WATCH: At Boston MLK Breakfast, Pressley Honors King, Calls for Collective Resistance Against Hate and Authoritarianism

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

“In the midst of this anti-Blackness on steroids, attacks on Black people, Black bodies, Black votes, Black history, Black power and progress, what calms me is knowing that somebody already wrote the blueprint for our survival.”

“Though we find ourselves at an acute crossroads as a nation and as a people, I believe what Dr. King said, ‘right temporarily defeated, is stronger than evil triumphant.’”

BOSTON – Today, at Boston’s 56th Annual Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Breakfast, Congresswoman Ayanna Pressley (MA-07) delivered powerful and deeply personal remarks in which she honored the life and legacy of Dr. King, the enduring strength of Black communities, and the urgent imperative to resist authoritarianism and hate with collective action. Congresswoman Pressley invoked the story of her great-grandmother, Mamma Eliza, whose handmade quilts became a metaphor for Black wisdom and protection, and discussed how Dr. King and our ancestors left us the blueprint for our survival.

A full transcript of the Congresswoman’s remarks is available below, and the video is available here.

Transcript: Rep. Pressley’s Remarks at the 56th Annual Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Breakfast in Boston
January 19, 2026
Boston, MA

Good morning. Y’all, it feels good to be home. 

Good to be in the Massachusetts 7th, good to be in Boston, the city where the union of Martin and Coretta was first forged, a union, a love, a radical Black love that birthed not only four children, Martin, Bernice, Yolanda and Dexter, but gave birth to a movement.

Now last night, we celebrated the divine embrace of Coretta and Martin, an embrace that laid the foundation for a divine assignment. 

As I travel the country and our Commonwealth, I love reminding folks, “before there was Atlanta, before there was Montgomery, there was Boston.” 

And of course, Boston is no stranger to making history. This 50 Year breakfast tradition is historic, both in its inception and the longstanding nature of it. 

Thank you to these two dedicated faith houses. Thank you to the Memorial Breakfast Committee. Thank you to our volunteers, and thank you to our banquet wait staff. And finally, thank you to our keynote speaker, my dear sister friend, the singular Nikole Hannah Jones, who’s also so very fly.

Now, it is certainly a humbling honor and intimidating prospect to be between the genius of Miss Hannah Jones and the award ceremony for our gifted young people in today’s program. 

A wise man once advised when addressing a crowd, “be brief, be sincere, and be seated.” And then church folk in advance of today’s program told me, “Congresswoman, you’ve got five minutes,” seriously. Well, y’all, I better get to it.

Now, do me a favor if you’ve heard some of this before, just pretend it’s the first time. Just like I need you to pretend like this is the first time you’ve seen this outfit. 

Now, as a child, my mother would send me down south to Selma, Alabama to spend time with my great grandmother, Mamma Eliza. She chopped her own firewood, ate what she grew in her garden, kept a snuff tobacco spit can next to her recliner, and was swift with a switch on your behind with a hint of disrespect. 

Now, Mamma Eliza wasn’t formally educated beyond the sixth grade, I don’t think, but she was smart, strong and God fearing. She was nearly six feet tall, but stood even taller to me because she was proud. 

When I returned home from vacation Bible school while I snacked on her homemade whole cakes, y’all don’t hear me, she would rock in her recliner, quilting and humming. I would stare in awe at the nimbleness of her hands, and as an inquisitive child, I peppered her with questions about her life and about the story behind each square she was stitching together. 

When she would finish a quilt, I would wrap it around my shoulders like a cape. I felt as if the life behind each patch was being transmitted to me and I was drawing superhero strength, safety, and freedom from its patchwork covering. I can feel the essence of those moments now. I felt proud and loved wrapped up in Mamma Eliza’s quilt. 

Now, the walls of Mamma Eliza’s Selma home were adorned with our family photos spanning years, and one faded eight by 10, black and white portrait of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. 

It was appropriate that he was featured among our family, a literal reminder that Martin was ours. He was us, his courage, his brilliance, his faith and pride, all a powerful and beautiful reflection of us.

Family, I know these are chaotic and uncertain times. It is easy to find oneself consumed by the cruelty and dysfunction of it all, but it is essential that we not allow despair to take over. Now, true, there are people who mean our collective humanity harm, who mean Black folks harm, who animate their hate through dangerous rhetoric and policy violence.

And yet I’m no longer asking myself, how low can they go?

Folk who fear DEI more than a dictator. Folk who speak with a mouthful of scriptures but walk with a heart of hate. Folk who claim to be patriots but lead insurrections. Folk who sow chaos, terrorize communities in the name of so-called public safety. 

No, I’m no longer asking how low can they go, only how hard can I and can we fight? And fight we must. 

History has already shown us that appeasement does not work. The only way to beat a dictator is with defiance. 

I don’t know about y’all, but in the midst of this anti-Blackness on steroids, attacks on Black people, Black bodies, Black votes, Black history, Black power and progress, what calms me is knowing that somebody already wrote the blueprint for our survival. 

The blueprint is written in our elders’ strategies for change like that of Byron Rushing and Frieda Garcia and Karen Holmes Ward. 

It’s written in the marches and the boycotts and the mobilizations of our ancestors. 

The blueprint is written in the words of Dr. King, who instructed us, especially our young people, like today’s MLK scholars and art awardees, to have a belief in one’s own dignity, in your worth, in your own somebodiness.

Your life matters. It has ultimate significance. Dr. King said “you should never be ashamed of your color. You are Black and beautiful.”

The blueprint is written and the prayers sent up and the blood that was shed.

So you see, I don’t care what the insecure man with a small mind, small heart—and he hates when I say this—even smaller hands, has to say at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, who thinks he is a king.

I care about the words of Dr. Martin Luther King, the man, the Black man, who was an original architect of Black Lives Matter, who wrote the blueprint for the Civil Rights Movement, for me, for our survival. 

250 years of enslavement, we are still here, covered by our ancestors’ quilts. 

88 years of Jim Crow, we are still here covered by our ancestors’ quilts.

Pandemics and insurrections, we are still here covered by our ancestors’ quilts.

During and after the current occupant of the Oval Office, we will still be here.

Family, we are so much more than resilient. We are miracles manifest. 

Though we find ourselves at an acute crossroads as a nation and as a people, I believe what Dr. King said, “right temporarily defeated, is stronger than evil triumphant.”

Now it is no secret that we are being pulled apart at the seams all around us, but there will come a time when we will get to the other side, and we will need to do that radical reimagining and that radical work of Reconstruction.

And we will need, just like my Mamma Eliza, some master quilters that know how to piece together something beautiful from what’s been discarded. 

As I close, I’m reminded of the January 6th insurrection. When I was on the floor in the dark, barricaded in my office, and the voices were getting louder and closer, I remember many, many hours later, an image of Black custodians in the U.S. Capitol cleaning up the mess left behind by this white supremacist mob, wearing t-shirts with antisemitic slogans, brandishing Confederate flags, erecting nooses on the west lawn of the Capitol.

Black custodians cleaning up the mess left behind by this white supremacist mob. It was as literal as it was figurative, because as Black people, we have been doing that. 

But because of those Black custodians, the work that they did made it possible for us to return to the House, to do our business, to ratify those election results. 

Their actions were that of patriots, but we have always been patriots, innovators, defenders of democracy. 

Black people, put on your ancestors’ quilts and keep fighting for freedom and justice. 

Happy Martin Luther King Day!

House Foreign Affairs Ranking Member Meeks Cautions Against U.S. Military Strikes on Iran

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Gregory W Meeks (5th District of New York)

Washington, D.C. – Representative Gregory W. Meeks, Ranking Member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, today issued a statement urging the Trump administration to not undermine the protest movement in Iran by using military force, which he argued would result in ramifications far beyond the protests.

“I stand in solidarity with the Iranian people, who are making their voices heard in opposition to a brutal regime. U.S. military action taken under the premise of helping these protesters risks doing the opposite: silencing an organic movement, strengthening the regime’s narrative, and inflicting civilian harm. Any lasting change in Iran will come from the courage of the Iranian people marching for dignity and freedoms, not from U.S. military strikes.

“The Iranian regime is a brutal, corrupt, and repressive government that has for decades terrorized its own people and destabilized the region. It is a regime that deserves to be replaced. But history is clear: the United States has never achieved sustainable regime change through airstrikes alone. 

“As the administration weighs its options, Congress must be fully consulted. The American people deserve clear answers about whether U.S. forces in the region are prepared for potential Iranian retaliation, whether our diplomats and service members could be placed at greater risk, and whether our allies—particularly Israel—are fully coordinated with and prepared to defend against possible missile attacks. Most importantly, the administration should make clear how military action is in the interest of the American people who voted against more reckless foreign wars.

“At a moment when the United States is already stretched globally—responding to crises in Ukraine, Gaza, of its own making in Venezuela, and elsewhere—we must be honest about the risks of escalation and the real possibility of a regional conflict spiraling out of control.

“I urge restraint and a return to a strategy that reflects our values, our constitutional responsibilities, and the hard lessons of history. The most effective way to stand with the Iranian people is through support that empowers Iranians themselves.” 

House Foreign Affairs Ranking Member Meeks Slams Trump Administration Plan to Shutter Camp As Sayliyah

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Gregory W Meeks (5th District of New York)

Washington, D.C. – Representative Gregory W. Meeks, Ranking Member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, today issued a statement following the State Department’s notification to the committee of its intent to close Camp As Sayliyah (CAS) in Qatar, which has supported the safe relocation of our vetted Afghan allies, by the end of September. CAS has served as a critical transit site supporting the safe relocation of vetted Afghan allies fleeing Taliban persecution. 

“CAS has functioned as a critical ‘lily pad’ for vetted Afghan partners who risked their lives alongside U.S. forces and diplomats. Closing CAS is the latest reckless step by the Trump administration to dismantle every remaining pathway for these allies to safely relocate in the United States. It is a profound betrayal of those who stood with us in Afghanistan, and of America’s word.

“Republicans spent years insisting that the United States has a moral obligation to protect Afghans who supported our mission. Now, under President Trump, those same voices are either silent or complicit as the administration slams the door on our allies and walks away from American promises Republicans once claimed as sacrosanct.

“I urge the administration to resume the processing of Afghan Special Immigrant Visas, reopen the U.S. Refugee Admissions Program and other relevant pathways, and ensure that no Afghan at CAS is involuntarily sent to Afghanistan or another third country. The United States must honor our solemn commitment to help those who supported our mission in Afghanistan during our twenty-year war there. The world is watching.” 

Congresswoman Torres Demands Immediate Release of Jose Oleaz, A Pomona Father Detained by ICE

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Norma Torres (35th District of California)

January 17, 2026

Washington, D.C. – Today, Congresswoman Norma Torres (CA-35) is demanding the immediate release of Jose Oleaz, a Pomona resident and father to his 13-year-old nephew, after ICE detained him during a raid this week, leaving a child who has already suffered devastating loss without the father who has been raising him.

Jose Oleaz has lived in the United States for more than 20 years, works steadily, and poses no threat to public safety. Yet ICE detained him anyway, despite knowing he is the primary parent to a minor child.

“This is wrong, we cannot keep letting ICE terrorize our communities,” said Congresswoman Norma Torres. “ICE detained an innocent father and ripped him away from a 13-year-old child who depends on him for safety, stability, and love. This child has already endured unimaginable loss, and now the government is inflicting even more trauma. ICE should be focused on finding and removing people who pose real threats to public safety, not targeting hardworking fathers who are doing everything right, working day and night to care for their families and keep their children safe.”

Bryan Gonzalez, lost his aunt two years ago. After that tragedy, Oleaz stepped in as Bryan’s father, raising him.

ICE detained Oleaz on Wednesday during a raid in Pomona, ignoring the predictable harm this action would cause to a child who has already endured trauma. Oleaz is the family’s primary breadwinner and also cares for his father, who is battling cancer. He has worked for years at the same landscaping company and is described by family members, educators, and community leaders as responsible, hardworking, and deeply devoted to his family.

“ICE has full discretion to release fathers like Jose Oleaz,” Torres continued. “There is no justification for detaining an innocent man and traumatizing a child. Mr. Oleaz must be released immediately and reunited with his family. Children should never be collateral damage. Bryan deserves his father, and Jose Oleaz deserves to be home.”

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Pappas Announces New Legislation to Reduce Energy Costs

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Chris Pappas (D-NH)

Pappas’s legislation would improve energy delivery, improve existing assistance and weatherization programs, and provide direct relief to consumers

Today Congressman Chris Pappas (NH-01) unveiled new legislation to tackle Granite Staters’ rising energy costs. His bipartisan Energy Burden Tax Credit Act, introduced with Congressman Mike Lawler (NY-17) would provide a refundable tax credit to families struggling with high energy costs, saving households hundreds of dollars a year on energy.

“No family should ever wonder if they can afford to keep their home warm during the winter months,” said Congressman Pappas. “I’ve heard from a constituent in Dover who told me that her December electric bill was the highest she has ever received, a household in Ossipee whose bill increased by over a hundred dollars last month, and a family on the Seacoast who spend nearly as much on energy as they do on their mortgage each month. That’s why I’m introducing several bipartisan bills today that create a new energy tax credit to put money back in people’s pockets, help military families weatherize their homes, and improve energy transmission so that we can bring down energy costs at the source.”

New Hampshire has some of the highest energy costs in the nation and for lower and middle income families, including the 25% of New Hampshire households that earn less than $50,000 each year, energy costs pose a significant burden. Pappas’s bill provides individuals and households who spend more than 3% of their income on energy with a refundable tax credit equal to 75% of the excess amount they spend on energy. 

Under Pappas’s legislation a family in New Hampshire that makes $50,000 and pays the average cost of energy in New Hampshire, about $2,676 per year ($223 a month), would receive a refundable credit of $882, effectively reducing their energy costs by a third. 

Pappas is also introducing the following new legislation today:

  • His bipartisan Transmission Facilitation Program Reauthorization Act, which would restore DOE’s program providing states and municipalities with federal support for projects developing new transmission lines or upgrading existing transmission lines, helping accelerate project timelines and increase grid capacity. 

  • His Heroes Home Energy Savings Act, which would reauthorize and increase funding for the Weatherization Assistance Program Enhancement and Innovation Grant to spur innovation in weatherization and provide active duty and reserve military families with grants to help lower their energy costs. 

Pappas is a fierce advocate for efforts that lower energy costs for Granite Staters and programs that help low-income families pay their bills, and has repeatedly called on both Democratic and Republican administrations to stop the export of oil to foreign adversaries and protect and strengthen the LIHEAP program, including successfully pressing the Department of Health and Human Services to take all necessary steps to ensure that the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) funds were distributed to the states by November 30, 2025. He has also previously introduced, cosponsored, or called for the passage of the following legislation: 

Following Push From NH’s Congressional Delegation, Trump Administration Reverses Devastating Addiction Prevention Grant Cuts

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Chris Pappas (D-NH)

Congressman Chris Pappas (NH-01), Senator Maggie Hassan (NH), Senator Jeanne Shaheen (NH), and Congresswoman Maggie Goodlander (NH-02) have successfully pushed the Trump Administration to reverse its massive, sudden, and unexplained cuts to critical mental health and addiction prevention grant programs.

On Wednesday, organizations across New Hampshire began to receive grant cancellation notices from the Department of Health and Human Services, which is led by Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. The New Hampshire Congressional Delegation quickly pressed Secretary Kennedy to reverse the cancellations, writing in a letter to him on Wednesday, that this funding “makes it possible for community-based organizations across the state to improve youth mental health, prevent overdoses, and support our first responders.”

Yesterday, under pressure from New Hampshire’s Congressional Delegation and people across the country, the Administration began reinstating this critical funding for New Hampshire organizations.

“While I am relieved these grants for mental health, addiction, and recovery services in New Hampshire have been reinstated thanks to our advocacy, I remain deeply troubled by this administration’s ongoing attempts to cruelly rip away vital resources from Granite Staters,” said Congressman Pappas. “No community is untouched by the addiction and mental health crises. We are finally starting to see progress in this fight in New Hampshire, so I will do everything I can to make sure the administration doesn’t break its promise to our communities.”

“The chaos and uncertainty that the Trump Administration is causing for our first responders, health care providers, and others who are trying to serve the public has serious consequences for the health and safety of our communities,” said Senator Hassan. “Thanks to the quick, bipartisan outcry over these cuts, this reckless decision by the Trump Administration has been reversed. I will continue to call out and hold the Trump Administration accountable when it puts Granite Staters at risk.” 

“I’m relieved to hear that the Trump Administration may restore the announced cuts to substance use and mental health programs across New Hampshire and the country. If true, then the Administration has heard our calls and quickly reversed course on its outrageous, misguided decision. This never should have happened in the first place, and had the Administration carried out its initial plan it would have had a devastating effect on the fight to address the substance use and mental health crises in New Hampshire—which is why we immediately called on Secretary Kennedy to reconsider,” said Senator Shaheen.

“Secretary Kennedy’s random assault on federal grants that are genuine lifelines for Granite Staters of all ages in every corner of our state was as senseless as it was reckless,” said Congresswoman Goodlander. “Tackling our state’s mental health crisis is a mission that unites us as Americans, and the last thing our healthcare providers and first responders on the frontlines of this effort need is the kind of confusion and chaos that we saw this week. Secretary Kennedy needs to go and these random and senseless attacks on life-saving funding promised to New Hampshire need to end.”

Pappas Provisions to Strengthen Postal Service Pass House of Representatives

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Chris Pappas (D-NH)

The bipartisan measures would address rural delivery delays and harmful closures of post offices and processing facilities

Congressman Chris Pappas (NH-01), a founding member of the Congressional Postal Service Caucus, announced that three of his provisions to strengthen the United States Postal Service (USPS) passed the House of Representatives as part of the Fiscal Year 2026 Financial Services and General Government (FSGG) report. The language would address top issues impacting mail delivery for rural communities, including USPS plans to limit the number of times mail is picked up from rural post offices, to consolidate processing facilities, and to close local post offices. 

“The U.S. Postal Service provides an essential public service, and chronic mail delays impact everything from people’s health to the success of our small businesses,” said Congressman Pappas. “USPS must improve service, not make it worse. I fought for these provisions to prevent harmful facility downsizing and improve and safeguard mail service for communities across New Hampshire, and I’m glad that they have passed the House. I’ll continue to support efforts that strengthen mail service and delivery.”

Specifically, Pappas’s provisions that passed in the FSGG report are: 

  • A recommendation that the USPS reevaluate its Regional Transportation Optimization (RTO) plan to ensure that rural Americans do not experience further mail delays. The RTO plan limits the number of times mail is picked up from post offices more than fifty miles away from Regional Processing and Distribution Centers.
  • A recommendation that the USPS halt any realignment, consolidation, or partial consolidation of processing or logistics facilities that provide services to postal districts that at any point over the past calendar year have failed to meet 93 percent on-time delivery for two-day single-piece First Class mail and 90.3 percent on-time delivery for three-to-five-day First Class mail.
  • A recommendation that the USPS halt any plans to close any post office if that post office serves more than 15,000 people or if there is not another post office within 15 miles. 

In 2024, in response to USPS’s announcement that it planned to close the Manchester USPS Processing and Distribution Center, Pappas worked alongside a bipartisan group of his House colleagues and the New Hampshire delegation to call on then United States Postmaster General Louis DeJoy to reverse course on these plans. Heeding Pappas and his colleagues’ calls, USPS paused the implementation of proposed changes to the Manchester facility in May 2024.

Background:

Congressman Pappas is a strong advocate for the U.S. Postal Service and ensuring Granite Staters receive fast, reliable mail and package delivery. He has introduced the bipartisan Postal Suspension Transparency Act to bring transparency to the postal emergency suspension process and ensure access to mail during any temporary post office closure. Earlier this year, he helped introduce the bipartisan Protect Postal Performance Act to prevent USPS from downsizing facilities in underserved areas, provide oversight over modifications to delivery schedules, and increase public transparency. He has also consistently pushed for passage of the bipartisan Porch Pirates Act, which would increase penalties for package theft by so-called ‘porch pirates.’

In the 117th Congress, Pappas helped pass the bipartisan Postal Service Reform Act of 2022which was signed into law, and made urgently needed reforms to ensure the USPS’s longevity. 

Krishnamoorthi Statement on Upcoming DHS Appropriations, Future of Trump’s ICE

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

SCHAUMBURG, IL—Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi issued the following statement today:

“We must abolish Trump’s ICE. I will not support one more dollar for ICE as long as this agency—operating without oversight and accountability—continues to kill and injure our neighbors. We saw what they did to Renée Good. We saw how they acted in Chicago. Secretary Noem must immediately testify before our Oversight Committee about ICE’s impunity and the dangerous policies that enabled these tragedies.”

Congressman Krishnamoorthi Introduces First Home Affordability Act to Help Working Families Buy Their First Home

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

Legislation targets upfront costs as more than 75 percent of homes remain out of reach for typical buyers

WASHINGTON — Today, Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi (D-IL) introduced the First Home Affordability Act, legislation to help first-time homebuyers, especially working and middle-class families in Illinois, overcome the biggest barrier to homeownership: upfront costs. With more than 75 percent of homes on the market unaffordable to a typical household, many families who could manage a monthly mortgage are locked out before they ever get a chance to buy. The First Home Affordability Act would create a refundable tax credit during the first five years of homeownership, helping families stabilize their finances, build equity, and put down roots in their communities.

“For many Illinois families, the cost of buying a home has been pushed out of reach by surging housing prices,” Congressman Krishnamoorthi said. “My legislation, the First Home Affordability Act, creates a refundable tax credit for first-time homebuyers, helping break down that barrier and giving working families a fair shot to achieve the American Dream of building a middle-class life.”

What the First Home Affordability Act Does

  • Creates a refundable tax credit of up to $25,000 for qualified first-time homebuyers, delivered over the first five years of ownership, with up to $5,000 per year.

  • Provides assistance equal to 10 percent of the home’s purchase price up to $25,000.

  • Targets middle-class families, with the credit phased down based on local Area Median Income.

  • Applies only to buyers purchasing a home as their primary residence, promoting long-term ownership.

Additional Support for Community Workers

  • First responders, K-12 teachers, and childcare workers may access the full $25,000 credit in the first year.

  • Eligibility requires the profession to be the buyer’s primary occupation at the time of purchase.

Chairman Hudson Leads C&T Subcommittee Markup of Six Bills to Improve Public Safety Communications

Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative Richard Hudson (NC-08)

WASHINGTON, D.C. – On Thursday, Congressman Richard Hudson (NC-09), Chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Communications and Technology, led a subcommittee markup on six bills to strengthen public safety communications, improve emergency alerts, and modernize how Americans reach help in a crisis.

“Upgrading our nation’s call centers to NG911 technology is crucial for public safety,” said Rep. Hudson. “This internet protocol-based system will open the door to advanced tools for both the public and our first responders.” 

The markup featured Congressman Hudson’s Next Generation 9-1-1 Act, which helps communities upgrade and coordinate modern 9-1-1 technology systems nationwide.

Bills under consideration included:

  • H.R. 6505, Next Generation 9-1-1 Act (Reps. Hudson and Carter–LA) – Supports further deployment and coordination of Next Generation 9-1-1.
  • H.R. 5200, Emergency Reporting Act (Reps. Matsui and Bilirakis) – Requires FCC reporting after activation of the Disaster Information Reporting System and improves network outage reporting.
  • H.R. 5201, Kari’s Law Reporting Act (Reps. Matsui and Bilirakis) – Directs the FCC to publish a report on implementation of Kari’s Law.
  • H.R. 7022, Mystic Alerts Act (Reps. Pfluger and Fletcher) – Directs the FCC to initiate a rulemaking to establish standards and protocols to facilitate satellite alerting capabilities for providers that transmit emergency alerts.
  • H.R. 1519, Public Safety Communications Act (Rep. Cammack) – Provides statutory authority for NTIA’s Office of Public Safety Communications to support public safety communications efforts.
  • H.R. 2076, LuLu’s Law (Rep. Palmer) – Directs the FCC to issue an order explicitly permitting wireless emergency alerts to mobile phones in the event of a shark attack.

A link to the markup items is available at: Subcommittee Markup of Six Bills | Committee Repository | U.S. House of Representatives

Markup Details:

WHAT: Subcommittee on Communications and Technology Markup – Consideration of Six Bills

DATE: Thursday, January 15, 2026

TIME: 9:00 AM ET

LOCATION: 2123 Rayburn House Office Building