Casten Leads House Dems in Demanding EPA Maintain Their Greenhouse Gas Reporting Program

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

November 10, 2025

Washington, D.C. — U.S. Congressman Sean Casten (IL-06), Vice Chair of the House Sustainable Energy and Environment Coalition (SEEC), led SEEC leadership members, including Co-Chairs Reps. Doris Matsui, Mike Quigley, and Paul Tonko and Vice Chairs Reps. Don Beyer, Suzanne Bonamici, Mike Levin, and Chellie Pingree, in a letter to Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Administrator Lee Zeldin demanding EPA reverse course and maintain the Greenhouse Gas Reporting Program.

“We write to inform you that the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is violating clear congressional directives by proposing to end the EPA’s Greenhouse Gas Reporting Program (GHGRP),” the lawmakers wrote. “For more than a decade, this program has been the most important source of transparent and verifiable climate pollution data in the federal government, and the EPA has clear authority and obligation to continue maintaining it. Ending it would undermine lawful, evidence-based governance at precisely the moment when climate and energy challenges demand better information, not less.”

The Greenhouse Gas Reporting Program (GHGRP), codified and established in a final rule by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency in 2009, requires large industrial facilities, fuel and industrial-gas suppliers, and CO2 injection sites to monitor and report their greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions annually. In September 2025, the EPA proposed eliminating reporting obligations to the GHGRP, undermining transparency, accountability, and the data infrastructure that supports both climate policy and private-sector decision-making. If finalized, it would end mandatory emissions reporting for virtually all large industrial facilities after the 2024 reporting year and suspend or eliminate requirements for the remaining sectors until 2034.

Text of the letter can be found below. A copy of the letter can be found here.

Dear Administrator Zeldin,

We write to inform you that the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is violating clear congressional directives by proposing to end the EPA’s Greenhouse Gas Reporting Program (GHGRP). For more than a decade, this program has been the most important source of transparent and verifiable climate pollution data in the federal government, and the EPA has clear authority and obligation to continue maintaining it. Ending it would undermine lawful, evidence-based governance at precisely the moment when climate and energy challenges demand better information, not less. The elimination of the GHGRP represents yet another example of the Trump Administration’s censorship of scientific data, while simultaneously threatening statutory obligations, jeopardizing taxpayers’ ability to claim certain energy tax credits, weakening American competitiveness in global markets, and depriving American businesses and investors of the credible data they rely on for decision-making. These short-sighted partisan decisions from the Trump Administration will have long-term implications for the economic prosperity and wellbeing of our businesses and the American people.

EPA has clear legal authority and an obligation to maintain the GHGRP. The Consolidated Appropriations Acts for Fiscal Years 2008 and 2009 directed and funded EPA to promulgate and implement a greenhouse gas reporting rule covering “all sectors of the economy.” EPA did so relying on its broad authority under section 114 of the Clean Air Act, and has maintained the GHGRP since that time. The Agency’s new and unsupported view of its legal authority runs afoul of Congress’s clear direction and EPA’s own longstanding practice.

EPA’s proposal reflects a broad pattern of scientific data censorship under the Trump Administration as climate data is restricted, hidden, or defunded across the federal government. These actions have included funding cuts to researchers and scientists at the National Climate Assessment,the shutdown of the website for the U.S. Global Change Research Program, the elimination of Federal Emergency Management Agency’s Future Risk Index,the discontinuation of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Billion Dollar Weather and Climate Disasters database, the disabling of the Climate and Economic Justice Screening Tool, and significant censoring of hundreds of government websites related to climate change, among others. Suppressing scientific data does not make climate pollution or the systemic risk of climate change go away, it only blinds American policymakers, researchers, and the public to emerging threats and leaves our communities and families more vulnerable and defenseless.

The GHGRP is the backbone of the emissions verification needed to administer certain energy tax credits to American taxpayers. The GHGRP is indispensable to taxpayers in the energy industry, which rely on GHGRP data to verify eligibility for various federal tax incentives that support American industry. Without the GHGRP, even the American Petroleum Institute claims that major energy companies would lose the data infrastructure necessary to demonstrate compliance and claim these incentives, which would harm both American industry and our nation’s climate goals.

The GHGRP provides essential data that gives American manufacturing a competitive edge in rapidly innovating international markets. Eliminating this program would erode confidence in U.S. scientific data, drive up the cost of capital, and weaken American competitiveness just as the European Union, the United Kingdom, and other major economies adopt Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanisms (CBAMs) that reward verified low-emission manufacturing. For example, U.S.-produced low-emission steel and aluminum provide a clear market advantage relative to the high carbon intensity of materials produced in China, India, South Africa, and elsewhere. Without verifiable, trusted data like that provided by the GHGRP, the U.S. industry risks losing that global competitive advantage.

This data is equally vital as a business tool to investors and other stakeholders in the private sector, and is not easily replicable. EPA’s own website highlights GHGRP’s value as a business tool for cost-saving and risk management, noting that “data can be an important tool for businesses and other innovators to find cost- and fuel-saving efficiencies that reduce greenhouse gas emissions.”The Facility Level Information on GreenHouse gases Tool (FLIGHT) and other GHGRP datasets are widely used by companies, analysts, and investors to evaluate emissions performance and manage exposure to risks. Private companies also rely on the data to demonstrate the credibility of their emissions reduction strategies to investors and regulators. Ending federal reporting for greenhouse gases would shift the data-collection burden to the states or to less-equipped actors, fragmenting quality, raising costs, and eroding market trust.

Terminating the GHGRP would jeopardize key programs and reports that rely on this data to meet statutory obligations. In fact, EPA itself has long recognized the GHGRP’s importance to its own work, the work of other federal agencies, state and local programs, and to the private sector.

Given these concerns, we demand that EPA reverse course and maintain the Greenhouse Gas Reporting Program. To that end, we request that EPA outline how it will ensure continuity and quality of the data, tools, and public reporting functions that American businesses, investors, states, and federal agencies rely upon for compliance, planning, and risk management.

Thank you for your attention to this matter. We look forward to your prompt response.

Carbajal, Smucker Reintroduce Bipartisan Bill to Reduce Veterans’ Housing Costs

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

U.S. Representatives Salud Carbajal (D-CA-24), a Marine Corps veteran, and Lloyd Smucker (R-PA-11) reintroduced bipartisan legislation aimed at improving housing access and affordability for U.S. veterans.

The lawmakers’ Home for the Brave Act would exempt veterans’ disability benefits from counting toward total income when determining their eligibility for housing assistance programs through the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD).

“No veteran should be punished for receiving the very benefits they earned through their service to our country,” said Rep. Carbajal, a Marine Corps veteran. “I’m proud to lead this bipartisan effort to end this unfair practice in our country’s housing assistance system and ensure veterans have access to the safe, affordable homes they deserve.”

“Our veterans have made tremendous sacrifices to protect our freedom and safety, and they should not lose access to housing assistance because they receive disability benefits for injuries sustained in service,” said Rep. Smucker. “Our community has worked hard to end veteran homelessness, and I’m honored to support this important mission alongside my constituents. I also appreciate Rep. Carbajal’s dedication to our nation’s veterans and their families, and I look forward to partnering with him to advance this legislation.”

Financial benefits for service-connected disabilities are currently counted as income when determining eligibility for housing assistance programs through the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD).

As a result, many veterans are determined ineligible for these housing programs because their disability benefits are placing them at a higher income level.

Other agencies, including the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), do not consider veterans benefits for service-connected disabilities income.

The bill has endorsement of the American Legion and the Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW).

“Veterans and their families shouldn’t be penalized or disqualified from receiving housing support just because they receive compensation for service-related injuries or the loss of a loved one,” said VFW National Legislative Associate Director Joe Grassi. “Many of our nation’s heroes are struggling in this economy and facing financial instability or homelessness. To help resolve these serious issues, VFW supports the Home for the Brave Act of 2025.”

Speaker Johnson Remarks on Day 41 of Democrat Government Shutdown

Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative Mike Johnson (LA-04)

WASHINGTON — On Day 41 of the Democrat Shutdown, Speaker Johnson delivered remarks after eight Senate Democrats voted last night to break the filibuster and begin the process of voting to reopen the government.

“It appears to us this morning that our long national nightmare is finally coming to an end, and we’re grateful for that. At least some Democrats now finally appear ready to do what Republicans and President Trump and millions of hardworking American people have been asking them to do for weeks,” Speaker Johnson said. “As we said from the beginning, the people’s government cannot be held hostage to further anyone’s political agenda. That was never right, and shutting down the government never produces anything. It never has if you study history. And so, here we are.”

Watch Speaker Johnson’s full remarks here.

Read Speaker Johnson’s full remarks as delivered below:

Good morning, everybody. I’m very thankful to see you all this morning. I’m thankful to welcome you to what appears to be the beginning of the end of the longest government shutdown in US history. As shameful as that is, I don’t think it’s coincidental, you know how I think. But after 40 days of wandering in the wilderness and making the American people suffer needlessly, some Senate Democrats finally have stepped forward to end the pain.

It appears to us this morning that our long national nightmare is finally coming to an end, and we’re grateful for that. At least some Democrats now finally appear ready to do what Republicans and President Trump and millions of hardworking American people have been asking them to do for weeks.

As we said from the beginning, the people’s government cannot be held hostage to further anyone’s political agenda. That was never right, and shutting down the government never produces anything. It never has if you study history. And so, here we are.

I want to remind everybody this morning of another critical point that you’ve heard me repeat over and over, over the last several weeks. It’s something that I and leader John Thune and President Trump and every Republican leader have all said repeatedly from the beginning: we have always been open to finding solutions to reduce the oppressive cost of health care under the Unaffordable Care Act. We just made clear that we would not and should not ever do that, and that is negotiate as hostages.

And I’ve also reminded you here every morning that Republicans have not just been talking about reducing costs and fraud and abuse in so many areas in health care, we’ve been actually passing new laws to accomplish that urgent mission for the people. And we will continue to do so.

So, here’s where we are. By way of schedule, just so you know and you’re following. If you’re not at home, if you’re waking up to this good news this morning, the Senate’s vote late last night of 60 to 40 opens the door.

Now the Senate is moving forward on an amended House CR that will reopen the government until January 30. Added to that are provisions to fully fund SNAP through the end of the next fiscal year, which is September 2026, guaranteed back pay for all federal workers who have been made to endure these hardships over the last several weeks. And it also includes passage of three appropriations bills, which we’re grateful to be moving through the process. That is the Military Construction-Veterans Affairs bill. It’s the Agriculture bill and the Legislative Branch bill.

The Senate will be back in session this morning to finish their job. And we’re certainly praying that they do. They’ll need unanimous consent from all Senators to fast track their final vote. As you know, there’s some procedural hurdles that one or more could throw in the way, but we certainly hope that they won’t do that because so many people across this country are desperate for the government to reopen.

At the very moment that they do that final vote; I will call all House Members to return to Washington as quickly as possible. We’ll give a 36-hour formal and official notice so that we can vote as soon as possible to pass the amended CR bill and get it to the President’s desk. As you all know, and he said as recently as last night, I was with him, and he told the press, he said, we want to get the government open. He’s very anxious to get the government reopened and to end the Schumer Shutdown. We all are.

With regard to the travel challenges, I spoke yesterday at some length with Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy, my former colleague and good friend. And he lamented the serious situation that we have with air travel in the US. He’s bent over backwards as all members of the Administration and the Cabinet have done in all their areas of jurisdiction to try to keep the government working for the people and to mitigate the pain and the harm.

But the problem we have with air travel is that our air traffic controllers are overworked and unpaid, and many of them have called in sick. That’s a very stressful job, and even more stressful exponentially when they’re having trouble providing for their families. And so, air travel has been grinding to a halt in many places.

And as of Sunday, nearly half of all domestic flights and US flights were either canceled or delayed. And it’s a very serious situation. So, I’m saying that by way of reminder, I’m stating the obvious to all my colleagues, Republicans and Democrats in the House. You need to begin right now returning to the Hill. We have to do this as quickly as possible.

Now, we look forward to the government reopening this week so Congress can get back to our regular legislative session. We have a lot of business to do, as you all know. And we will be working in earnest. There’ll be long days and long nights here for the foreseeable future to make up for all this lost time that was imposed upon us.

I want to close with something that’s important. I think it’s important to say, this is genuine. I mean, this sincerely. We applaud the seven Senate Democrats and one Independent Senator who did the right thing. They decided to put principle over their personal politics.

And my urgent plea of all my colleagues in the House, and that means every Democrat in the House, is to think carefully and finally do the right thing and help us to bring an end to the pain of the American people. This has gone on too long. Too many people have suffered, and it’s long overdue.

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Tonko Vows NO Vote on GOP Budget that Fails to Address Rising Health Care Costs

Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative Paul Tonko (Capital Region New York)

Tonko Vows NO Vote on GOP Budget that Fails to Address Rising Health Care Costs

Senate spending bill fails to reestablish Affordable Care Act benefits that provide millions with health care

Albany, November 10, 2025

ALBANY, NY — Congressman Paul D. Tonko (NY-20) released the following statement pledging to vote down the latest Republican budget that fails to address rising health care costs for Americans:

This so-called deal in the Senate is a betrayal of everything we’ve fought for over the last 40+ days and of all those we’ve asked to fight alongside us. 

Nothing in this deal will address skyrocketing health care costs for millions of Americans. Nothing in this deal will address the rampant lawlessness of the Trump Administration. 

I’m a hell no on this deal and will do all in my power to stop it in the House.

Garamendi Slams Trump and Duffy for Letting Billionaires Fly While Cutting Families’ Thanksgiving Flights

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman John Garamendi – Representing California’s 3rd Congressional District

WASHINGTON, DC – Congressman John Garamendi (D-CA-08), senior member of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, slammed Secretary of Transportation Pete Duffy for potentially excluding private jets from the agency’s 10% flight cuts at 40 major U.S. airports.

“President Trump, we know you and your colleagues really love private jets, but most Americans travel commercial,” said Garamendi “But right now as families face hours-long security lines and canceled Thanksgiving flights, President Trump and Secretary Duffy better make certain that flights aren’t cancelled so billionaires can fly uninterrupted in their private jets,”

“Congress hasn’t seen the actual plan behind the 10% cut, and the Trump administration’s lack of transparency is frustrating, though not surprising. What’s equally frustrating, but again, not surprising, is that several individuals—from Kristi Noem to Kash Patel, and potentially even Secretary Duffy himself—allegedly have been using American tax dollars to purchase private jets or fly privately while the rest of us face commercial flight cancellations.”

“Private jets make up one in six flights handled by our already over-burdened air traffic controllers. There were 348,000 private jet departures in October alone, with 70% originating from the United States. Letting luxury travel continue while working families struggle confirms the truth: Trump and Duffy serve billionaires, not the American people.”

“I demand the Department of Transportation and FAA immediately ground all non-essential private jets for the duration of the flight cuts. If Trump and Duffy want to prove me wrong, release the plan, share the data with Congress, and let families fly home.”

The full letter can be found HERE and below:  

The Honorable Sean Duffy  

Secretary  

U.S. Department of Transportation  

1200 New Jersey Avenue, S.E.  

Washington, D.C. 20590  

The Honorable Bryan Bedford

Administrator

Federal Aviation Administration

800 Independence Avenue, SW

Washington, D.C. 20591

Dear Secretary Duffy:  

In light of the Department of Transportation and Federal Aviation Administration’s unprecedented decision to cancel 10% of flights at 40 airports across the country, I urge immediate action to ensure that all luxury private jet operations are suspended before any reductions for commercial air travel are implemented. Working Americans cannot be asked to carry the brunt of this burden while the ultra-wealthy fly as if the rules don’t apply to them. If the federal government reduces flight operations in the name of safety, these reductions must first apply to the billionaire class.  

As I send this letter, more than 2,000 commercial flights have been cancelled or delayed. This number will only continue to grow throughout the weekend, creating confusion, frustration, and uncertainty for commercial airline travelers. American taxpayers already heavily subsidize private jet travel. Private jet travelers pay just two percent of the taxes used to fund the Federal Aviation Administration, despite making up one in six flights handled by FAA’s air-traffic controllers. This October alone saw 348,000 private jet departures, with the United States accounting for 70% of these departures. Potentially allowing luxury travel for the over 15,000 private jets in the country to proceed while working families struggle to get to their destinations sends a clear and unacceptable message: that the wealthy are playing by different rules.  

Recent reports that the Department of Homeland Security purchased two private jets for Secretary Noem and other senior Department officials, at the cost of $172 million, underscore this outrageous double standard. When public servants and federal workers are making sacrifices, it is unacceptable for government officials or private individuals to use taxpayer-supported aviation resources for personal convenience.  

Essential aviation workers are already stretched thin. It is unconscionable that they be asked to facilitate private jet operations for the ultra-wealthy while these critical employees are reporting to duty without pay. Luxuries for the billionaire class should never come at the expense of the safety of the American public or our aviation workforce.  

I demand that the Department of Transportation and Federal Aviation Administration take immediate steps to ground all private jet operations – excluding aircraft used for agricultural, emergency, or other essential public service purposes – before implementing commercial airline reductions. Every available resource within the Federal Aviation Administration should be dedicated to maintaining safe, equitable air travel for the public, not preserving convenience for the ultra-wealthy.  

This is a matter of basic fairness and responsible governance. Working Americans should not suffer while the privileged few glide above the consequences. The Department of Transportation has an obligation to demonstrate that America’s aviation system serves the public interest, not private luxury. I request an immediate response outlining what steps you will take to ensure that private aviation does not remain a loophole for the ultra-wealthy during this period of national disruption.

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Higgins Requests Additional Details on Big Tech’s Response to Charlie Kirk’s Assassination

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Clay Higgins (R-LA)

LAFAYETTE, LA – Congressman Clay Higgins (R-LA) delivered a second letter to social media executives following online posts celebrating the killing of conservative leader Charlie Kirk. The letter requests additional details on how the platforms are determining which posts merit the user’s removal from the platform and ban from creating new accounts. 

This message follows a letter Congressman Higgins wrote to the same executives on September 15, 2025, that urged for the immediate removal of posts and accounts that celebrated Kirk’s assassination. This letter continues a fact-finding investigation to reveal how social media leaders use policies to discourage political violence and the celebration of death on their platforms, with specific regard to repeat offenders.

“I appreciate the responses from your platforms regarding content moderation policies and community guidelines in place to eliminate the celebration, incitement, and glorification of the assassination of Mr. Charlie Kirk. Although your platforms have these terms in place, it has not stopped the proliferation of content that has celebrated murder,” Congressman Higgins wrote. 

“I request the methodology your companies follow to determine posts that warrant removal from the platform, specifically for individuals with repeat offenses,” Congressman Higgins continued. “Repeat offenders should absolutely not be allowed to remain on your platforms and post celebration of death.”

Read the full letter here

Wasserman Schultz: Democrats Will Not Give Up Our Fight

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

House Democrats are fighting to secure bipartisan legislation to fund our government and prevent an unfolding health care coverage calamity that will financially crush tens of millions.

Today, U.S. Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schutlz (FL-25) released the following statement:

“House Democrats are fighting to secure bipartisan legislation to fund our government and prevent an unfolding health care coverage calamity that will financially crush tens of millions.

The Senate proposed bill critically fails to extend the Affordable Care Act tax credits and leaves future healthcare funding in jeopardy for veterans exposed to deadly toxins. This proposal will not solve the healthcare mess Donald Trump and Republicans foisted on the American people. Costs will soar. Basic healthcare and access to doctors will be pushed out of reach for millions. 

House Democrats will not give up our fight to make life less expensive for families, seniors and veterans. And we will continue to oppose this economic trainwreck that Donald Trump and Republicans own. When it’s finally debated in the House, we will hold Republicans accountable and go to the mat for a vote on legislation to prevent millions of Americans’ health care costs from skyrocketing. We will demand Mike Johnson swear-in Congresswoman-elect Adelita Grijalva and explain why he allowed this healthcare and shutdown catastrophe to mushroom into a full-blown crisis, while Republicans enjoyed a two-month, taxpayer-funded vacation.”

Rep. Aguilar on Government Funding Legislation and the Republican Health Care Crisis

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

Rep. Pete Aguilar released the following statement:
“House Democrats have been clear from day one: we need a bipartisan deal that funds the government and addresses the health care crisis Republicans created with their Big Ugly Law.
“The bill the Senate is taking up does not fix the health care crisis or make life more affordable for Americans across the country. That’s why I’m voting no.  
“At a time when Americans are facing affordability and health care crises, we need a real solution that will address the rising cost of health care. 
“Donald Trump and Republicans are to blame for this disaster and because of their cruel, corrupt and costly policies, millions of Americans will suffer. They prioritized permanent tax cuts for billionaires but are refusing to fund just one year of Affordable Care Act tax credits to make insurance more affordable, all the while finding $40 billion to bail out Argentina. 
“Democrats will continue to fight for quality, affordable health care for the American people.”   

PRESS RELEASE: Rep. Barragán’s Statement on Senate Republicans’ Spending Bill

Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative Nanette Diaz Barragán (CA-44)

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE  

November 9, 2025

Contact: Jin.Choi@mail.house.gov

Rep. Barragán’s Statement on Senate Republicans’ Spending Bill

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Representative Barragán (CA-44) released the following statement on Senate Republicans’ spending legislation:  

The fight to lower healthcare costs for Americans continues, with the same level of commitment and fight that Americans deserve. At a time when Americans have received notices of their skyrocketing healthcare premiums, they continue to ask that I fight to lower their cost. I join House Democrats in that fight.

Trump and Republicans in Congress have created a health care crisis, and the Senate Republicans’ bill fails to extend the health care tax credits to lower costs for Americans. These credits are critical for millions of American families to get health insurance so they can see a doctor, fill prescriptions, and get critical health care. Republicans continue to put the health and lives of tens of millions of Americans at risk as they ignore their health care crisis, at the expense of the American people.

The Senate bill fails to meet the moment to bring costs down to ensure affordable health care for all Americans.”

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HOUSE DEMOCRATIC LEADER HAKEEM JEFFRIES VOWS TO FIGHT ON

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

Today, House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries released the following statement:

House Democrats have consistently maintained that bipartisan legislation that funds the government must also decisively address the Republican healthcare crisis. 

For seven weeks, Democrats in the House and Senate have waged a valiant fight on behalf of the American people.

It now appears that Senate Republicans will send the House of Representatives a spending bill that fails to extend the Affordable Care Act tax credits. As a result of the Republican refusal to address the healthcare crisis that they have created, tens of millions of everyday Americans are going to see their costs skyrocket. Many will not be able to afford a doctor when they or their children need one. 

America is far too expensive. We will not support spending legislation advanced by Senate Republicans that fails to extend the Affordable Care Act tax credits. We will fight the GOP bill in the House of Representatives, where Mike Johnson will be compelled to end the seven week Republican taxpayer-funded vacation. 

Donald Trump and the Republican Party own the toxic mess they have created in our country and the American people know it.

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