Beyer Introduces Legislation to Address Nationwide Nursing Shortage

Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative Don Beyer (D-VA)

Congressman Don Beyer (D-VA) today introduced the National Urgent Recruitment for Skilled Employees (NURSE) Visa Act to address the nationwide nursing shortage by making visas available to foreign nurses working in areas where the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) has determined there is a nursing workforce shortage.

“Across the country, healthcare facilities are facing staffing struggles because we simply don’t have enough nurses. As our health care system grapples with an increasing number of retiring nurses, the continued ripple effects of the pandemic, and continued high demand for skilled nursing professionals, we are approaching a critical tipping point where acute nurse staffing shortages are driving burnout leading to a compounding cycle,” said Rep. Don Beyer. “My bill, the NURSE Visa Act, would bolster the nursing workforce by allowing qualified foreign nurses to fill these gaps, ensuring that hospitals and clinics remain adequately staffed and American families get the timely, high-quality care they expect and deserve.”

Specifically, the NURSE Visa Act would create 20,000 nonimmigrant visas per fiscal year to employ nurses in areas where the HRSA has determined there is a nursing workforce shortage and where the facility has a provider-to-patient staffing ratio in place.

The United States has long struggled with nursing workforce shortages, which were further exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic, and the current domestic training infrastructure will be unable to meet these needs in the near term. According to a Health Workforce Analysis published by the HRSA in December 2025, federal authorities project a shortage of 267,330 full-time registered nurses (RN) in 2028 and a shortage of 204,690 full-time RNs in 2033.

Text of the National Urgent Recruitment for Skilled Employees (NURSE) Visa Act is available here.

Clyburn Announces $50 Million in Community Project Funding for South Carolina’s 6th Congressional District in Government Funding Legislation

Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative James E (Jim) Clyburn (6th District of South Carolina)

WASHINGTON, DC– U.S. Representative James E. Clyburn (SC-06), Ranking Member of the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, and Related Agencies, announced that he has secured $50 million in federal funding for local projects in South Carolina’s Sixth Congressional District. This funding, included in the federal spending package, responds directly to some of the most pressing needs facing communities across South Carolina. 

“I’ve dedicated my time and efforts in Congress to ensuring federal government investments in the communities I serve, especially those that have been historically neglected. This funding responds directly to some of the most pressing needs in those communities,” said Congressman Clyburn. “These investments will help grow South Carolina’s economy, improve our water supply, support our local colleges and universities, ensure public safety in our rural communities, and more. I look forward to continue working with my colleagues to make America’s greatness accessible and affordable to all.”

As Ranking Member of the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, and Related Agencies, Clyburn secured the following in the federal spending package:

  • A 3.8% Increase in pay for Air Traffic Control Workers
  • $30 million in research funding for the South Carolina State University Nuclear and Technology Research Program
  • $45 million in workforce development funding for aviation workforce development

Listed below is a summary of the projects Clyburn secured funding for in SC-06. 

Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies: 

  • Columbia: $1,031,000 for Benedict College, Quantum Information Science Hub
  • Sumter County: $1,031,000 for Sumter County Public Safety Enhancement Project

Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies: 

  • Orangeburg County: $1,092,000 for County of Orangeburg for Wastewater 
  • Treatment Plant Expansion

Energy and Water Development and Related Agencies

  • Lake Marion and Moultrie: $22,455,000 for Lakes Marion and Moultrie, Section 
  • 219, SC; U.S. Army Corps of Engineer Construction

Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, and Related Agencies

  • Orangeburg: $15,000,000 for South Carolian State University Military Science Center for Excellence
  • Orangeburg: $3,000,000 for Claflin University Boulevard Street Economic Renewal 
  • Bamberg: $1,500,000 for Bamberg County Downtown Renaissance 
  • Summerton: $1,500,000 for the Town of Summerton Blight Removal Capital, Improvements, and Community Development 
  • Sumter: $1,250,000 for Morris College Small Business Entrepreneur Incubator Center Acquisition Development, and Construction
  • Clarendon County: $1,000,000 for Clarendon County Intergenerational Wellness Complex Facilities Upgrades 

These additional community projects included in the federal spending package are in South Carolina’s 6th Congressional District; 

Energy and Water: 

  • Charleston: $9,375,000 for Section 219, SC; U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Construction
  • Mount Pleasant, Charleston: $4,688,000 for Section 219, SC; U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Construction 
  • Charleston: $500,000 for U.S. Army Corps of Engineers 
  • Columbia: $6,000,000 for University of South Carolina Battery Cycling Research 
  • Columbia: $4,500,000 for the University of South Carolina Semiconductor Chips

Commerce, Justice and Science, and Related Agencies:

  • Charleston: $441,000 for the South Carolina Aquarium 
  • Charleston: $825,000 for the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources
  • Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, and Related Agencies
  • Columbia: $2,239,000 for the Columbia Metropolitan Airport (CAE) Grants-in-Aid for Airports Program
  • South Carolina: $20,500,000 for the Airport Connect Road Project, U.S. Department of Transportation Highway Infrastruction Program 
  • Columbia: $12,61,000 for the University of South Carolina Facility Improvements 
  • Columbia: $10,000,000 for the University of South Carolina Veterans Military Center of Excellence 

Defense:

*Congressman Clyburn requested $72,400,000 for South Carolina in plus-ups in the Defense Appropriations Funding Bill.  

  • Columbia: $8,000,000 for University of South Carolina Talent and Technology Navy Power and Energy Systems – includes Benedict and S.C. State 
  • Columbia: $12,000,000 for University of South Carolina Unmanned Logistics Solutions for the USMC
  • Clemson: $15,000,000 for Clemson Digital Transportation for Integrating Human Ground-Air Machine Formations 
  • Ladson: $5,000,000 for KEEL USA – Ship Concept Advanced Design
  • Columbia: $20,000,000 for EPSCoR Program – Defense Established Program to Stimulate Competitive Research 
  • Aiken: $12,400,000 for Antares – Special Purpose Power Generation for Novel Effectors – Savannah River Site

A detailed summary of the bills are available below: 

Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration, and Related Agencies

Bill Summary

Commerce, Justice, and Science

Bill Summary 

Defense

Bill Summary

Energy and Water 

Bill Summary 

Financial Services and General Government

Bill Summary 

Homeland Security 

Bill Summary 

Interior and Environment 

Bill Summary 

Labor, HHS, Education and Related Agencies

Bill Summary

Legislative Branch

Bill Summary

Military Construction, Veterans Affairs, and Related Agencies

Bill Summary 

National Security, Department of State, and Related Programs

Bill Summary 

Transportation, Housing and Urban Development and Related Agencies

Bill Summary

Pelosi Warns First Amendment Under Siege: “Democracy Does Die in Darkness”

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi Representing the 12th District of California

Washington, D.C. – Today, Speaker Emerita Nancy Pelosi delivered remarks at the Washington Press Club Foundation’s 80th Annual Congressional Dinner, honoring the contributions of women in journalism and underscoring the essential role of a free press in a democracy.

Pelosi warned that the First Amendment is under siege, citing political intimidation, attacks on journalists and the corporate erosion of newsrooms. She emphasized that efforts to limit press freedom weaken transparency, accountability and American democracy.

Watch Pelosi’s remarks here.
 

Read the transcript of Speaker Emerita Pelosi’s remarks below:

Speaker Emerita Pelosi. Thank you, Madam President. That has a nice ring to it, doesn’t it?

Thank you, President Berry, for your kind introduction. And thank you to the board of the Washington Press Club Foundation for the honor of being with you this evening.

Let us congratulate tonight’s honoree, Susan Page, who is receiving the Lifetime Achievement Award, and Melissa Burke, who is receiving the David Lynch Award for regional journalism.

I’m delighted to join you on eighty years of this annual dinner. Eighty years of this dinner. Eighty years is truly a remarkable milestone. In Congress, we respect eighty years, that much longevity, as institutional memory.

The Women’s National Press Club, as was mentioned, was created at a time when women journalists were excluded from professional opportunities, shut out from press rooms, denied recognition that they were earning.
 
But your founders did not accept the status quo. They organized. They persisted. They fought for access, for credibility, for a seat at the table. And they proved again and again that women belonged there all along.

And that is an applause line. And they proved that women belonged there all along.

I can identify with that, because when I first ran for leadership, the men said, “Who said she could run?” Poor babies. Poor babies.

Soon after I was elected, it was my honor to host a retirement dinner for the legendary Washington journalist Mary McGrory.
 
Now, some of you are too young to remember Mary. Many of you are too young. But at that dinner that we had in the Capitol—my office was the Leader’s office but that had been the office that Tip O’Neill used as Speaker.

So Mary loved the fact that we used Tip’s suite to honor her. 
 
Ted Kennedy came over, and he talked about what Mary had done at the Washington Star when she started out. John Lewis was there, and he said Mary used her pen as a sword to fight for civil rights and other things. Father Drinan was there, and also Barney Frank.

And we all made the point that the Pope must have been very happy that Father Drinan, a Jesuit Member of Congress — the Pope insisted that he leave office and was replaced by one of the first gay men to serve in the Congress of the United States, Barney Frank.
 
And Father Drinan was there saying, “We’re getting ready for the resurrection.” That’s what he said.

Mary was recognized as one of the first queens of journalism. And you know what? When she started out, they said, “We don’t want you making any fuss, you know.”
 
She was new, a new woman. “We don’t want you making any trouble, any fuss.”
 
She said, “Well, that’s exactly what I came here to do. And in fact, that’s what I intend to do.” And she won a Pulitzer Prize.

So I bring up Mary McGrory because she’s just one of many women who were leaders at that time. And I was honored to honor her upon her retirement in the Capitol of the United States.

Just a few years later then I was elected Speaker and had the privilege of addressing the dinner shortly thereafter. I remember the evening very well, for the history and the progress we had both made.

Tonight, we honor the contribution of women in journalism and those who have covered Congress across generations.

And all of us eagerly await the humor of Kat and Madeleine, which I know will be done in the spirit of bipartisanship. Because in our democracy, defense of the First Amendment can and should be bipartisan.

I always say the press is the guardian of our democracy. And that’s how I view it.

One such guardian is my friend Jimmy Lai, a British Hong Kong journalist imprisoned in Beijing for printing the truth. I asked Speaker Johnson to call out this matter of Jimmy’s persecution when he spoke to the House of Commons a couple of weeks ago.
 
This was a big honor for our country, that the Speaker was invited in this bicentennial year to speak at the House of Commons. And the Speaker did call out the need for Jimmy Lai to be free, and I’m very grateful to him for doing that.

So in a bipartisan way, we support our journalists around the world.

As we recently acknowledged Martin Luther King Day last month, we spent all week in San Francisco. I recalled that when he and Coretta went to India in the 50s, they went to learn more about Gandhi and what nonviolence was about.
 
And when he was there, he learned that the word for nonviolence in Sanskrit, satyagraha, means two things. It means nonviolence, and it means insistence on the truth. Insistence on the truth.

Dr. King understood that the truth must be spoken, defended and carried forward by those who have the courage to do so. And I see a roomful of courage here tonight.

That sacred responsibility to defend the truth is a responsibility for all of us. But it has long been the special calling of the press. You who have been among the great practitioners of that insistence on the truth, even when it required great risk, sacrifice and fortitude.

It is that spirit of satyagraha—the truth as a moral obligation—that must guide us still.

Because make no mistake, the First Amendment is under siege here at home. You know that better than anyone. Each fact is challenged, truth is distorted and the press is treated by those in power as an enemy. “Fake news,” they call it, rather than treating press as a vital partner.

We see efforts to intimidate journalists, to discredit legitimate reporting, and to replace evidence with conspiracy. That is not accidental. It is a strategy.

Those who fear transparency and accountability fear the press.
 
Just in the last month we have seen what was referenced earlier. We have seen that fear made real, from the arrest of Don Lemon for his reporting on the raid on the home of the Washington Post journalist.
 
These incidents are an affront to press freedom, meant to scare, to chill and to silence. But amid that political intimidation, we must also reckon with an ongoing and accompanying threat.

Today, we saw painful layoffs at the Washington Post, part of a broader, reprehensible pattern in which corporate decisions are hollowing out newsrooms across the country.
 
When corporate interests gut local, national, and international journalism, communities lose watchdogs, truth loses megaphones and democracy loses guardians.

A free press cannot fulfill its mission if it is starved of its resources it needs to survive. When newsrooms are weakened, our republic is weakened with it.
 
Because democracy dies in darkness.

Are we all ready to say that together? Democracy dies in darkness.

At the same time, new rules governing the Pentagon press corps have raised serious concerns about access, independence and the ability of journalists to do their jobs without fear of retaliation.

This is not the first time our nation has been confronted with the issue of whether national security will be used as a reason—or an excuse—to limit press freedom.

And I must warn all of you, my friends in the press, that now  I’m going to engage in a little self-promotion. They say self-promotion is a terrible thing, but somebody’s got to do it.

Back in 2000, the Republican Congress passed an intelligence bill—and with Democratic cooperation. This was a bipartisan bill, but it was a Republican Majority. And this affects you. So you might want to hear it.

The Republican Congress passed an intelligence bill that included provisions that would have criminalize legitimate press reporting on national security.

What they wanted to do in the bill, and this is really important, was to place the burden of proof on the journalist as to whether his or her reporting harmed national security rather than what we wanted, which was that the burden of proof is on the government to prove that what the reporter was reporting was harming national security. This was a very big difference.

At the time, I was the top — here I come back bragging. At the time, I was the top Democrat on the Intelligence Committee. While I could not stop the bill’s passage. I did take it to President Clinton to hopefully get a veto. He understood completely what was at risk after learning of the provision.

President Clinton vetoed the bill and, said his words were “unnecessarily chilled legitimate activities that are at the heart of a democracy.”
 
Thereby, President Clinton helped protect the First Amendment.

Today, we are again witnessing the actions meant to chill the First Amendment’s most fundamental freedoms.
 
Let us be clear: attacks on journalism are attacks on the American people’s right to know, and attempts to undermine a free press or attempts to undermine the Constitution and democracy itself.

That is why tonight is not only a celebration, but is a reminder, a solemn reminder that we must protect and defend freedom. And we must insist on the truth, because America is in a crisis of conscience.

We have a president who has crowned himself king, a Congress which has abolished itself and a Supreme Court that has gone rogue.

Our First amendment, a free and independent press, the Fourth Estate is essential to the survival of our Republic.

To all the journalists in this room and beyond, the American people are counting on you, the press, to know your power.

We know you do. And we appreciate that. To know your power and to use it.

You know the power of the facts to defeat disinformation. You know better than anyone the power of questions to expose truth, the power of your work, to inform the American people and to strengthen our democracy.

We celebrate the 250th year of America’s independence. Today was the day that George Washington was elected president of the United States. On this day.

And my dear friend Jamie Raskin just gave me a quote from from Thomas Jefferson. And he said, “If I were to choose a country with a government without a press or the press without the government, I would choose the latter.”

Thank you, Jamie.

Another great American, Benjamin Franklin, you know, was asked after the Constitutional Convention, what form of government was created. He replied, “A republic, if we can keep it.” 

Ladies and gentlemen of the press. It is your voice has integrity, persistence and courage that will, as our national anthem declares, give proof through the night that our flag is still there, and as we pledge, with liberty and justice for all.

Keeping our republic depends on you. It has always depended on you.

Thank you, members of the press, for your patriotism. Thank you for your patriotism.

God bless America. Enjoy the evening. Thank you. 

LEADERS JEFFRIES AND SCHUMER DELIVER URGENT ICE REFORM DEMANDS TO REPUBLICAN LEADERSHIP

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

Today, House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY) and Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) sent the following letter to Leader Thune and Speaker Johnson laying out clear legislative actions to rein in ICE and stop the violence. The full text of the letter can be seen here and below: 

Dear Speaker Johnson and Leader Thune: 

We write with respect to fiscal year 2026 funding for the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). For months, the American people have watched in horror as U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has terrorized communities across the country. After months of escalation against everyday Americans and law-abiding immigrant families, two U.S. citizens were killed in the streets of Minneapolis. Federal immigration agents cannot continue to cause chaos in our cities while using taxpayer money that should be used to make life more affordable for working families. The American people rightfully expect their elected representatives to take action to rein in ICE and ensure no more lives are lost. It is critical that we come together to impose common sense reforms and accountability measures that the American people are demanding. We believe Congress needs to enact the following guardrails: 

  1. Targeted Enforcement – DHS officers cannot enter private property without a judicial warrant. End indiscriminate arrests and improve warrant procedures and standards. Require verification that a person is not a U.S. citizen before holding them in immigration detention.
  2. No Masks – Prohibit ICE and immigration enforcement agents from wearing face coverings.
  3. Require ID – Require DHS officers conducting immigration enforcement to display their agency, unique ID number and last name. Require them to verbalize their ID number and last name if asked.
  4. Protect Sensitive Locations – Prohibit funds from being used to conduct enforcement near sensitive locations, including medical facilities, schools, child-care facilities, churches, polling places, courts, etc.
  5. Stop Racial Profiling – Prohibit DHS officers from conducting stops, questioning and searches based on an individual’s presence at certain locations, their job, their spoken language and accent or their race and ethnicity.
  6. Uphold Use of Force Standards – Place into law a reasonable use of force policy, expand training and require certification of officers. In the case of an incident, the officer must be removed from the field until an investigation is conducted.
  7. Ensure State and Local Coordination and Oversight – Preserve the ability of State and local jurisdictions to investigate and prosecute potential crimes and use of excessive force incidents. Require that evidence is preserved and shared with jurisdictions. Require the consent of States and localities to conduct large-scale operations outside of targeted immigration enforcement.
  8. Build Safeguards into the System – Make clear that all buildings where people are detained must abide by the same basic detention standards that require immediate access to a person’s attorney to prevent citizen arrests or detention. Allow states to sue DHS for violations of all requirements. Prohibit limitations on Member visits to ICE facilities regardless of how those facilities are funded.
  9. Body Cameras for Accountability, Not Tracking – Require use of body-worn cameras when interacting with the public and mandate requirements for the storage and access of footage. Prohibit tracking, creating or maintaining databases of individuals participating in First Amendment activities.
  10. No Paramilitary Police – Regulate and standardize the type of uniforms and equipment DHS officers carry during enforcement operations to bring them in line with civil enforcement.

These reforms should apply to all federal activity, whether funded by FY26 appropriations, the OBBBA or any other act. 

Furthermore, there are steps that the Trump administration has the power to take right now to show good faith, including fully ramping down the surge in Minnesota and removing Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem from her position. 

These are common sense solutions that protect constitutional rights and ensure responsible law enforcement.  

Sincerely, 

Hakeem Jeffries

Democratic Leader

United States House of Representatives

Chuck Schumer

Democratic Leader

United States Senate

 Hoyer Remarks at Press Conference to Announce the Launch of the Federal Workforce Caucus

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Steny H Hoyer (MD-05)

WASHINGTON, DC – Today, Congressman Steny H. Hoyer (MD-05) joined U.S. Senators U.S. Senators Chris Van Hollen (D-MD) and Tim Kaine (D-VA) and U.S. Representatives James Walkinshaw (VA-11) and Suhas Subramanyam (VA-10), and federal employee union leaders and members at a press conference to announce the launch of the Federal Workforce Caucus to protect federal workers and strengthen the merit-based federal civil service for the American people.  Below is a full transcript of his remarks:

“Thank you very, very much, and I’m pleased to be here with you. And I don’t think we had a caucus, Jim is absolutely right. But I recall we had a guy named Don Devine; he worked for Ronald Reagan, and he wasn’t quite as blunt, as – I’m going to mention our CFO, as I call him, our OMB Director, [indistinguishable]. But we had a Republican who worked with me hip to hip on federal employees, his name is Frank [Wall]. And very frankly, Don Devine ran against me for Congress in the 90s, thinking I had committed political suicide because I said, ‘We ought to pay for what we buy,’ and we were successful. We were successful because, Jim, we may not have had a caucus but we had a whole bunch of people. Republicans and Democrats [from] Virginia and Maryland. And, ladies and gentlemen, 70% of the workforce is not in the Washington Metropolitan area. It’s serving the people in every corner of this country. 

I think we still have a bipartisan coalition that understands that our federal workers compose the best civil service in the world. Is it perfect? No, but [nothing] in the world is perfect. But it’s very good, and it is not [peopled] by persons who knew somebody, as Senator Van Hollen said . It’s [peopled] by people who have the skills, the talent, and yes, the patriotism to serve their fellow citizens in the civil service.

“So, I want to thank all of you who represent so many of those people who are working, all the unions, all the other organizations, I’m particularly going to call out one person here. Skye – I got to do you – Perryman who has done such extraordinary work with Democracy Forward in protecting, Rob, our people. But more than that, protecting our government and its integrity, and its ability to serve in a nonpartisan and bipartisan, equal way, the people of the United States of America. We meet today after a critical win for our federal workers, frankly. We kept our government open, ensuring that we can continue their work for the American people, and to receive their pay that they’re due. And I want to thank Senator Kaine for the work he has done, and so successfully. But we still have a lot of work ahead. The past year has been a reminder just how important the federal workforce is to American success, and just how dangerous it is to undermine the merit-based nature of our civil service. Chris Van Hollen, my colleague in Maryland, mentioned the symbol of the chainsaw. You know, a chainsaw is a rough cut, and it fells things; it makes them fall down, it kills them. The Administration’s way is to crusade against our federal workers.

“I say this a lot; Russell Vought summed up their strategy. This is not something that they’re hiding under a cover that they’re doing, they’re doing it right out in the open. They’re telling you what they want to do. ‘We want the bureaucrats to be traumatically affected.’ That’s the CFO of [their] enterprise. Any CFO that said that of their employees in any corporation –  including the largest corporations in America – would be fired the next day by the board of directors [saying], ‘What are you doing? We want the morale of our people up. We want them confident [their] work is appreciated.’ He went on to say, ‘When they wake up in the morning, we want them not to want to go to work –’ boy, that’s a great strategy ‘– because they’re increasingly viewed as villains.’ Boy, do we need a caucus.

“You were right, Jim, we need a caucus. Subramanyam you were right, we need a caucus. Tim and I and Chris who have been there, you know, we had some new blood come in and say, ‘Let’s organize!’ (laughter) We thought we were organized but we weren’t, and you made it clear. Vought went on to say, ‘We want their funding to be shut down. We want to put them in trauma.’ And yes, they shut down the government because they didn’t want to give people health care. My colleagues and I are establishing this caucus because we know the truth: federal workers are not villains, they are patriots and heroes. I have about 75,000 federal workers living in my district. I think it’s the largest-populated federal employee district in America. But I had a Senate district for 12 years in which there were very few state employees, and I fought hard for the state employees. Why? Because I know I can say very nice things, I can pass really nice laws, but if we don’t have people who care carrying them out, it’s not worth the paper it’s written on. That’s why we’re so passionately for federal employees.

“Now, I could go on and on, as some people will attest to, who have known me for a long time. (laughter) But, the other five pages of this speech, I’m going to forgo because you get my point. This is not about Democrats or Republicans. This is about every American who regularly thinks, ‘I have a problem that needs to be solved,’ and they pick up the phone and they call some of us. (turns around and begins pointing at Members and union leaders) And they call you, you, you – and they certainly call you (laughter). You too. So, this caucus is going to energize the Congress in appreciating the work that is done every day by our federal employees, from the top level to the bottom level, who, by the way, are not paid nearly as much as their private sector counterparts. I’m glad to be a member of this caucus. I thank Jim for sort of galvanizing us. I thank Chris for doing that as well, we worked shoulder to shoulder for a long period of time. America needs our federal employees, not traumatized, but energized and uplifted.”

Pressley Urges Congress End Qualified Immunity, Demands Accountability for Families of Loved Ones Killed by ICE

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

During negotiations on DHS funding, Democrats must prioritize giving power to the people to protect their rights.”

“People should be allowed to sue ICE agents for violating their rights and killing their loved ones. Period.”

Pressley Legislation Would Hold Federal Law Enforcement Officers Accountable for Breaking the Law and Killing Our Neighbors

WASHINGTON – During Oversight Democrats’ bicameral shadow hearing on the use of violence by ICE held yesterday, Congresswoman Ayanna Pressley demanded Congress end qualified immunity to ensure federal law enforcement officers are held accountable for breaking the law and murdering civilians. Rep. Pressley called on her colleagues not to settle for bare minimum reforms in funding negotiations for the Department of Homeland Security, instead urging them to fight to rebalance power and restore accountability.

Rep. Pressley highlighted the urgency of the moment by uplifting stories of traumatized community members she met with during her trip to Minnesota with Rep. Ilhan Omar (MN-05), many of whom deserve accountability for ICE agents violating their rights or killing their loved ones.

Rep. Pressley leads the Qualified Immunity Abolition Act, which would grant victims the right to sue federal law enforcement officers—not just state and local—for civil rights violations by abolishing the defense of qualified immunity in these lawsuits.

A transcript of Congresswoman Pressley’s remarks at the shadow hearing is available below, and the video is available here.

Transcript: Pressley Urges Congress End Qualified Immunity, Demands Accountability for Families of Loved Ones Killed by ICE
Committee on Oversight and Government Reform
February 3, 2026

REP. AYANNA PRESSLEY: Last week, I traveled to Minneapolis at the invitation of my sister-in-service and by bond, Congresswoman Ilhan Omar, to the Minnesota Fifth, a district that I’ve been to many times doing justice work.

I went to bear witness to the trauma that so many communities are being forced to endure.

I met residents who have watched rogue masked agents detain, deport, and even kill their neighbors in broad daylight. In cold blood. Without due process. Without care for what their violence leaves behind.

Public executions. Public terror. 

Five-year-olds are being detained. I’m thinking of Liam Ramos, a five-year-old child held in detention for a week, and the over 3,000 other children whose names we don’t know, who remain in detention centers across the country. 

I’m thinking of his classmates who wrote letters to ICE agents, pleading – pleading – for mercy, appealing to whatever humanity they hoped still existed. 

I will not accept a system that rips children from safety in the name of quote-unquote law and order. 

This is trauma. And the witnesses here today live with it. 

I so look forward to a day when people do not have to relive and weaponize their trauma in order to compel action from their government. But I’m grateful to those who bare their heart for the good of humanity.

Each of you have shown immense courage, and it is time for Democrats to show that same courage and fight against fascism. 

As we negotiate funding for DHS, we have a real opportunity to do more than express concern. We have the chance to reject this campaign of terror, and we have a responsibility to do so.

As Democrats, we can say we give a damn, but that is not enough that we refuse to act with courage.

Requiring agents to remove masks or obtain warrants before entering homes is important, but let’s be honest—that is the bare minimum. 

We can’t leave power in the hands of bad actors to decide whether or not to follow the law. We can’t make demands of people like Trump and Noem and then hope that they willingly comply. 

Our Constitution doesn’t rely on good faith—it demands checks and balances. 

If we want real change, we must check this Administration and rebalance power in the hands of the people, where it belongs. 

Here is a simple fact: People should be allowed to sue ICE agents for violating their rights and killing their loved ones. Period. 

That should not be controversial for Democrats, Republicans, independents or anyone. But there are barriers in the way. 

Congress must remove these barriers with a two-step legislative fix. 

Step one: we need to close the loophole.

There is currently a loophole in the law that prevents federal officials from being sued under Section 1983, which is a civil rights law protecting constitutional rights. If victims of violence can sue state and local law enforcement, they should also be able to sue federal law enforcement. 

Step two: we need to abolish qualified immunity.

Qualified immunity is an unjust, court-invented legal doctrine that says law enforcement misconduct can be excused. That includes violations of constitutional rights. 

The Supreme Court has expanded qualified immunity to the point where even Clarence Thomas thinks it’s gone too far. 

This accountability two-step is critical to reining in this extremist administration.

During these negotiations on DHS funding, Democrats must prioritize giving power to the people to protect their rights. 

Mr. Romanucci, you are the lawyer representing the Good family during this unimaginably painful moment. You’ve spent decades litigating excessive force cases. How does qualified immunity impact your ability to seek accountability for your clients?

MR. ROMANUCCI: Thank you, Congresswoman. Qualified immunity is a tremendous barrier. It’s a hurdle to achieve civil justice and accountability for people who want to sue police officers. 

I liken it very much to get out of jail card on a Monopoly board, because unless it’s clearly established that the officer violated a law, they get a pass. They get qualified immunity, and the lawsuit is dismissed. You cannot achieve that. 

By your suggestion – which is, which is a good one, we’re aligned – by abolishing qualified immunity and making the employer, the agency, the law enforcement agency, responsible for the police officers’ actions, we have accountability. 

We have a system of justice that would be fair and gets rid of that hurdle.

REP. PRESSLEY: Thank you. We need laws that empower families like those that have testified before us today.

We should use these negotiations to rebalance power, to restore accountability, and to protect the people that we were actually sent here to serve. 

I yield back.

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Bishop Votes To Reopen Government & Focus Congress on ICE, Public Safety

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Sanford D Bishop Jr (GA-02)

WASHINGTON – Yesterday, Congressman Sanford D. Bishop, Jr. (GA-02) voted to support a combined funding bill which will provide full-year funding for Fiscal Year (FY) 2026 to the U.S. Departments of Labor, Education, and other departments and agencies that support affordable housing and health care and advance medical research; workforce training as well as entrepreneurs and small business owners; and America’s military families, national defense, diplomacy, and election security. The bill also froze funding for the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) which includes Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), and Transportation Security Administration (TSA).

“This funding bill keeps the federal government open and working for the American people for the remainder of the fiscal year so that families have access to safe, reliable, and affordable utilities, health care, housing, roads, railways, and air travel as well as job and entrepreneurial opportunities. This bill will help ensure our military families are cared for, our national defense is strong, and our election security remains vigilant,” said Congressman Bishop. “Hardnosed negotiations over the last year made sure this bill reasserted Congress’s Constitutional powers of the purse, staved off destructive cuts, and eliminated poison pill amendments that would have hurt families.”

Constructive and realistic discussions about the needs of the American people led to improvements in the funding bill that provide $432 billion to make housing more affordable, help families with $170 million for Child Care as well as Head Start, protect $415 million in life-saving medical research at the National Institutes of Health, and deliver a 3.8% pay raise for military personnel – all of which earned bipartisan support in the end.

“I am outraged that ICE is aggressively sweeping up American citizens and law-abiding immigrant families. We need guardrails to protect the public’s safety and make sure immigration enforcement is just, fair, and humane. Rather than providing ICE with a blank check, this bill froze its funding,” added Congressman Bishop. “The ten-day freeze of DHS funds will allow Congress to make a full court press on urgently needed changes to ICE without the distraction of funding the remainder of the government.”

Last month, Congressman Bishop voted against an earlier version of the Homeland Security appropriations bill which would have provided funding for DHS through the end of September. Americans have been horrified by ICE’s behavior in the past months on streets in communities across the country and have demanded dramatic changes before DHS is funded for the full year. Commonsense protections include a mask ban, judicial warrant requirements, independent investigations when agents break the law, use of force protocols, mandatory body cameras, and an end to the storming of sensitive locations like houses of worship, schools, and hospitals.

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Rep. Cline Funding For I-81 Improvements Signed Into Law

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Ben Cline (VA-06)

This week, President Trump signed the Fiscal Year 2026 Transportation, Housing and Urban Development (THUD) appropriations bill into law, which included $17 million for widening projects and safety enhancements along Interstate 81. The funding, championed by Rep. Ben Cline (VA-06), advances key improvements and potential expansion of the corridor and underscores his work on the House Appropriations Committee on behalf of Virginia’s Sixth District.

“Interstate 81 is a critical component of the Shenandoah Valley and plays an outsized role in the region’s economy and daily life,” said Rep. Cline. “From local commuters and families to farmers, manufacturers, and truck drivers, countless Virginians rely on this corridor every day. This funding allows us to begin tackling persistent safety and congestion challenges while laying the groundwork for future capacity improvements. Adding a third lane to I-81 will improve reliability, support economic growth, and deliver lasting benefits for communities throughout the entire Sixth District and beyond.”

BACKGROUND:

The I-81 Corridor handles an enormous volume of freight and passenger traffic. Each year, more than 12 million commercial trucks travel along the interstate, moving over $300 billion in goods. As traffic increases, so does the need to modernize the highway to support on-time delivery and reduce disruptions that hurt both local businesses and national commerce.

Originally built over 50 years ago, I-81 has not kept up with growing traffic and freight demands. A 2018 state report identified urgent needs along the corridor, and while Virginia has taken important steps to address them, additional federal investment is necessary.

Travel delays are becoming more frequent and unpredictable, impacting both freight movement and personal travel. To help fix this, Virginia’s Interstate 81 Corridor Improvement Program (CIP) includes plans to widen the road from two to three lanes in critical sections. These upgrades will reduce congestion, create more room for emergency response vehicles, and lower the risk of crashes by allowing more space for vehicles to maneuver.

Congressman Ben Cline represents the Sixth Congressional District of Virginia. He previously was an attorney in private practice and served both as an assistant prosecutor and a Member of the Virginia House of Delegates. Cline and his wife, Elizabeth, live in Botetourt County with their two children.

Congressman Pete Stauber’s Critical Mineral Dominance Act Passes the House

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

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Congressman Pete Stauber (MN-08) today celebrated the House passage of his legislation, H.R. 4090, the Critical Mineral Dominance Act. This bipartisan legislation codifies several of the Trump Administration’s executive actions aimed at establishing the United States as the world’s leading producer of critical and rare earth minerals. The legislation will help strengthen national security and reduce the United States’ dangerous mineral dependence on foreign adversaries like China.

“President Trump has been a champion for American mineral dominance from day one, and by codifying the administration’s domestic mining policies into law, we can ensure that these pro-mining policies stay in place no matter who is in the White House,” said Congressman Stauber. “This legislation will help enable us to mine here domestically, create good-paying, union jobs, enhance our national security, and position the United States to lead and win in the 21st Century economy.”

“For far too long, America’s reliance on imports has left us vulnerable, with China controlling roughly 60 percent of global critical mineral production, 90 percent of processing, and 75 percent of manufacturing. The Chinese Communist Party has repeatedly weaponized this dominance through export restrictions and trade leverage, creating uncertainty for key U.S. industries. Previous administrations exacerbated this issue by reversing project approvals and restricting development on millions of acres of public lands, stifling domestic mining efforts,” Congressman Stauber added.

H.R. 4090 requires the Department of the Interior (DOI) to assess the economic costs of our import reliance for each critical mineral and incorporate this data into annual USGS summaries. The legislation also requires DOI to identify expedite approval of proposed priority mining projects on federal lands, while exploring opportunities for the utilization of products from active, inactive, or proposed mines. Additionally, it calls for DOI to report to Congress on the barriers to such byproduct production and recommendations to overcome them.

The full text of H.R. 4090, the Critical Mineral Dominance Act, is available here.

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Rep. Omar Speaks on House Floor Calling to Abolish ICE and End Federal Occupation

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

WASHINGTON — Today, Congresswoman Ilhan Omar (MN-05) spoke on the House Floor calling to abolish ICE and end the federal occupation of Minnesota. In 2026 alone, federal immigration agents have fatally shot two Minneapolis residents, Renee Good and Alex Pretti. In her speech, Rep. Omar also demands a full, independent investigation into both shootings. You can watch the full video here. Below is a transcript of her remarks:

“Two of my constituents, Renee Good and Alex Pretti — beloved neighbors and community members were murdered by federal immigration enforcement agents. 

“These were not distant headlines. These were beloved community members fighting to protect their neighbors.  

“Alex Pretti was a 37-year-old ICU nurse at the Minneapolis VA who cared for veterans. He was a healer. He should be alive. 

“And Renee Good, a 37-year old beloved wife, mother, community member — should be alive. 

“Kristi Noem’s DHS must be held accountable. 

“We cannot continue to operate as if this terror is acceptable.

“We cannot allow a federal agency — one that was created for one purpose to terrorize — to function as an occupying force in our communities.

“Real accountability starts with abolishing ICE, impeaching Kristi Noem, and rethinking how we enforce immigration policy in this country.

“And we cannot stop there. 

“We must demand that those responsible for terrorizing our communities are investigated thoroughly, not by the agencies that oversee them, but by truly independent authorities.

“We have seen federal agencies block state investigators and stonewall accountability. That is unacceptable. 

“Our system of justice cannot tolerate a situation where people are killed, and the only response is silence, spin, or justification from administration officials.

“Minnesota was once known as a place of refuge. It has now been turned into a war zone, by a federal government that has lost sight of the values that make America great. 

“Everything we love, our communities, our rights, our Constitution, our humanity is on the line right now.

“We have to fight like our future depends on it because it does.”

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