADAMS, MCCORMICK, AND FIGURES INTRODUCE HBCU RESEARCH CAPACITY ACT TO EXPAND ACCESS TO FEDERAL RESEARCH FUNDING

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman French Hill (AR-02)

WASHINGTON – Today, House Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU) Caucus Co-Chairs Rep. French Hill (AR-02) and Rep. Alma Adams (NC-12), along with Caucus members Rep. Richard McCormick (GA-06) and Rep. Shomari Figures (AL-02), introduced the HBCU Research Capacity Act. The legislation is the House companion to S. 4167, introduced by Sen. Katie Britt (R-Ala.) and Sen. Raphael Warnock (D-Ga.) on March 24, 2026.

HBCUs are cornerstones of American higher education, producing a disproportionately large share of Black STEM graduates and playing an outsized role in building the nation’s workforce, yet they receive less than 1% of the roughly $60 billion in federal research and development funding allocated to colleges and universities each year. The HBCU Research Capacity Act fixes that by establishing a federal clearinghouse giving HBCUs a centralized, regularly updated source of federal grant opportunities across agencies, along with best practices for building research capacity and stronger coordination to reduce longstanding barriers to access.

“Historically Black Colleges and Universities, including the four we are blessed to have here in Arkansas, have been a source of opportunity and innovation for generations,” said Rep. Hill, Co-Chair of the Congressional Bipartisan House HBCU Caucus. “Despite their outsized contributions, HBCUs receive a fraction of the federal research funding available to them. The HBCU Research Capacity Act takes a practical step toward changing that by ensuring these institutions have the information and tools they need to compete for federal dollars and continue fulfilling their vital mission for generations to come.”

“HBCUs have always punched above their weight. HBCUs contribute nearly $16.5 billion to the economy every year despite receiving less than 1% of federal research funding. That gap isn’t a reflection of merit, it’s a reflection of decades of systemic underfunding,” said Rep. Alma Adams, Founder and Co-Chair of the Congressional Bipartisan HBCU Caucus. “The HBCU Research Capacity Act will help by giving our institutions a clear path to federal grant opportunities. I’m proud to champion this House companion with Representatives Hill, McCormick, and Figures and alongside Sen. Rev. Warnock and Sen. Britt in the Senate to ensure HBCUs receive the funding they have earned.”

“The time to act is now if we want to keep America leading in the world of STEM. Our nation’s HBCUs are producing some of the brightest minds in science and technology, even as they face real funding challenges,” said Congressman Richard McCormick. “I’m proud to co-sponsor the HBCU Research Capacity Act that ensures these students can stay ahead in the global technology race, which starts with investing in our own talent.”

“HBCUs have a long-standing track record of making significant contributions to our nation’s economy and workforce despite being consistently underfunded,” said Rep. Shomari C. Figures. “With Alabama being home to the most HBCUs in the nation, this bill is a game-changer for the institutions in my state at the forefront of research and development because it creates a one-stop shop for all federal research funding opportunities. I’m proud to join my colleagues in introducing this bipartisan legislation, and I will continue fighting for HBCUs to receive the resources they need to continue training and educating the next generation of leaders, researchers, and scholars.”

Background

The HBCU Research Capacity Act would:

  • Establish a federal clearinghouse to provide a centralized source of information on federal grant opportunities available to HBCUs.
  • Ensure HBCUs receive consistent and timely updates on research and development funding opportunities across federal agencies.
  • Provide best practices and guidance to help institutions strengthen research capacity and improve competitiveness for federal grants.
  • Encourage coordination across key federal agencies to better align funding opportunities and reduce barriers to access.
  • Promote transparency and accountability through regular reporting to Congress and participating institutions.
  • Direct agencie

Beyond The Epstein Class: A New Economic Patriotism

Source: United States House of Representatives – Rep Ro Khanna (CA-17)

BEYOND THE EPSTEIN CLASS:
A NEW ECONOMIC PATRIOTISM
Rep. Ro Khanna’s Speech at the National Press Club April 14, 2026

We meet at a time of crisis in self-government.

Cynicism, and even nihilism, has taken hold in many corners of our nation. People are losing faith that liberal democracy has the strength to deliver.

The American Dream is out of reach for many of our fellow citizens.

Powerful economic forces of globalization and automation seem beyond their control, shaping their destinies while their struggles go unnoticed.

More troubling, there is growing doubt that we can still come together around a shared national purpose.

Americans do not trust government because they see a system that is corrupted by big money and captured by the powerful.

And nothing encapsulates that sense of injustice more than what I call the Epstein class.

This is a group of elites who seem to operate outside the law.

When people see powerful men abusing and trafficking young girls without consequence—it shakes something fundamental.

They have seen the callowness, immaturity, hedonism, rootlessness, and immorality of our governing class.

People are asking themselves: If they can get away with that, what can’t they get away with?

They see elite indifference and impunity has led to wealth piling up —into a few hands, in a few places— while vast parts of this country experience stagnation and despair.

Workers and communities are treated as dispensable, as they see fortunes being built on offshoring jobs, automating plants, liquidating companies, buying back stock, and harvesting data.

Factory towns hollowed out. Main streets emptied. Entire regions left behind.

At the same time, 19 billionaires hold over $3 trillion in wealth ––12.5% of our entire economy. This is a concentration greater than the era of Rockefeller, Vanderbilt, and Carnegie. The inequality is staggering.

We are in a new Gilded Age.

Millions of Americans face tomorrow with anxiety — anxiety at the gas pump and the grocery store, anxiety if they or their family gets sick, anxiety if their job will be replaced by AI.

The question is no longer are you better off than you were four years ago? It’s are you better off than you were four weeks ago?

Decades ago, scholars like William Julius Wilson warned about Black job loss hollowing out inner cities. Too few listened. Later, economists like Anne Case and Angus Deaton showed how economic despair was spreading in white working class communities. We still did not act.

Now, concern has hit the professional class. I was just at Brown University and 80 percent of the kids raised their hands when I asked if they were worried about getting a job. Even the Ivy Leaguers and their parents are concerned.

A society fearing its future is a society that is in decline.

We don’t need to be a nation in fear.

Where do we go from here?

We cannot go back to the days before Trump.  

The time for incrementalism and nudges of a broken system is over.

That is why I am proposing the most bold, ambitious, programmatic agenda of a generation.  

I call it a New Economic Patriotism.

This is a comprehensive new economic vision. A new deal for this era. A freedom budget for this century.

Not extractive capitalism—but patriotic, productive free enterprise that leaves no community behind.

When Europe was devastated after World War II, George C. Marshall developed a plan for reindustrialization.

We need a 21st century Marshall Plan for middle class and working class Americans — mobilizing business, workers, universities, and government to rebuild struggling communities and close our economic divide.

Here’s what that means.

First, it means Jobs.

We launch a Work for America program—modeled on the Works Progress Administration that created over 8.5 million jobs.

Every young person, out of high school or college, will have the chance to do work that is deeply meaningful: rebuilding communities, providing care services, working on national technological projects, making government agencies user friendly, training in industries of the future.

Young people can work in their own communities or a community far from where they grew up — building bonds of social cohesion across divides.

After a few years of service, they build real-world skills that translate directly into strong private sector careers. It becomes a civic equivalent of military service, highly valued by employers and a proven pathway into opportunity.

Second, it means Investment.

We will create a historic National Industrial Bank to invest in the industries that will define the future: 
semiconductors, rare earth minerals, advanced manufacturing, key starting materials for drugs,  medical innovation, modern steel, robotics, ship building, and more.

This isn’t invoking distant history. We did it recently with the CHIPS Act that I helped write a few years ago. Now we must do it for other critical technologies setting up new factories in communities that suffered de-industrialization like Lorain and Johnstown.

Third, we are going to make Care a national priority.

Childcare, eldercare, and home care are not just services.They are the backbone of a humane society, and they are a massive source of good-paying jobs that cannot be outsourced or automated.

Fourth, making sure Americans have Modern Skills for the economy of the future.

We will form a nationwide system of trade schools and tech institutes.

That means 1000 new trade schools for jobs such as HVAC technicians, electricians, cosmetologists, drone operators, and robotic technicians. These young tradespeople will learn how to use technology and AI.

As for the tech institutes, they will be set up at public colleges, HBCU’s, and HSIs.

We did this with the Techwise Program I helped launch with Google, Nvidia and Zoom.

We provided 9 month courses, a 5k scholarship, 10 hours a week leading to 75k-100k cutting edge AI and tech jobs for young folks who could do them, while staying in their community. This program must be scaled for the entire nation.

Fifth, we must give workers ownership.

AI creates a capital biased world, with exaggerated returns to shareholders. Paying workers a living wage is necessary, but not enough. They must share in a company’s profits, through stock or defined benefits.

If workers are more productive than ever, they must be compensated to match that and have shorter work weeks and time off.

Good jobs and worker ownership is the starting point. In the richest nation in history, no American should be worrying about the basic necessities of life.

That is why we need an Economic Bill of Rights for our time.

The moment has finally come for a national health insurance system,  so your healthcare is not tied to your job. Medicare for All is a better system that lowers our costs, with better outcomes, where every doctor is in network.

For our young people — to assure career opportunity is not limited by your families wealth, we need free college and free trade schools.

For our families — a national $10 a day childcare program would lessen the financial burdens on working Moms and Dads trying to survive.

And we address the housing crisis by building actual affordable housing, capping rent, and assisting first time buyers with their downpayment.

How do we pay for all this?  We pay for it by making different choices. We stop endless foreign wars and invest here at home. We cut wasteful defense spending that no longer serves our security.

Consider that we could have free public college and trade school for every American with just the money that we have spent so far on the war in Iran.

Every bomb we drop overseas is a student who does not get a scholarship, a rural hospital that is not staying open, childcare that parents are not able to get.

By the way, I am not calling for “Bloated Government”. I am calling for “Dynamic Government”.  Working with the private sector, protecting workers, driving innovation — generating results, not waste.

Remember it was American taxpayer funded technology breakthroughs that helped create the current markets in my district that have generated so much wealth.

And we say to those who have done well:  If America has been good to you, then you must do good for America. That is why we need a billionaire tax.

It is patriotic to pay our fair share. This is not anti-business. This is pro-America.

I am passionate about this new economic vision because I have seen what this country can be.

I grew up in Bucks County, Pennsylvania. My neighbors were electricians, nurses, teachers, HVAC technicians, doctors. The kids of the neighborhood all played street hockey together, traded baseball cards, went sledding or shoveled driveways.

My parents came here believing in America. We were a nation brimming with confidence. Kennedy had called for us to go to the Moon. This country was on the move, bursting with energy, preeminent in science and industry.

I went to public school. I had coaches who believed in me even though I couldn’t hit. I had teachers who told me that I could achieve anything I wanted in America.  
I believed them.

I want young people to have the chances that I did, with an America that gives every family the chances it gave mine.

If we bring economic hope and prosperity to every neighborhood of this country — for those left out, for those who have given up, for those barely hanging on — we can rebuild faith in our democratic project.

Right now, we have too many elected officials who are completely unprepared for what’s coming.

The people of the United States need leadership and a government that understands what the future is.

Economic renewal is our new national purpose.

We can then build a cohesive, multiracial democracy—where every American has dignity, independence, and security.

America wants to be proud again. America wants to be a force for good again, for ourselves and for the world.

With bold leadership and a New Economic Patriotism, we will take back our nation from the Epstein class.
 

PASSED: U.S. Rep. Sharice Davids’ (D-KS-03) Bipartisan Bill to Strengthen Aviation Safety Passes U.S. House

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Sharice Davids (KS-3)

Today, the U.S. House passed Representative Sharice Davids’ ALERT Act, bipartisan legislation she introduced to modernize aviation safety systems, strengthen air traffic controller training, and reduce the risk of future tragedies. The bill, written in response to the tragic plane collision at DCA that took 67 lives, is supported by the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB), which investigates aviation accidents and issues safety recommendations to prevent future incidents.

“The tragic loss of 67 lives, including Kansans on Flight 5342, is something our state and our country will carry with us forever, and it demands action,” said Davids. “I helped lead the ALERT Act to take bipartisan steps to strengthen aviation safety by modernizing technology, improving air traffic controller training, and addressing communication gaps so we can better protect passengers and crew. Kansans expect accountability and results, and this legislation reflects the work I’ve done with the victims’ families, safety experts, and federal agencies. Now, we need to finish the job with a final, bipartisan bill that ensures safety measures are implemented without delay.”

WATCH: Davids speaks on the U.S. House Floor about the impact of her ALERT Act

On January 29, 2025, Flight 5342 departed Wichita, KS (ICT), bound for Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport (DCA). As the flight approached its destination, it collided midair with a military training helicopter, tragically killing the two pilots, two flight attendants, and 60 passengers on the airplane, along with all three crew members aboard the helicopter.

The ALERT Act, split between civilian air travel and military aircraft safety, is informed by recommendations from the NTSB and addresses concerns about airspace congestion, communication failures, outdated collision-avoidance systems, and coordination between civilian and military aircraft. 

Specifically, the ALERT Act would:

  • Upgrade Aircraft Collision Warning Systems
    • Direct the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) to evaluate and implement improvements to advanced collision-avoidance technology on commercial aircraft.
    • Establish a timeline for deploying updated systems that provide earlier and clearer warnings to pilots.
  • Strengthen Air Traffic Controller Training
    • Create expert working groups to modernize controller training standards.
    • Improve risk assessment tools to help controllers identify hazards in real time.
    • Increase transparency if safety recommendations are not adopted.
  • Improve Airspace Communication
    • Study technology that detects “blocked transmissions,” which occur when radio messages overlap and critical information is lost.
    • Provide Congress with cost and implementation recommendations.
  • Review Airspace Congestion and Airport Capacity
    • Require the FAA to assess safe arrival and departure rates at congested airports.
    • Review aircraft spacing requirements in complex airspace environments.
  • Enhance Military Aviation Safety
    • Require closer coordination between the Department of Defense and the FAA on collision-avoidance systems.
    • Strengthen helicopter safety management systems, particularly in shared civilian-military airspace.
  • And more

Davids also previously voted to support the Rotorcraft Operations Transparency and Oversight Reform (ROTOR) Act – a bipartisan bill aimed at improving aviation safety standards. Although it failed to pass the U.S. House, it is supported by the victims’ families and safety professionals. 

Following the tragic collision, Davids has taken several additional steps to improve aviation safety and honor the lives lost:

  • Met with the victims’ families in Wichita and pledged to be a voice for transparency and reform in the investigation.
  • Pressed FAA and NTSB experts in a U.S. Transportation and Infrastructure Committee hearing on air traffic controller shortages and safety protocols.
  • Toured the Olathe Air Traffic Control Center to highlight critical staffing needs and renew her call for increased investments in aviation safety infrastructure.
  • Responded to initial NTSB recommendations with a commitment to act on any legislative fixes needed to keep passengers and crew safe.
  • Pledged to act on recommendations from an initial NTSB investigative hearing on the tragic midair collision.
  • Honored the one-year anniversary by submitting a statement into the Congressional Record pledging continued action to prevent future tragedies.

Davids serves on the U.S. House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee and has long championed bipartisan efforts to support innovation and strengthen aviation safety standards, including by helping pass into law a bipartisan FAA reauthorization.