Krishnamoorthi Responds After Florida Politician Calls Him a “Foreign Occupier” in Racist Attack Following Anti-Indian Remarks

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi (8th District of Illinois)

SCHAUMBURG, IL – After Florida politician Chandler Langevin—who recently called for the mass deportation of Indian Americans—attacked Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi’s name and heritage, calling him a “foreign occupier” in response to the Congressman’s earlier condemnation of his racist comments, Congressman Krishnamoorthi issued the following statement:

“It’s telling that rather than apologizing for calling for the mass deportation of Indian Americans, Mr. Langevin chose to double down with racist mockery. I was born in India, raised in Peoria, and elected by the people of Illinois—there’s nothing ‘foreign’ about standing up for my fellow Americans. Hate may be loud, but it will never drown out the values of decency and democracy that unite us.”

Congressman Krishnamoorthi Renews Demand for Administration Action as Trump’s Trade War Hammers Illinois Soybean Farmers

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi (8th District of Illinois)

TAYLOR RIDGE, IL — This afternoon, Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi, Ranking Member of the House Select Committee on the Strategic Competition between the United States and the Chinese Communist Party, visited a Taylor Ridge soybean and corn farm to hear directly from Illinois farmers about the devastating impacts of President Trump’s trade war and China’s retaliatory tariffs on their livelihoods, input costs, and local jobs. During today’s stop, hosted by the Bohnsack and VanDaele families, the Congressman toured the farm, discussed this year’s harvest and input prices with local producers, and outlined his recent letter to U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer and U.S. Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins urging immediate, strategic action to protect Illinois agriculture from “the profound damage that President Trump’s trade war is inflicting on Illinois soybean farmers.” In the letter, he also called for urgent steps to mitigate PRC retaliation, stabilize farm income, and rebuild export channels.

“Illinois farmers don’t want aid, they want trade,” Congressman Krishnamoorthi said. “Yet it’s farmers paying the price for President Trump’s reckless, go-it-alone trade war that has wiped out our largest export market. Farmers don’t want one-time bailouts; they want markets, certainty, and a level playing field. I’m pressing the Trump Administration to open new export channels, strengthen income and risk management tools, and reaffirm that America’s farmers will not be sacrificed for President Trump’s geopolitical maneuvering.”

What Congressman Krishnamoorthi is pushing for

  • Diversify and expand export markets in Southeast Asia, South Asia, Africa, and the Middle East.
  • Stabilize farm income through targeted support, strengthened crop-insurance and revenue-protection tools, and access to low-interest financing to bridge the current shock.
  • Restore trust in U.S. trade reliability and secure a resolution that reopens durable market access for U.S. soybeans without undercutting farmers.

By the numbers

  • Illinois produces 15% of all U.S. soybeans, generating about $7 billion in annual economic activity and supporting tens of thousands of jobs statewide.
  • In 2024, Illinois exported $1.4 billion in soybeans to China; in 2025, that figure fell to zero after retaliatory tariffs.
  • Foreign competitors, including Brazil and Argentina, have moved to lock in long-term supply contracts with China, threatening to permanently displace U.S. market share.

Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi Introduces Bipartisan Resolution Recognizing the Religious and Historical Significance of Diwali

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi (8th District of Illinois)

WASHINGTON – Today, Congressmen Raja Krishnamoorthi (D-IL) and Brian Fitzpatrick (R-PA) introduced a bipartisan resolution to recognize the historical and religious significance of Diwali. The Festival of Lights celebration, which began on Monday, October 20 this year, is celebrated throughout the U.S. by more than three million Americans of Indian descent, including Hindus, Jains, and Sikhs.

“Diwali celebrates the triumph of light over darkness and good over evil,” Congressman Krishnamoorthi said. “For the millions of Hindus, Sikhs, and Jains here in the U.S. celebrating with friends, family, and loved ones, it’s my hope that my bipartisan resolution honoring the cultural, religious, and historical significance of the Festival of Lights brings our communities together and inspires us to see the light in the world and overcome the challenges we face. Happy Diwali, and I hope everyone celebrating has a joyful and peaceful holiday.”

“Diwali speaks to something larger than any one tradition; it speaks to the enduring human belief that light will always conquer darkness, that truth will outlast fear, that unity is our strength, and that hope will endure,” Congressman Fitzpatrick said. “In Pennsylvania’s First District, we are proud to have three incredible Mandirs whose doors and hearts remain open to all, serving as critical community pillars of faith, service, and unity. This resolution honors not only a tradition that uplifts, unites, and endures, but the profound contributions of our Indian-American community to the strength of our district and our nation.”

The full text of the resolution is available here.

ICYMI: Krishnamoorthi Sounding the Alarm on Trump’s Devastating Health-Care Cuts From Chicago’s West Side To Rockford

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi (8th District of Illinois)

SCHAUMBURG, IL – Last week, Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi visited Loretto Hospital in Chicago’s Austin neighborhood and River Bluff Nursing Home in Rockford to highlight how President Trump’s so-called “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” is threatening health care for Illinois families. The law slashes $911 billion from Medicaid, risking coverage for more than 535,000 Illinoisans and putting hospitals, nursing homes, and clinics across the state in jeopardy.

During his visits, Congressman Krishnamoorthi met with health-care workers and administrators who described how shrinking reimbursements are already forcing tough decisions about patient care. At Loretto Hospital — where 83 percent of patients rely on Medicaid — staff warned that cuts could shutter maternal-health and mental-health programs. At River Bluff Nursing Home, caregivers said federal reductions could mean bed closures and longer waitlists for families seeking affordable elder care.

“The so-called ‘One Big Beautiful Bill’ is a cruel betrayal of our seniors and working families — slashing Medicaid, jeopardizing hospitals, and threatening the care that keeps communities strong,” Congressman Krishnamoorthi said. “These cuts were made to bankroll tax breaks for the wealthiest Americans at everyone else’s expense. I’ll keep fighting to protect affordable, quality health care for every Illinoisan.”

Following the visits, major Illinois outlets from Chicago to Rockford covered the Congressman’s warning about Trump’s health-care cuts and his call to extend Affordable Care Act premium tax credits before they expire.

WHAT THEY’RE WATCHING

Chicago — Loretto Hospital:

 

Loretto Hospital in Austin braces for impact from Medicaid cuts: “May have to close these programs”

Loretto Hospital faces financial challenges as shutdown continues

Krishnamoorthi warns of impact of Medicaid cuts in Trump spending plan 

Rockford — River Bluff Nursing Home:

Congressman Krishnamoorthi highlights Medicaid importance at Illinois nursing home 

Krishnamoorthi warns of nursing home risks under Trump’s proposed bill 

WHAT THEY’RE HEARING

Chicago – Loretto Hospital 

Congressman Krishnamoorthi discussed the urgent need to extend ACA tax credits and repeal Trump’s health-care cuts, reaching more than 150,000 listeners.

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Krishnamoorthi Denounces Anti-Indian Hate Speech by Florida Official, Calls for Unity Against Hate and the Climate of Fear Fueled by Trump’s Mass ICE Raids

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi (8th District of Illinois)

SCHAUMBURG, IL – Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi condemned recent remarks by Palm Bay, Florida, City Council Member Chandler Langevin calling for the mass removal of Indian immigrants:

“It’s unacceptable—and dangerous—that in 2025 we’re hearing elected officials call for the mass removal of Indian Americans. This rhetoric echoes the cruelty of Donald Trump’s mass ICE raids and fuels a climate of fear that harms families across our nation.

When hate speech is normalized and communities are scapegoated, our democracy is weakened.

We must stand together across every community against all forms of hate. Protecting our democracy means ensuring everyone can live free from fear and discrimination, no matter their skin color, accent, or country of origin.”

RELEASE: REP. KHANNA REACTS TO SPEAKER JOHNSON CONFIRMING HE WILL ALLOW VOTE ON THE BIPARTISAN EPSTEIN FILES TRANSPARENCY ACT

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

Washington, DC – Today, Representative Ro Khanna (CA-17) released the following statement after Speaker Mike Johnson said he will allow a floor vote on the Epstein Files Transparency Act — Rep. Thomas Massie and Rep. Khanna’s bipartisan bill to release the Epstein files –– once Adelita Grijalva is sworn in and signs the discharge petition: 

“This is a big deal. I appreciate Speaker Johnson making it clear we will get a vote on Rep. Thomas Massie and my bill to release the Epstein files. The advocacy of the survivors is working. Now let’s get Adelita Grijalva sworn in and Congress back to work,” said Rep. Khanna. 

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Transcript: Congressman Crow Outlines His New Vision for American Foreign Policy

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

WASHINGTON — Congressman Jason Crow (D-CO-06), a former Army Ranger and Member of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence and Armed Services Committees, presented his new vision for American foreign policy. A transcript of the speech as delivered is included below.

I’ve been on Capitol Hill for seven years now, in this job, on the Armed Services Committee, the Foreign Affairs Committee, the Intelligence Committee. Have led the bipartisan Veterans caucus, the Army caucus. I’ve done a lot of work in this field. But all of this policy has always brought me back to the start of my career as a teenager, when I first raised my right hand, and took an oath to this country, and at that point, was Private Crow, the lowest ranking person you can be in the military. 

I was at the very receiving end of all the policy that’s made here in this town. Since that time, from Private Crow to Congressman Crow, the world indeed has been turned upside down. All that we had assumed and taken for granted has been thrown into question. The biggest divide that I see right now, and how we view this problem, is those who believe that Donald Trump is the cause of it, versus those who believe that Donald Trump is a symptom of it. 

And that requires looking back over the last 30 years, and looking at it through the lens of the people that I grew up with in a working class town in the Upper Midwest, those who I fought with, and those who I now serve. In those last 30 years, we’ve had over 20 years of failed military interventions, $3 trillion, three million combat tours, over 7000 of our own dead, tens of thousands of others dead, and what’s not in those numbers is the unequal burden that was borne by the working class.

What I learned as a young man is that when people pound their chest and bang the war drums in Washington, D.C. and talk about going to do tough things, they’re not talking about themselves. They’re talking about young kids from towns many of us haven’t heard of that have to pick up rifles, jump into helicopters, get inside tanks, and do the tough stuff. 

Meanwhile, while all of this was happening, the middle class was gutted by NAFTA and free trade and neoliberal economic policies, that were supposed to deliver for everybody, raised the water for all boats, delivered instead, disproportionate impacts. The industrial portions of our country were left behind in many trade deals and automation. Also, we had a pandemic that shattered Americans’ sense of safety, and once again, the impact felt disproportionately. 

It’s one thing to jump on a zoom if you’re in a white collar office job, but most of the people that I represent couldn’t do that. They’re in the service industry, construction, healthcare, and they lost their jobs or had to show up anyway. Also, meanwhile, we have a surging China that is competing against us, and out competing us in many key ways, and the largest land war in Europe. 

All of this to say that the veil has been pierced, and the last decade of elections have made something very clear: Americans simply no longer trust the foreign policy establishment in this country. And they shouldn’t. Because it’s actually failed them in so many remarkable ways.

So this isn’t predominantly a policy discussion. It’s a discussion about trust, about where we are now, but how we’re going to restore trust to get back to having policy discussions with the people that we’re supposed to serve. Because what is very clear, again, is that America wants something very different. I believe that the way that we answer four key questions will determine whether or not people will trust us again and give us the opportunity to serve. 

The first question you should ever ask a Member of Congress before they ever start talking about foreign policy is: are you willing to reclaim your foreign policy powers?

Our Founders believed that Congress had a fundamental role in our foreign policy, from trade to treaties, to war powers, and to appropriations. For decades, Congress has ceded and given up many of those powers. Our Founders knew that these things were too important to be entrusted simply to the Executive because it needed accountability to those closest to the people. And there’s no one closer to the people than members of Congress, who have to go home every weekend and stand before their constituents and answer questions. We saw over the last 25 years Congress giving blank checks to presidents Republican and Democratic Congresses did it, and they did it to Republican and Democratic presidents across the board.

Nobody here can ever tell me that our 25 years of failed foreign military interventions would have ended differently, or sooner, had members of Congress been forced regularly to go to high school gymnasiums, Rotary Clubs, and any other organization in their community, and explain why Americans should give their sons and daughters to war efforts and billions of their hard earned dollars. It absolutely would have ended differently. 

So any member of Congress must be willing to repeal and replace our AUMFs and reinsert itself in our trade and treaty powers. Because if you’re concerned about the bombing of Iran, the bombing of the Houthis, the strikes in the Caribbean, well, Congress is letting that happen. If you think that our counterterrorism strategy in Africa has largely failed, well, Congress could change that. And if you’re troubled by the weaponization of our National Guard across our country and our president claiming to go to war with the American people? Well, Congress could stop that too. So no Member of Congress can legitimately talk about foreign policy unless they’re willing to take that first step. 

The second question, are we willing to follow our own rules? Americans believe in rules. This town loves to talk about the ‘Rules Based International Order.’ First of all, nobody outside this town really understands what that means. But secondly, a lot of Americans just think it’s bullshit. Not the rules, but our unequal application and our inconsistency in following those rules.

I saw very clearly when I was in Iraq and Afghanistan, us making deals with warlords and strongmen. I know our history of aligning, at times, with autocrats because we want to keep oil prices low, we make short-term decision after short-term decision that undermines our credibility, and our ability to actually go to the world and make the case. 

And frankly, there is no more vivid example than the split screen between Ukraine, and the Israel-Gaza war. Ukraine, a just war, a country fighting for its survival and its sovereignty that merited our involvement, and still does, while at the same time us supporting and not being willing to apply our own rules to a war that brought over 60,000 civilian casualties in the Middle East and in Gaza. This town loves to talk about IHL, LOAC [Law of Armed Conflict], National Security Memorandum 20, the Conventional Arms Transfer Policy, Leahy Vetting. These are all tools that could work, that would work if we actually are willing to apply our own standards and live by them. Americans do indeed want rules to avoid chaos and inconsistency, and it starts with following them ourselves. 

The third question, are you willing to take on corruption seriously, both at home and abroad? The Trump administration has rapidly become the most corrupt in American history. Donald Trump is personalizing American power for the benefit of his family and a handful of associates. He has become a predatory pawn shop dealer looking to cut a deal with the next desperate customer who walks through the door. 

Imposing tariffs on Brazil to support an ally, $20 billion bailout for Argentina, Pakistan giving a golf course deal for favorable treatment, hotel deals around the world too countless to even mention today, jets in exchange for security deals, and on and on. All while billions flow into meme coins from unknown foreign investors directly into the pocket of Donald Trump and the Trump family. 

Trump’s doctrine is simple, it’s pay to play for tech oligarchs and strong men, all of whom will support each other and steal our democracy and our self determination from us, so that only they will control politics, the economy, technology, information, and our daily lives. An ambitious anti-corruption agenda at home and abroad must be our second order priority behind recapturing war powers. And if members of Congress aren’t willing to be serious about that, then they can’t be taken seriously by all of you.

The next and final question is, are we willing to open the door to new talent? When I worked in construction, to help put my way through college, you’d start every day with a handshake, but what that handshake actually was, was a callous check. You’re feeling somebody’s hands and asking yourself, are they one of me? Are they one of us? Because more so than how smart you are, or what you may know, people want to be able to trust you. 

It is just true that our foreign policy and national security system has become too insular and out of touch. We cannot run a system that’s responsive and seen by the American people as responsive to their needs if it’s with the same people, who have gone to the same three colleges, most of whom live within 50 miles of an ocean. 

This town loves its policy dinners, its saloons, its retreats, its nice trips. When I first came to Congress and I started to go to these salons and these dinners, it didn’t take me very long to realize it was the same people saying many of the same things. Americans simply don’t see themselves in their leadership anymore. 

It must reflect not only who we are, but how we think. Our ability to turn this around will be directly related to our ability to tap into the talent that this entire country has to offer. And that means mentoring programs. That means reaching into high schools and colleges around the country. It means changing, radically, our security clearance system so people with actual lived experience can still qualify for important jobs.

And it also means creating a diplomacy and national security system that requires for advancement regular tours in the United States to conduct public diplomacy, to go to Kansas City and run a World Affairs Council, to go to Denver and help organize civic organizations focused on the global economy.

A lot has happened in my almost seven years in Congress, but it all comes back to my time as an Arby’s cashier, a construction worker, a paratrooper and a Ranger. In all of those cases, people simply wanted to trust you first. Most of these folks have lost faith in this town, and rightfully so. I share much of that anger and frustration. There is so much that we must do, but we will never be given the chance to do any of it unless we prove that we are willing to build an entirely new system based on fundamental principles. Thank you. 

Congressman Crow Outlines His New Vision for American Foreign Policy

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

WASHINGTON — Today, Congressman Jason Crow (D-CO-06), a former Army Ranger and Member of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence and Armed Services Committees, presented his new vision for American foreign policy.

In remarks delivered at the Center for American Progress (CAP), Congressman Crow offered a new affirmative vision for the future of American global leadership. His speech presented a foreign policy that is rooted in working-class interests and true American values. He discussed a few key pillars, Congress’ role in our foreign policy and the need to reclaim its authority. The implications of America failing to live up to our values on the global stage. The crucial need to root out corruption both at home and abroad. And how we can find and recruit new talent to bolster our foreign policy institutions.  

American Foreign Policy has Neglected the Working Class

“And that requires looking back over the last 30 years and looking at it through the lens of the people that I grew up with in a working-class town in the Upper Midwest, those who I fought with, and those who I now serve. In those last 30 years, we’ve had over 20 years of failed military interventions, $3 trillion, three million combat tours, over 7,000 of our own dead, tens of thousands of others dead, and what’s not in those numbers is the unequal burden that was borne by the working class.”

“Americans simply no longer trust the foreign policy establishment in this country. And they shouldn’t. Because it’s actually failed them in so many remarkable ways.”

Congress’ Role in our Foreign Policy 

“Because if you’re concerned about the bombing of Iran, the bombing of the Houthis, the strikes in the Caribbean, well, Congress is letting that happen. If you think that our counterterrorism strategy in Africa has largely failed, well, Congress could change that. And if you’re troubled by the weaponization of our National Guard across our country and our president claiming to go to war with the American people? Well, Congress could stop that too.”

Living Up to our Own Standards

“I saw very clearly when I was in Iraq and Afghanistan, us making deals with warlords and strongmen. I know our history of aligning, at times, with autocrats because we want to keep oil prices low, we make short-term decision after short-term decision that undermines our credibility, and our ability to actually go to the world and make the case.”

Rooting out Corruption at Home & Abroad 

“Trump’s doctrine is simple, it’s pay to play for tech oligarchs and strong men, all of whom will support each other and steal our democracy and our self-determination from us, so that only they will control politics, the economy, technology, information, and our daily lives.” 

“An ambitious anti-corruption agenda at home and abroad must be our second order priority behind recapturing war powers. And if members of Congress aren’t willing to be serious about that, then they can’t be taken seriously by all of you.”

A Foreign Policy that Represents Every America

“It is just true that our foreign policy and national security system has become too insular and out of touch. We cannot run a system that’s responsive and seen by the American people as responsive to their needs if it’s with the same people, who have gone to the same three colleges, most of whom live within 50 miles of an ocean.”

“It must reflect not only who we are, but how we think. Our ability to turn this around will be directly related to our ability to tap into the talent that this entire country has to offer. And that means mentoring programs. That means reaching into high schools and colleges around the country. It means changing, radically, our security clearance system so people with actual lived experience can still qualify for important jobs.”

As a former Army Ranger, Congressman Crow knows that America’s strength is derived from the strength of its values and has long promoted U.S. global leadership. He has long supported diplomatic efforts to ease tensions around the globe and has strongly spoken out against sending another generation of troops to fight another yet another series of endless conflicts. 

The full speech can be viewed here, and transcript of the speech as delivered is included below:

I’ve been on Capitol Hill for seven years now, in this job, on the Armed Services Committee, the Foreign Affairs Committee, the Intelligence Committee. Have led the bipartisan Veterans caucus, the Army caucus. I’ve done a lot of work in this field. But all of this policy has always brought me back to the start of my career as a teenager, when I first raised my right hand, and took an oath to this country, and at that point, was Private Crow, the lowest ranking person you can be in the military. 

I was at the very receiving end of all the policy that’s made here in this town. Since that time, from Private Crow to Congressman Crow, the world indeed has been turned upside down. All that we had assumed and taken for granted has been thrown into question. The biggest divide that I see right now, and how we view this problem, is those who believe that Donald Trump is the cause of it, versus those who believe that Donald Trump is a symptom of it. 

And that requires looking back over the last 30 years and looking at it through the lens of the people that I grew up with in a working-class town in the Upper Midwest, those who I fought with, and those who I now serve. In those last 30 years, we’ve had over 20 years of failed military interventions, $3 trillion, three million combat tours, over 7000 of our own dead, tens of thousands of others dead, and what’s not in those numbers is the unequal burden that was borne by the working class.

What I learned as a young man is that when people pound their chest and bang the war drums in Washington, D.C. and talk about going to do tough things, they’re not talking about themselves. They’re talking about young kids from towns many of us haven’t heard of that have to pick up rifles, jump into helicopters, get inside tanks, and do the tough stuff. 

Meanwhile, while all of this was happening, the middle class was gutted by NAFTA and free trade and neoliberal economic policies, that were supposed to deliver for everybody, raised the water for all boats, delivered instead, disproportionate impacts. The industrial portions of our country were left behind in many trade deals and automation. Also, we had a pandemic that shattered Americans’ sense of safety, and once again, the impact felt disproportionately. 

It’s one thing to jump on a zoom if you’re in a white-collar office job, but most of the people that I represent couldn’t do that. They’re in the service industry, construction, healthcare, and they lost their jobs or had to show up anyway. Also, meanwhile, we have a surging China that is competing against us, and out competing us in many keyways, and the largest land war in Europe. 

All of this to say that the veil has been pierced, and the last decade of elections have made something very clear: Americans simply no longer trust the foreign policy establishment in this country. And they shouldn’t. Because it’s actually failed them in so many remarkable ways.

So, this isn’t predominantly a policy discussion. It’s a discussion about trust, about where we are now, but how we’re going to restore trust to get back to having policy discussions with the people that we’re supposed to serve. Because what is very clear, again, is that America wants something very different. I believe that the way that we answer four key questions will determine whether or not people will trust us again and give us the opportunity to serve. 

The first question you should ever ask a Member of Congress before they ever start talking about foreign policy is: are you willing to reclaim your foreign policy powers?

Our Founders believed that Congress had a fundamental role in our foreign policy, from trade to treaties, to war powers, and to appropriations. For decades, Congress has ceded and given up many of those powers. Our Founders knew that these things were too important to be entrusted simply to the Executive because it needed accountability to those closest to the people. And there’s no one closer to the people than members of Congress, who have to go home every weekend and stand before their constituents and answer questions. We saw over the last 25 years Congress giving blank checks to presidents Republican and Democratic Congresses did it, and they did it to Republican and Democratic presidents across the board.

Nobody here can ever tell me that our 25 years of failed foreign military interventions would have ended differently, or sooner, had members of Congress been forced regularly to go to high school gymnasiums, Rotary Clubs, and any other organization in their community, and explain why Americans should give their sons and daughters to war efforts and billions of their hard earned dollars. It absolutely would have ended differently. 

So, any member of Congress must be willing to repeal and replace our AUMFs and reinsert itself in our trade and treaty powers. Because if you’re concerned about the bombing of Iran, the bombing of the Houthis, the strikes in the Caribbean, well, Congress is letting that happen. If you think that our counterterrorism strategy in Africa has largely failed, well, Congress could change that. And if you’re troubled by the weaponization of our National Guard across our country and our president claiming to go to war with the American people? Well, Congress could stop that too. So, no Member of Congress can legitimately talk about foreign policy unless they’re willing to take that first step. 

The second question, are we willing to follow our own rules? Americans believe in rules. This town loves to talk about the ‘Rules Based International Order.’ First of all, nobody outside this town really understands what that means. But secondly, a lot of Americans just think it’s bullshit. Not the rules, but our unequal application and our inconsistency in following those rules.

I saw very clearly when I was in Iraq and Afghanistan, us making deals with warlords and strongmen. I know our history of aligning, at times, with autocrats because we want to keep oil prices low, we make short-term decision after short-term decision that undermines our credibility, and our ability to actually go to the world and make the case. 

And frankly, there is no more vivid example than the split screen between Ukraine, and the Israel-Gaza war. Ukraine, a just war, a country fighting for its survival and its sovereignty that merited our involvement, and still does, while at the same time us supporting and not being willing to apply our own rules to a war that brought over 60,000 civilian casualties in the Middle East and in Gaza. This town loves to talk about IHL, LOAC [Law of Armed Conflict], National Security Memorandum 20, the Conventional Arms Transfer Policy, Leahy Vetting. These are all tools that could work, that would work if we actually are willing to apply our own standards and live by them. Americans do indeed want rules to avoid chaos and inconsistency, and it starts with following them ourselves. 

The third question, are you willing to take on corruption seriously, both at home and abroad? The Trump administration has rapidly become the most corrupt in American history. Donald Trump is personalizing American power for the benefit of his family and a handful of associates. He has become a predatory pawn shop dealer looking to cut a deal with the next desperate customer who walks through the door. 

Imposing tariffs on Brazil to support an ally, $20 billion bailout for Argentina, Pakistan giving a golf course deal for favorable treatment, hotel deals around the world too countless to even mention today, jets in exchange for security deals, and on and on. All while billions flow into meme coins from unknown foreign investors directly into the pocket of Donald Trump and the Trump family.

Trump’s doctrine is simple, it’s pay to play for tech oligarchs and strong men, all of whom will support each other and steal our democracy and our self-determination from us, so that only they will control politics, the economy, technology, information, and our daily lives. An ambitious anti-corruption agenda at home and abroad must be our second order priority behind recapturing war powers. And if members of Congress aren’t willing to be serious about that, then they can’t be taken seriously by all of you.

The next and final question is, are we willing to open the door to new talent? When I worked in construction, to help put my way through college, you’d start every day with a handshake, but what that handshake actually was, was a callous check. You’re feeling somebody’s hands and asking yourself, are they one of me? Are they one of us? Because more so than how smart you are, or what you may know, people want to be able to trust you. 

It is just true that our foreign policy and national security system has become too insular and out of touch. We cannot run a system that’s responsive and seen by the American people as responsive to their needs if it’s with the same people, who have gone to the same three colleges, most of whom live within 50 miles of an ocean. 

This town loves its policy dinners, it’s saloons, it’s retreats, it’s nice trips. When I first came to Congress and I started to go to these salons and these dinners, it didn’t take me very long to realize it was the same people saying many of the same things. Americans simply don’t see themselves in their leadership anymore. 

It must reflect not only who we are, but how we think. Our ability to turn this around will be directly related to our ability to tap into the talent that this entire country has to offer. And that means mentoring programs. That means reaching into high schools and colleges around the country. It means changing, radically, our security clearance system so people with actual lived experience can still qualify for important jobs.

And it also means creating a diplomacy and national security system that requires for advancement regular tours in the United States to conduct public diplomacy, to go to Kansas City and run a World Affairs Council, to go to Denver and help organize civic organizations focused on the global economy.

A lot has happened in my almost seven years in Congress, but it all comes back to my time as an Arby’s cashier, a construction worker, a paratrooper and a Ranger. In all of those cases, people simply wanted to trust you first. Most of these folks have lost faith in this town, and rightfully so. I share much of that anger and frustration. There is so much that we must do, but we will never be given the chance to do any of it unless we prove that we are willing to build an entirely new system based on fundamental principles. Thank you. 

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Trahan, Wyden Seek Clarification on Federal Access to UNOS Organ Transplant Technology

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Lori Trahan (D-MA-03)

WASHINGTON, DC – Today, Congresswoman Lori Trahan (MA-03), a member of the House Energy and Commerce Committee’s Health Subcommittee, and Senate Committee on Finance Ranking Member Ron Wyden (D-OR) sent a letter to the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS) requesting clarification regarding statements made by the organization’s CEO at the House Energy & Commerce Oversight & Investigations Subcommittee hearing titled “Ensuring Patient Safety: Oversight of the U.S. Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network.” The letter seeks detailed responses to questions about federal access to the technology systems that support the U.S. Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network (OPTN).

During the July hearing, UNOS leadership stated that the organization had never obstructed federal officials’ access to its systems. However, testimony from Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) officials during the same hearing and public reporting suggest otherwise, including a 2022 report that UNOS demanded a $55 million fee for government access to its taxpayer-funded technology.

“Technology is the backbone of the organ transplant system. When federal officials cannot fully access the systems they fund, it puts patient safety at risk,” the lawmakers wrote. “Federal agencies should have the ability to oversee and ensure the integrity of the systems they pay for. We are seeking clarity from UNOS so Congress can fully understand whether the OPTN’s technology is being appropriately managed in the public interest.”

The letter requests UNOS provide detailed documentation and answers to questions by November 1, 2025, including:

Current contracts with HRSA related to OPTN technology.

Rules, requirements, and standard operating procedures governing federal access to UNOS systems.

Correspondence with federal officials regarding access to UNOS technology since January 2021.

Details on any restrictions UNOS has imposed on federal access to its code, data, or documentation.

UNOS’s plans to ensure federal agencies have control over OPTN technology, consistent with the bipartisan SHARE-IT Act.

A copy of the letter sent today can be accessed HERE.

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Radioactive Shrimp Should Not Be on the Menu

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

LAFAYETTE, LA – Congressman Clay Higgins (R-LA) delivered a letter to President Trump requesting a pause on foreign shrimp imports due to reports of toxic, radioactive product entering the United States.  

Congressman Higgins wrote, “Radioactive and contaminated shrimp in our country’s grocery stores is a significant public health threat. I have long maintained that imported seafood can be dangerous, and that stronger preventive measures are necessary to ensure tainted products do not reach American consumers.”

“I recommend that you use executive authority to ensure the integrity of our food supply by implementing a pause on shrimp imports until the FDA can guarantee that contaminated and radioactive products are not entering the country. Every shipment of seafood reaching our shores should meet the highest American standards of safety,” continued Congressman Higgins.

Read the full letter here.