Jayapal Statement on Lack of Humanitarian Aid, Genocide in Gaza

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Pramila Jayapal (7th District of Washington)

SEATTLE, WA — U.S. Representative Pramila Jayapal (WA-07) released the following statement on the current situation in Gaza:

“Each day, month after month, we in America are witnesses to, and complicit in, horrific and shocking images coming from Gaza. The population has been systematically starved, civilian infrastructure has been destroyed, and areas designated as ‘safe’ have been bombed. In order to generate the massive shift we need in U.S. policy to stop what is happening and to immediately ensure humanitarian aid into Gaza, we must confront hard truths. I believe it is time to name that the government of Israel is committing genocide in Gaza. 

“The word genocide was codified by the Genocide Convention in 1948 in direct response to the Holocaust – an atrocity in which six million Jewish people and millions of others were systematically and horrifically murdered, destroying Jewish communities across Europe. The Genocide Convention was ratified by the United States under President Ronald Reagan in 1988, and the purpose was to distinguish it from the actions of other parties so that actors can step in to protect lives when there is a risk of genocide. The Convention identifies both intent and actions as part of the determination.

“In Gaza since October 7th, more than 60,000 Palestinians have been killed, including over 870 infants, and nearly 150,000 have been injured. Hundreds have died from malnutrition as humanitarian aid has been blocked by the Israeli Government or only offered at limited and dangerously militarized distribution sites. Large numbers of Palestinians have been shot at by Israel Defense Forces (IDF) soldiers even as they attempt to get food from designated sites. Ninety percent of the population in Gaza has been displaced from their homes and communities, forced to repeatedly flee to often unsafe and unsanitary conditions. We have also seen the repeated and indiscriminate destruction of civilian infrastructure, including homes, schools and universities, hospitals, religious sites, and farmland, making it nearly impossible for Palestinians to reconstitute as a group, a key factor of genocide. Top Israeli officials have repeatedly made the intent of these systematic actions clear, referring to the Palestinian people as ‘human animals,’ repeating that ‘there are no innocents in Gaza,’ or advocating for the complete relocation of the entire Palestinian population, essentially an ethnic cleansing.

“The United States is Israel’s largest supplier of arms, providing the Government of Israel billions of dollars in military aid. We have been derelict in not applying our own domestic laws to these military shipments and ignoring international humanitarian laws. This makes us complicit in this genocide. Now we must do everything in our power to uphold our legal obligations by refusing to fund weapons of war to the Government of Israel and by using all our leverage and diplomatic expertise to bring an end to this war and achieve a durable peace for Israelis and Palestinians.

“Recently, more and more prominent voices, including pre-eminent Israeli and Jewish American experts on the Holocaust and on genocide, have determined that what is happening is genocide. After conducting in-depth field research, several Israeli human rights organizations have done the same. I have been deeply influenced by the wisdom of these Jewish experts who have named what is being done in Gaza as a genocide. This is the kind of wisdom that is forged, very painfully, in the crucible of deep suffering.

“I recognize the deep pain that using the word genocide may carry for many of my Jewish constituents, friends, and allies, given the origins of the word and the horrors of the Holocaust. Please know that I will continue to wholly and completely stand against antisemitism, condemn the terrorist attacks of October 7 by Hamas, and forcefully call on Hamas for the immediate and unconditional return of all hostages. As our moral and legal obligations dictate, we must hold both the ability to speak out against the horrors of October 7 and against the horrors of the genocide unfolding right now in Gaza and the West Bank.

“It is my fervent hope that the more we come to terms with the truth of what is happening, the more likely it is that we can shift American policy to stop aiding and abetting this travesty, and ultimately, that America will play an important role in negotiating a lasting peace for Israelis and Palestinians alike.”

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Committee Democrats Denounce NEPA Rollbacks at Interior and USDA: “Dangerous,” “Unprecedented,” and “Profoundly Unjust”

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Jared Huffman Representing the 2nd District of California

August 05, 2025

Washington, D.C. – House Natural Resources Ranking Member Jared Huffman (D-Calif.), Energy and Mineral Resources Subcommittee Ranking Member Yassamin Ansari (D-Ariz.), and Indian and Insular Affairs Subcommittee Ranking Member Teresa Leger Fernández (D-N.M.) condemned the Trump administration’s attempts to gut one of America’s most important tools to defend public health, protect the environment, and ensure government transparency.
  
In formal comments to Interior Secretary Doug Burgum and Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins, Committee Democrats blasted the Departments’ rushed and sweeping rollback of the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) — calling it a “dangerous” effort to shut the public out of federal decision-making and greenlight polluting projects behind closed doors.
 
The lawmakers warned that the agency-by-agency rulemaking will create confusion and legal risk. “Project sponsors… will face conflicting standards, new bureaucratic barriers, and more litigation. These outcomes will ultimately erode trust in the federal process and delay—not accelerate—important projects.”
 
They also highlighted the rollback of core public protections, including draft Environmental Impact Statements and meaningful comment periods. “Public engagement is both a legal obligation and a proven tool for improving the substance, legitimacy, and durability of federal decisions,” the members wrote. “Abandoning it is a profound, costly and avoidable mistake.”
 
The lawmakers condemned the agencies’ efforts to eliminate environmental justice, climate, and cumulative impacts from review. “Ignoring these major environmental impacts will not make them disappear. It will merely blind the agency to their consequences,” they wrote. These consequences will be “immediate, compounding, and profoundly unjust” for “low-income communities, Tribal Nations, and historically overburdened communities of color.”
 
They objected to the administration’s use of an interim final rule without justification. “There is clearly no such emergency present that would justify bypassing the standard, legally required rulemaking process,” they wrote. “Proceeding under these conditions violates both the letter and the spirit of the APA and undermines the legitimacy of the entire rulemaking process.”
 
Read the full letter to Secretary Burgum.
 
Read the full letter to Secretary Rollins.
 

Background

Signed into law in 1970, NEPA is a cornerstone of environmental protection and government transparency, ensuring that federal agencies evaluate the environmental and public health impacts of major projects before moving forward. In February 2025, the Trump administration rescinded the Council on Environmental Quality’s unified NEPA rules, directing agencies to issue their own versions.
 
On July 3, 2025, Interior and USDA issued separate interim final rules (IFRs) that severely limit public comment, eliminate draft environmental impact statements, and allow agencies to skip analysis of climate change, cumulative impacts, and environmental justice. The public was given just 30 days to comment on each.
 
This fragmented approach — with each agency adopting its own rules and regulations — is legally risky and will delay, not speed up, project delivery. Data show that permitting times fell under the Biden administration after Congressional Democrats invested over $1 billion in agency capacity through the Inflation Reduction Act. That funding has since been slashed by the Trump administration.

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Top Democrats Condemn Trump’s Federal Workforce Purge, Back Bills to Block Mass Firings at Interior, Forest Service

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Jared Huffman Representing the 2nd District of California

August 04, 2025

Washington, D.C. – Natural Resources Ranking Member Jared Huffman (D-Calif.), Vice Ranking Member Sarah Elfreth (D-Md.), Federal Lands Subcommittee Ranking Member Joe Neguse (D-Colo.), Water, Wildlife, and Fisheries Subcommittee Ranking Member Val Hoyle (D-Ore.), Oversight and Investigations Subcommittee Ranking Member Maxine Dexter (D-Ore.), Indian and Insular Affairs Subcommittee Ranking Member Teresa Leger Fernández (D-N.M.), Energy and Mineral Resources Subcommittee Ranking Member Yassamin Ansari (D-Ariz.), and House Agriculture Committee Forestry and Agriculture Subcommittee Ranking Member Andrea Salinas (D-Ore.) introduced a series of bills to halt the abuse of the Reductions in Force (RIF) process to carry out politically-motivated mass firings across the Department of the Interior and U.S. Forest Service. 

These cuts would gut the federal workforce responsible for fighting wildfires, managing public lands, protecting water, advancing clean energy, and honoring tribal obligations. Interior has already lost 11% of its staff and the Forest Service 15%  — driven by forced retirements, firings, and DOGE’s $21.7 billion scheme to waste taxpayer dollars and pay employees to stay home.

“The Trump administration is firing the public servants who protect lives and communities by helping to battle deadly wildfires, tracking extreme weather events, and keeping water clean and public lands accessible. These RIFs are a targeted purge of the people who show up when disaster strikes and who make this country stronger and safer, day in and day out. These dedicated professionals, and all Americans, deserve better. If Congress doesn’t step in to stop this purge, the fallout will last generations. America will be weaker: less prepared for climate disasters, less able to defend its lands and resources, and less capable of serving its people when it matters most,” said Ranking Member Jared Huffman (D-Calif.). 

“These are hard-working public servants who steward our public lands, keep us safe from extreme weather events, advance clean energy production, and so much more. Our country is better off with these federal employees on the job. I’m proud to join Ranking Members Huffman and Lofgren in stepping up to protect our civil servants and the many services that they provide for the American people,” said Vice Ranking Member Sarah Elfreth (D-Md.).

“The Trump administration’s continued attacks on hard-working public servants have severely hampered federal agencies’ ability to manage critical programs, including at DOI and USFS. Additional firings at these agencies—especially as the administration seeks to cut critical funding—would be detrimental to our ability to safeguard our natural resources, protect communities, fight wildfires, and more,” said Rep. Joe Neguse (D-Colo.), Ranking Member of the Federal Lands Subcommittee. “That’s why I’m proud to join Ranking Member Huffman in introducing two bills that would protect the employees at our land management agencies and the communities they serve.”

“You don’t fix government by firing the people who make it work,” said Rep. Val Hoyle (D-Ore.), Ranking Member of the Water, Wildlife, and Fisheries Subcommittee. “These attacks on federal workers hurt our ability to manage forests, prepare for emergencies, and keep families safe. It’s wrong, and I’m proud to be a part of the effort to push back.”

“Trump’s mass firings are an assault on the very people who protect our air, our water, and our communities from crisis. As a physician and a lawmaker, I know that when disaster strikes—whether it’s a wildfire, a toxic spill, or a public health emergency—it’s scientists, public servants, and field professionals who make the difference between resilience and catastrophe,” said Rep. Maxine Dexter (D-Ore.), Ranking Member of the Oversight and Investigations Subcommittee. “I’m proud to help introduce legislation to stop the purge of our public workforce and defend the essential services every American relies on.”

“Trump’s cruel and chaotic attacks on public servants are not about efficiency. These attacks dismantle the very agencies that protect our water, lands, and communities,” said Rep. Teresa Leger Fernández (D-N.M.), Ranking Member of the Indian and Insular Affairs Subcommittee. “As wildfires rage across the West and droughts parch our lands, New Mexicans know that fully-staffed agencies protect us from disaster. Our legislation will help defend our communities from the Trump administration’s dangerous firings.”

“Federal workers are essential to making sure that our government truly acts in the best interest of the people,” said Rep. Yassamin Ansari (D-Ariz.), Ranking Member of the Energy and Mineral Resources Subcommittee. “The public servants at the Department of the Interior and the US Forest Service work hard every day to keep us safe and make sure our communities are healthy. I’m so proud to join my colleagues in pushing to suspend Trump’s reckless and indiscriminate firings at this agency so that they can continue their important work.” 

“The Trump administration has already weakened the Forest Service by firing critical staff, including those who manage wildfire preparedness and response. This bill is a necessary step to prevent further reckless reductions,” said Rep. Andrea Salinas (D-Ore.), Ranking Member of the Forestry and Nutrition Subcommittee on the House Agriculture Committee. “I’m proud to join Ranking Member Huffman in standing up for the agency’s workforce and to protect communities that rely on it.”

Read the full text of the House DOI RIFs bill here.

Read the full text of the House USFS RIFs bill here.

Background

The bills impose an immediate moratorium on agency firings through the RIF process to protect public service delivery while Congress investigates DOGE and assesses long-term staffing needs. 

The Senate companion bills were introduced by Ranking Member of the U.S. Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.), Ranking Member of the U.S. Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.), and Ranking Member of the Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.).

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Huffman, Lofgren Introduce Legislation to Defend Federal Workforce Amidst DOGE Attacks

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Jared Huffman Representing the 2nd District of California

August 04, 2025

Washington, D.C. – U.S. House Committee on Natural Resources Ranking Member Jared Huffman (D-Calif.) and U.S. House Committee on Science, Space, and Technology Ranking Member Zoe Lofgren (D-Calif.) introduced legislation to prevent politically-motivated workforce reductions at the Department of the Interior (DOI), the U.S. Forest Service (USFS), and the Department of Energy (DOE). The Senate companion bills were introduced by Ranking Member of the U.S. Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.), Ranking Member of the U.S. Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.), and Ranking Member of the Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.).

The legislation introduced would require an immediate moratorium on Reductions in Force (RIFs) at DOI, USFS, and DOE, so employees are protected while Congress conducts oversight and evaluates long-term workforce needs.  

“The Trump administration is firing the public servants who protect lives and communities by helping to battle deadly wildfires, tracking extreme weather events, and keeping water clean and public lands accessible. These RIFs are a targeted purge of the people who show up when disaster strikes and who make this country stronger and safer, day in and day out. These dedicated professionals, and all Americans, deserve better. If Congress doesn’t step in to stop this purge, the fallout will last generations. America will be weaker: less prepared for climate disasters, less able to defend its lands and resources, and less capable of serving its people when it matters most,” said Ranking Member Jared Huffman (D-Calif.). 

“The missions of these agencies are critical to the health, safety, and prosperity of the American people,” said Ranking Member Zoe Lofgren (D-Calif.). “Our devoted public servants make those missions possible. If you take away the workforce, what are you left with? Trump will stop at nothing to slash and burn core functions of our federal science agencies at the altar of this administration’s twisted idea of ‘efficiency.’ The President and his minions are lying to the American people when they claim that terminations, cuts, and cancellations will put more money in Americans’ pockets. Their scheming won’t do that at all. Instead they will leave Americans more susceptible to disaster, disease, and economic turmoil. The chaos must end.”

“These agencies provide critical services that protect American public health and safety, conserve our natural resources, and advance America’s scientific leadership on the world stage.  Firing our scientists, engineers, and land management professionals does not save us money—it makes our government less efficient, costs taxpayers more in the long run, and weakens our nation’s security and competitiveness,” said Ranking Member Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.)“This legislation will ensure we have the dedicated workforce we need to meet urgent challenges — from protecting our communities from increasingly devastating and catastrophic extreme weather events to advancing energy innovation, and protecting critical wildlife habitats.”  

Read the full text of the House DOI RIFs bill here.

Read the full text of the House USFS RIFs bill here.

Read the full text of the Senate DOE RIFs bill here. 

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Huffman, Markey Lead Colleagues in Opposing Trump’s Reckless Threats to the Western Arctic

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Jared Huffman Representing the 2nd District of California

August 04, 2025

Washington, D.C. – Today, Natural Resources Ranking Member Jared Huffman (D-Calif.), Senator Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.), and 27 Democratic colleagues wrote to the Department of the Interior condemning the Trump administration’s move to eliminate protections for the National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska, one of the most ecologically sensitive and culturally important regions in the Arctic.

“The National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska (NPR-A) is home to many of our nation’s Arctic treasures, including a variety of wildlife, vast waterways, and sensitive coastal resources,” the lawmakers wrote. “Yet, the Department of the Interior has proposed rescinding the Bureau of Land Management’s 2024 rule governing the NPR-A’s protection, a step that flies in the face of sound environmental stewardship. It would be disastrous for the region to repeal this common-sense and legally grounded rule— which ensures responsible management of the Western Arctic—and reopen the NPR-A to oil and gas drilling.”

They warn of the impacts of unconstrained oil and gas development and industrialization in the region, especially on subsistence resources and the climate. “Repealing the 2024 rule means reopening millions of acres of undisturbed public land to oil and gas drilling. And drilling can bring with it myriad environmental harms: seismic blasting; oil spills; gas leaks; habitat destruction; and contamination of water and soil. Without the 2024 rule, we could see massive industrial sprawl in areas such as the Teshekpuk Lake Special Area or the Colville River Special Area, which are vital to wildlife and subsistence users.”

The lawmakers continued, “Rolling back the regulations would enable more projects without strong protections for the sensitive landscape, species habitats, and impacted communities within the Western Arctic—projects like Willow, ConocoPhillips’s oil drilling project on the plain of the North Slope of Alaska in the NPR-A, a disaster from a wildlife and climate perspective.”

Read the full letter here.

Background

On June 2, 2025, the Department of the Interior proposed rescinding the 2024 NPR-A rule, a rule that provides common-sense limits on oil and gas development across sensitive habitat areas to protect Special Areas and support tribal subsistence practices. 

Just last week, the Trump administration repealed policies to protect NPR-A Special Areas in the Western Arctic, lands that Congress directed the Interior Department to afford “maximum protection” due to their “significant subsistence, recreational, fish and wildlife, or historical or scenic value” under the Naval Petroleum Reserves Production Act of 1976. 

Ranking Member Huffman and Senator Markey have led efforts to protect the Arctic in the House and the Senate, including as lead sponsors of the Arctic Refuge Protection Act, legislation that will restore critical protections to the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge—the nation’s largest national wildlife refuge—by designating the Coastal Plain ecosystem as wilderness under the National Wilderness Preservation System. 

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Rep. Castor Introduces Bill to Ban Utility Companies from Manipulating Elections, Misleading Voters

Source: United States House of Representatives – Reprepsentative Kathy Castor (FL14)

U.S. Rep. Kathy Castor (FL-14) reintroduced legislation to prohibit utility companies from using ratepayer dollars to fund political activities, including the use of ‘dark money’ to fund ‘ghost candidates’ and undermine public trust.

Florida households already face some of the highest electric bills in the country – and bills are expected to increase by another $430 each year thanks to the Republicans’ Big Ugly Bill. At the same time, regulators in Florida’s Public Service Commission are working to approve record utility rate hikes with high shareholder profits.

In Florida, investigative reports revealed how affiliates of Florida Power and Light (FPL) – the state’s largest utility – used ratepayer money to secretly fund “ghost candidates,” spy on journalists and manipulate news coverage to sway elections. In Ohio, FirstEnergy was at the center of a major bribery scheme that resulted in racketeering charges. And in Illinois, Commonwealth Edison paid $200 million to settle a federal bribery investigation tied to state political leaders. These utility companies have not only abused their influence – they’ve also tried to stop the growth of affordable, cleaner energy like solar.

“Electric bills should pay for electricity – not political tricks to hijack elections, mislead voters and steal elections,” said Rep. Castor. “Florida families are tired of being taken advantage of by big utility companies that continue to raise rates while using their hard-earned dollars to bankroll deceitful political activities and block access to cleaner, cheaper energy. It’s time for Congress to stand up for customers, stop this abuse and secure our elections from corporate manipulation.”

Following reports of this scheme, Castor pressed the U.S. Department of Justice to investigate FPL and pursue transparency and accountability to protect ratepayers from unknowingly funding corrupt political activities.

“American families are already facing skyrocketing utility bills. They should not have to pay for the lobbying and public relations operations of their monopoly utility companies. By passing this bill, Congress can protect Americans from being forced to subsidize utilities and their Washington trade associations that advocate for policies that will raise their rates even higher,” said David Pomerantz, Executive Director of the Energy and Policy Institute, a utility watchdog group.

“For years monopoly utility companies have forced customers to pay for lobbying against the clean energy that ratepayers want. Congress should finally put a stop to this scam and pass this bill,” said Howard Crystal, legal director of the Center for Biological Diversity’s energy justice program. “Utility bills are already sky high and the Trump administration is working overtime to subsidize fossil fuels and big tech data centers that will raise rates even more. Customers shouldn’t be unwittingly bankrolling utility trade groups working against a livable planet for their children.”

“Electric utilities should not be allowed to force families to bankroll political influence campaigns that protect their profits and block clean energy growth,” said Evergreen Action Senior Power Sector Lead Charles Harper. “It’s a broken system when customers are forced to fund the lobbying efforts that keep their bills—and utility profits—at record highs. This legislation would end that abuse and ensure utilities serve the public interest, not their own political agenda.”

Original CosponsorsDoris Matsui (CA-07), Jennifer McClellan (VA-04), Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (NY-14), Chellie Pingree (ME-01), Shri Thanedar (MI-13), Rashida Tlaib (MI-12)

Supporting organizations include: 350.org, Center for Biological Diversity, CLEO Institute, Energy and Policy Institute, Evergreen Action, GreenLatinos, Our Power, Public Citizen, Rewiring America, Sierra Club, Solar United Neighbors, The Pace Energy and Climate Center, Vote Solar.

The full text of the legislation can be viewed here.

Congressman Cleaver Celebrates Groundbreaking of Largest Infrastructure Project in Grandview’s History

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Emanuel Cleaver II (5th District Missouri)

(Kansas City, MO) – Today, U.S. Representative Emanuel Cleaver (D-MO) joined city leaders and community members to break ground on the largest infrastructure investment in Grandview’s history: a $24 million revitalization of nearly five miles of Blue Ridge Boulevard. The project is set to improve safety, accessibility, and economic opportunity along one of the city’s most vital corridors. Congressman Cleaver helped secure $4.6 million in federal Community Project Funding to support the multi-phase initiative, which includes roadway resurfacing, new sidewalks, lane expansion, ADA-compliant intersections, a multi-use path, and beautification enhancements designed to attract new investment and strengthen local businesses.

“This is more than a groundbreaking – it’s a gamechanger,” said Congressman Cleaver. “Revitalizing Blue Ridge Boulevard means safer roads, stronger local businesses, and a brighter future for Grandview and south Kansas City. I was proud to secure $4.6 million in federal funding to help make this vision a reality, and I look forward to seeing the transformation take shape for the families and businesses who call this corridor home.”

“This project has been a long time coming,” said Grandview Mayor Leonard Jones. “Securing these funds ensures the City is doing what we do best, and that’s leveraging taxpayer dollars so they get more for their money. Congressman Cleaver continues to work for the people of Grandview and the region who use the Blue Ridge Corridor.”

The Blue Ridge Boulevard revitalization project connects two ends of Kansas City and is the main commercial corridor for the City of Grandview. The $4.6 million in Community Project Funding was one of fifteen projects Congressman Cleaver championed in Congress in 2022, securing nearly $39,250,000 in federal funding for Fiscal Year 2023 that directly benefits constituents in Missouri’s Fifth Congressional District.

Photos from today’s event can be found here.

Emanuel Cleaver, II is the U.S. Representative for Missouri’s Fifth Congressional District, which includes Kansas City, Independence, Lee’s Summit, Raytown, Grandview, Sugar Creek, Greenwood, Blue Springs, North Kansas City, Gladstone, and Claycomo. He is a member of the exclusive House Financial Services Committee and Ranking Member of the House Subcommittee on Housing and Insurance.

House MAHA Caucus Holds Member Briefing on Metabolic Health

Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative Lloyd Smucker (PA-16)

WASHINGTON—Reps. Lloyd Smucker (PA-11) and Dr. John Joyce (PA-13), co-chairs of the House Make America Health Again (MAHA) Caucus, held an informative briefing for caucus members last week.

The caucus members heard from experts on metabolic health and the role it plays in individuals’ overall health, including presentations from:

  • David Baszucki, founder and CEO of Roblox Corporation and co-founder of Baszucki Group
  • Jan Ellison Baszucki, co-founder and President of Baszucki Group and founder of Metabolic Mind
  • Cristina Nigro, PhD, Policy and Partnerships Officer, Baszucki Group
  • Mariela Glandt, MD, founder and Medical Director of Glandt Center for Diabetes Care; CEO and founder, OwnaHealth
  • Andrew Koutknik, PhD, Principal Investigator and Research Scientist at Florida State University’s Institute for Sports Science and Medicine
  • Matt Bernstein, MD, Chief Medical Officer of Ellenhorn

The briefing was the first in a planned series of informative events to bring scientists and experts to the Caucus to share their research and highlight opportunities for data-driven changes in federal policy that will help Americans take charge of their health.

“I want to thank Baszucki Group and all our presenters for their enlightening presentation about the impact of our metabolism on our mental health, as well as our overall health. As the MAHA Caucus continues to educate its members and works alongside the Trump administration to improve our nation’s health outcomes, I look forward to future briefings. It is critical that we work to address our health crisis with declining life expectancy, rising incidences of chronic diseases, and high rates of obesity,” said Rep. Lloyd Smucker (PA-11).

“As a nation, we spend more money on healthcare than any other country on earth, yet the number of Americans suffering from chronic diseases continues to rise. Throwing money at the problem is not a solution; it’s time for fundamental change to the way our country approaches healthcare, with a focus on preventing chronic diseases before they begin,” said Co-Chair of the Make America Healthy Again Caucus, Rep. John Joyce, M.D. “The Make America Healthy Again Caucus gives us, as Members of Congress, an opportunity to bolster the progress being made by the Trump administration to end the chronic disease epidemic. I want to thank the guests who joined us at this week’s meeting to share their expertise, and I look forward to working with my fellow co-chairs and our counterparts in the Senate to finally Make America Healthy Again.”

“Last Monday’s MAHA Caucus briefing was an important step forward in our mission to Make America Healthy Again. We heard from an outstanding panel on the critical role of metabolic health and how diet impacts both physical and mental well-being. I’m proud of the progress we’re making to advance a commonsense approach to tackling the chronic disease epidemic that is focused on preventive care. Our caucus looks forward to continuing these important conversations in the months ahead,” said Rep. Vern Buchanan, founding member of the MAHA caucus and Chair of the Ways and Means Health Subcommittee. 

“Baszucki Group is honored to work with lawmakers committed to addressing our country’s chronic disease epidemic. We were grateful for the opportunity to present our work on the metabolic drivers of physical and mental health to the MAHA Caucus. With chronic illness affecting over half of Americans, and mental disorders on the rise, our healthcare system must shift from symptom management toward prevention, treatment and reversal of illness with therapeutic nutrition. This work is deeply personal to me, not just as an advocate, but as a mom. Our family witnessed the power of metabolic approaches when after years of unsuccessful conventional treatments, my son began a ketogenic diet four years ago that sent his bipolar symptoms into remission. That experience ignited in us a mission to get successful, life-restoring, evidence-based nutritional interventions to other families by working to bring metabolic health to the mainstream. We look forward to partnering with lawmakers to elevate well-established nutritional therapies that pioneering clinicians are already using to reverse mental and physical illnesses across the country,” saidJan Baszucki, Co-Founder and President of Baszucki Group, Founder, Metabolic Mind. 

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CONGRESSMEN VICENTE GONZALEZ, TONY GONZALES, AND OTHER TEXAS BORDER LAWMAKERS INTRODUCE BILL TO ENSURE COLONIAS’ CONTINUED ACCESS TO FEDERAL FUNDING

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Vicente Gonzalez (15th District of Texas)

BROWNSVILLE, TEXAS – Today, Congressman Vicente Gonzalez (TX-34) announced the introduction of H.R. 4498, the Ensuring Continued Access to Funding for Colonias Act, alongside Congressman Tony Gonzales (TX-23), and other Texas Border Members of Congress. This legislation seeks to protect federal funding sources for colonias along the U.S.-Mexico border. 

Colonias, often unincorporated and outside city limits, are characterized by high poverty rates and a lack of adequate water, sewer, and decent housing infrastructure. Since 1991, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) has set aside a dedicated percentage of grant funding for colonias along the border under the Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) program to improve access to these basic needs.

However, due to an outdated population standard—last revised in 1990—many colonias are at risk of losing this specific set-aside in the near future. This bipartisan bill corrects this issue by raising the population eligibility for the Community Development Block Grant Colonia Set-Aside Program from 1 million to 2 million residents — ensuring that colonia communities located in larger metropolitan statistical areas, such as El Paso and McAllen, remain eligible for targeted CDBG federal funding. Texas has the most colonias of the four southern border states. 

“This is about doing what’s right for our communities that are in need of clean water, safe housing, and modern infrastructure,” said Congressman Vicente Gonzalez. “South Texans should not be punished simply because their surrounding areas have seen population growth. This bipartisan bill will ensure colonia communities remain eligible for vital federal resources.” 

“Colonias along the border have historically lacked the most basic necessities, like water and sewage. Though federal grant funding exists to address those needs, an outdated provision in the law may soon disqualify these communities from being eligible for it. My legislation, the Ensuring Continued Access to Funding for Colonias Act, corrects this problem so that colonias continue to have a fighting chance for self-sufficiency and economic development. Preventing colonia grant funds from lapsing is not only the right thing to do—it is essential to promoting public health, safety, and security along the border,” said Congressman Tony Gonzales. 

Congressman Henry Cuellar (TX-28), Congresswoman Veronica Escobar (TX-16), and Congresswoman Monica De La Cruz (TX-15) have co-sponsored the legislation. 

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Pallone Warns New Republican Law Will Strip Health Coverage from NJ Seniors

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Frank Pallone (6th District of New Jersey)


NJ 6th District Congressman join local seniors in Piscataway to condemn devastating cuts to Medicare and Medicaid

PISCATAWAY, NJ – Today, Congressman Frank Pallone, Jr. (NJ-06), Ranking Member of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, joined seniors at the Piscataway Senior Center to condemn a newly signed Republican law that slashes more than $1 trillion from Medicare, Medicaid, and the Affordable Care Act – cuts that will hit New Jersey’s seniors especially hard. The cuts will result in 15 million Americans losing their health coverage.

During the forum, Pallone explained how the Republican law –  he dubbed the “Big Ugly Bill” – threatens the health and financial security of millions of low-income seniors and people with disabilities who rely on Medicaid for premiums, prescriptions, and long-term care.

Pallone warned the law’s cuts will strip Medicaid coverage from more than 350,000 New Jerseyans, including half the state’s expansion population, by imposing new paperwork reporting requirements, doubling eligibility checks, and adding out-of-pocket costs for low-income individuals. He also noted that by adding trillions to the federal deficit, the law triggers automatic Medicare cuts that jeopardize access to care for seniors across the state.

“This law is a direct attack on Medicare and Medicaid,” Pallone said. “It’s going to throw hundreds of thousands of New Jerseyans off their health care, gut the safety net for our most vulnerable residents, and destabilize the hospitals and long-term care facilities that seniors rely on. I fought this law every step of the way in the Energy and Commerce Committee, and I’m not done fighting it now.”

Local seniors in attendance shared personal stories about how Medicare and Medicaid helps them afford prescription drugs and in-home care. 

Pallone serves on the Energy and Commerce Committee, which was central to the fight over the law’s health care provisions. House Republicans advanced the legislation without Democratic support last month, and former President Donald Trump signed it into law shortly after.