Current Crohn's and Colitis Caucus Members
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November 2020 Election Results (Results As of November 30, 2020) U.S
New York State Congressional Delegation November 2020 Election Results (Results as of November 30, 2020) U.S. Senate 116th Congress (Jan. 2019 - Jan. 2021) 117th Congress (Jan. 2021 - Jan. 2023) Senator Charles Schumer (D) Senator Charles Schumer (D) (Up for re-election in 2022) Senator Kirsten Gillibrand (D) Senator Kirsten Gillibrand (D) (Up for re-election in Jan 2024) U.S. House of Representatives 116th Congress (Jan. 2019 - Jan. 2021) 117th Congress (Jan. 2021 - Jan. 2023) NY – 1 Lee Zeldin (R-Shirley) Lee Zeldin (R-Shirley) NY – 2 Peter King (R-Seaford) (Ret.) Andrew Garbarino (R-Sayville) NY – 3 Thomas Suozzi (D-Glen Cove) Thomas Suozzi (D-Glen Cove) NY – 4 Kathleen Rice (D-Mineola) Kathleen Rice (D-Mineola) NY – 5 Gregory Meeks (D-Far Rockaway) Gregory Meeks (D-Far Rockaway) NY – 6 Grace Meng (D-Queens) Grace Meng (D-Queens) NY – 7 Nydia Velazquez (D-Brooklyn) Nydia Velazquez (D-Brooklyn) NY – 8 Hakeem Jeffries (D-Brooklyn) Hakeem Jeffries (D-Brooklyn) NY – 9 Yvette Clarke (D-Brooklyn) Yvette Clarke (D-Brooklyn) NY – 10 Jerrold Nadler (D-Manhattan) Jerrold Nadler (D-Manhattan) NY – 11 Max Rose (D-Staten Island) Nicole Malliotakis (R-Staten Island) NY – 12 Carolyn Maloney (D-Manhattan) Carolyn Maloney (D-Manhattan) NY – 13 Adriano Espaillat (D-Manhattan) Adriano Espaillat (D-Manhattan) NY – 14 Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-Queens) Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-Queens) NY – 15 Jose Serrano (D-Bronx) (Ret.) Ritchie Torres (D-Bronx) NY – 16 Eliot Engel (D-Bronx) Jamaal Bowman (D-Yonkers) NY – 17 Nita Lowey (D-Harrison) (Ret.) Mondaire -
The Congressional Progressive Caucus Co-Chairs, Mark Pocan (D
The Congressional Progressive Caucus Co-Chairs, Mark Pocan (D-WI) and Raúl Grijalva (D-AZ), joined constitutional authorities, activists, and other CPC leaders in applauding Senators Bernie Sanders (I-VT), Mike Lee (R-UT), and Chris Murphy (D-CT) for their introduction of S.J. Res. 54 to end the illegal U.S. war alongside Saudi Arabia against Yemen’s Houthis. The Senators’ joint resolution closely parallels bipartisan House resolution H. Con. Res. 81, introduced in September 2017 by CPC Vice Chair Ro Khanna, CPC Co-Chair Mark Pocan, Rep. Thomas Massie (R-KY) and Rep. Walter B. Jones (R-NC). H. Con. Res. 81, which invokes the War Powers Resolution of 1973 to remove U.S. forces from unauthorized hostilities, was co-sponsored by 38 CPC Members and was endorsed by the Congressional Progressive Caucus: “By allowing endless, unauthorized wars, Congress has abdicated its responsibility to uphold the Constitution. In the face of what is currently the world’s worst humanitarian crisis, triggered by our secretive, illegal war in Yemen waged alongside the Saudi regime, we welcome the resolution introduced by Congressional Progressive Caucus founding member, Senator Bernie Sanders, and Republican Senator Mike Lee, to remove U.S. forces from that senseless conflict. We strongly urge our Senate colleagues to co-sponsor and vote in support of the Sanders-Lee resolution. For progressives who recognize the unique threat to peace posed by the current president and the far- reaching authorities he has seized, nothing is more urgent than working across the aisle to reassert Congress’s constitutional powers and rein in an out-of-control executive branch.” —Congressmen Mark Pocan (D-WI) and Raul Grijalva (D-AZ), Co-chairs of the Congressional Progressive Caucus “Our nation’s military involvement in Yemen, the worst humanitarian crisis in our modern world, is unconstitutional and unauthorized. -
Thank You Guide
Great American Outdoors Act: Thank You Guide Phone District 1 Representative Suzan DelBene 202-225-6311 District 2 Representative Rick Larsen 202-225-2605 District 3 Representative Jaime Herrera Beutler 202-225-3536 District 5 Representative Cathy McMorris Rodgers 202-225-2006 District 6 Representative Derek C. Kilmer 202-225-5916 District 7 Representative Pramila Jayapal 202-225-3106 District 8 Representative Kim Schrier 202-225-7761 District 9 Representative Adam Smith 202-225-8901 District 10 Representative Denny Heck 202-225-9740 Senator Maria Cantwell 202-224-3441 Senator Patty Murray 202-224-2621 Email to Co-Sponsors District 1 Suzan DelBene - [email protected] (cc: [email protected]) District 2 Rick Larsen - [email protected] (cc: [email protected]) District 6 Derek C. Kilmer - [email protected] (cc: [email protected]) District 7 Pramila Jayapal - [email protected] (cc: [email protected]) District 8 Kim Schrier - [email protected] (cc: [email protected]) District 9 Adam Smith - [email protected] (cc: [email protected]) District 10 Denny Heck - [email protected] (cc: [email protected]) Senator Maria Cantwell - [email protected] Senator Patty Murray - [email protected] Dear Representative / Senator _____ and [ staff first name ] , My name is _______ and I am a constituent of Washington's [#] Congressional District, as well as a representative of [Organization]. I am reaching out to give a huge thank you for your co-sponsorship and vote in support of the Great American Outdoors Act. -
The New Democrat 2 August 2019
TThhee NNeeww DDeemmooccrraatt A Publication of the Peninsula Democratic Coalition (PDC) August 2019 Congresswoman Anna Eshoo Mark Your (CD-18) traveled to Texas Calendar! detention centers: “The Sunday, August 18, 2019 conditions are Inhumane” 4:00-7:00 pm Congresswoman Eshoo Tours Texas Border and Speaks with Border Officials, Families, and Volunteers WASHINGTON, D.C. — Congresswoman Anna PDC Annual G. Eshoo (D-CA) traveled to McAllen and Brownsville, Texas recently Family Potluck to tour the McAllen Border Patrol Processing Center and the Brownsville Port of Picnic & Entry on Saturday, July 13. Eshoo assessed firsthand the deterioration of care in Funwildl ber heald ait as er Texas since her first visit in June 2018. The Cuesta Park , Congresswoman met with located directly beside the El Camino families, questioned U.S. Rep. Anna Eshoo, right, spoke border officials, and heard with a Border Patrol agent in Texas YMCA and El Camino Hospital, from humanitarian on June 22, 2018, during a tour volunteers. Rep. Eshoo with congressional members of in Mountain View. released the following immigration detention facilities. statement after the trip: Photo courtesy of Rep. Anna “The conditions I Eshoo's office. Special Guest witnessed at the border were inhumane. Forty or more detainees are being kept in cells built to Speaker: house a maximum of eight people for days or even weeks, and children are without access to proper hygiene. Since my first visit Ricardo Lara to the southern border last year, the crisis has worsened and it’s clear the Administration’s policies have exacerbated the Insurance humanitarian crisis. The decision to suspend foreign aid to Commissioner of countries in the Northern Triangle has been catastrophic. -
OSHA Sends Draft Emergency Temporary Standard for COVID OMB Review
OSHA sends draft emergency temporary standard for COVID OMB review BY ALEX GANGITANO © istock The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) announced on Monday it has sent a draft emergency temporary standard (ETS) on the coronavirus pandemic to the Oice of Management and Budget, defending the extra time the agency took to move on establishing a standard. OSHA, a division of the Department of Labor (DOL), took “the appropriate time” to get the standards right, according to the DOL. President Biden issued an executive order in January on protecting worker health and safety, which called on OSHA to issue an ETS by March 15. “OSHA has been working diligently on its proposal and has taken the appropriate time to work with its science-agency partners, economic agencies, and others in the U.S. government to get this proposed emergency standard right,” a DOL spokesperson said in an email on Monday. Democratic Michigan Reps. Debbie Dingell, Rashida Tlaib and Andy Levin wrote a letter to Biden earlier on Monday calling for ETS implementation as COVID-19 cases in the state are rising again. “What a difference a President Joe Biden and Secretary of Labor Marty Walsh make. I’ve been calling for an emergency temporary standard to protect against COVID-19 for over a year now. I’m glad to see DOL acting to move us closer to issuing the ETS, and POTUS needs to approve it swiftly and get this standard into effect,” Levin told The Hill on Monday following the announcement. Democrats, unions and worker advocates have called for oicial OSHA COVID-19 standards since the onset of the pandemic. -
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Max Rose Split on Impeach-Trump Stumps
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Max Rose Split on Impeach-Trump Stumps https://thecity.nyc/2019/10/ocasio-cortez-and-rose-split-on-impeach-tru... Clifford Michel, Christine Chung Photo: Ben Fractenberg/THE CITY Sign up for “THE CITY Scoop,” our daily newsletter where we send you stories like this first thing in the morning. New York City’s two newest Democratic members of Congress are returning from Washington for town halls this week as calls for an impeachment inquiry mount — but their homecoming receptions are bound to differ. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who has long demanded President Donald Trump’s impeachment, will host a Thursday town hall in Queens to discuss her new legislative package addressing income inequality and poverty. Meanwhile, Rep. Max Rose, the city’s lone impeachment holdout, has a transit-themed town hall scheduled in Staten Island on Wednesday, where activists are saying they’ll ask about impeachment. “Nothing will distract me from fighting to improve the lives of my constituents,” Rose told THE CITY in a statement Monday. “The focus of the upcoming town halls will be on transit and our commuting nightmares — but I most certainly welcome any questions.” Ocasio-Cortez, whose spokesperson declined comment, has drawn attention to Democrats, such as Rose, who’ve refused to back the impeachment inquiry. The first-term reps’ diverging positions reflect the different stakes they face at the ballot box next year, political observers say. Rose’s 2018 win — a moderate Democrat taking back a district won by Trump — was emblematic of the so- called Blue Wave that regained the party the House of Representatives. -
Employees of Northrop Grumman Political Action Committee (ENGPAC) 2017 Contributions
Employees of Northrop Grumman Political Action Committee (ENGPAC) 2017 Contributions Name Candidate Office Total ALABAMA $69,000 American Security PAC Rep. Michael Dennis Rogers (R) Leadership PAC $5,000 Byrne for Congress Rep. Bradley Roberts Byrne (R) Congressional District 01 $5,000 BYRNE PAC Rep. Bradley Roberts Byrne (R) Leadership PAC $5,000 Defend America PAC Sen. Richard Craig Shelby (R) Leadership PAC $5,000 Martha Roby for Congress Rep. Martha Roby (R) Congressional District 02 $10,000 Mike Rogers for Congress Rep. Michael Dennis Rogers (R) Congressional District 03 $6,500 MoBrooksForCongress.Com Rep. Morris Jackson Brooks, Jr. (R) Congressional District 05 $5,000 Reaching for a Brighter America PAC Rep. Robert Brown Aderholt (R) Leadership PAC $2,500 Robert Aderholt for Congress Rep. Robert Brown Aderholt (R) Congressional District 04 $7,500 Strange for Senate Sen. Luther Strange (R) United States Senate $15,000 Terri Sewell for Congress Rep. Terri Andrea Sewell (D) Congressional District 07 $2,500 ALASKA $14,000 Sullivan For US Senate Sen. Daniel Scott Sullivan (R) United States Senate $5,000 Denali Leadership PAC Sen. Lisa Ann Murkowski (R) Leadership PAC $5,000 True North PAC Sen. Daniel Scott Sullivan (R) Leadership PAC $4,000 ARIZONA $29,000 Committee To Re-Elect Trent Franks To Congress Rep. Trent Franks (R) Congressional District 08 $4,500 Country First Political Action Committee Inc. Sen. John Sidney McCain, III (R) Leadership PAC $3,500 (COUNTRY FIRST PAC) Gallego for Arizona Rep. Ruben M. Gallego (D) Congressional District 07 $5,000 McSally for Congress Rep. Martha Elizabeth McSally (R) Congressional District 02 $10,000 Sinema for Arizona Rep. -
August 10, 2021 the Honorable Nancy Pelosi the Honorable Steny
August 10, 2021 The Honorable Nancy Pelosi The Honorable Steny Hoyer Speaker Majority Leader U.S. House of Representatives U.S. House of Representatives Washington, D.C. 20515 Washington, D.C. 20515 Dear Speaker Pelosi and Leader Hoyer, As we advance legislation to rebuild and renew America’s infrastructure, we encourage you to continue your commitment to combating the climate crisis by including critical clean energy, energy efficiency, and clean transportation tax incentives in the upcoming infrastructure package. These incentives will play a critical role in America’s economic recovery, alleviate some of the pollution impacts that have been borne by disadvantaged communities, and help the country build back better and cleaner. The clean energy sector was projected to add 175,000 jobs in 2020 but the COVID-19 pandemic upended the industry and roughly 300,000 clean energy workers were still out of work in the beginning of 2021.1 Clean energy, energy efficiency, and clean transportation tax incentives are an important part of bringing these workers back. It is critical that these policies support strong labor standards and domestic manufacturing. The importance of clean energy tax policy is made even more apparent and urgent with record- high temperatures in the Pacific Northwest, unprecedented drought across the West, and the impacts of tropical storms felt up and down the East Coast. We ask that the infrastructure package prioritize inclusion of a stable, predictable, and long-term tax platform that: Provides long-term extensions and expansions to the Production Tax Credit and Investment Tax Credit to meet President Biden’s goal of a carbon pollution-free power sector by 2035; Extends and modernizes tax incentives for commercial and residential energy efficiency improvements and residential electrification; Extends and modifies incentives for clean transportation options and alternative fuel infrastructure; and Supports domestic clean energy, energy efficiency, and clean transportation manufacturing. -
MICHIGAN FAH MEMBER FACILITIES Federation of American Hospitals Represents America’S Tax-Paying SENATE Community Hospitals and Sen
MICHIGAN FAH MEMBER FACILITIES Federation of American Hospitals represents America’s tax-paying SENATE community hospitals and Sen. Gary Peters (D) health systems. Sen. Debbie Stabenow (D) HOUSE (Click name to view the district) Rep. Jack Bergman (R) / Michigan 1st Rep. Peter Meijer (R) / Michigan 3rd Rep. John Moolenaar (R) / Michigan 4th Rep. Fred Upton (R) / Michigan 6th Rep. Andy Levin (D) / Michigan 9th Rep. Lisa McClain (R) / Michigan 10th TOTAL Rep. Haley Stevens (D) / Michigan 11th FACILITIES Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D) / Michigan 13th Rep. Brenda Lawrence (D) / Michigan 14th 17 TOTAL HOSPITAL BEDS 3,655 TOTAL EMPLOYEES 17,408 FEDERATION OF AMERICAN HOSPITALS® 750 9th Street, N.W. Suite 600, Washington, DC 20001 fah.org MICHIGAN FAH MEMBER FACILITIES Beds Employees REP. JACK BERGMAN (R) / MICHIGAN 1ST 3 HOSPITALS UP Health System - Bell Ishpeming LifePoint Health 25 345 UP Health System - Marquette Marquette LifePoint Health 307 2,516 UP Health System - Portage Hancock LifePoint Health 96 685 REP. PETER MEIJER (R) / MICHIGAN 3RD 1 HOSPITAL Forest View Hospital Grand Rapids Universal Health Services, Inc. 108 295 REP. JOHN MOOLENAAR (R) / MICHIGAN 4TH 1 HOSPITAL Cedar Creek Hospital Saint Johns Universal Health Services, Inc. 34 109 REP. FRED UPTON (R) / MICHIGAN 6TH 1 HOSPITAL Skywood Recovery Augusta Universal Health Services, Inc. 100 53 REP. ANDY LEVIN (D) / MICHIGAN 9TH 1 HOSPITAL Foundations Detroit Royal Oak Universal Health Services, Inc. 5 REP. LISA MCCLAIN (R) / MICHIGAN 10TH 1 HOSPITAL Lake Huron Medical Center Port Huron Prime Healthcare Services 119 392 REP. HALEY STEVENS (D) / MICHIGAN 11TH 2 HOSPITALS DMC Huron Valley-Sinai Hospital Commerce Tenet Healthcare Corporation 158 962 Havenwyck Hospital Auburn Hills Universal Health Services, Inc. -
1 April 2, 2020 the Honorable Nancy Pelosi Speaker, U.S. House Of
April 2, 2020 The Honorable Nancy Pelosi Speaker, U.S. House of Representatives H-232, United States Capitol Washington, DC 20515 Dear Speaker Pelosi: We are grateful for your tireless work to address the needs of all Americans struggling during the COVID-19 pandemic, and for your understanding of the tremendous burdens that have been borne by localities as they work to respond to this crisis and keep their populations safe. However, we are concerned that the COVID-19 relief packages considered thus far have not provided direct funding to stabilize smaller counties, cities, and towns—specifically, those with populations under 500,000. As such, we urge you to include direct stabilization funding to such localities in the next COVID-19 response bill, or to lower the threshold for direct funding through the Coronavirus Relief Fund to localities with smaller populations. Many of us represent districts containing no or few localities with populations above 500,000. Like their larger neighbors, though, these smaller counties, cities, and towns have faced enormous costs while responding to the COVID-19 pandemic. These costs include deploying timely public service announcements to keep Americans informed, rapidly activating emergency operations, readying employees for telework to keep services running, and more. This work is essential to keeping our constituents safe and mitigating the spread of the coronavirus as effectively as possible. We fear that, without targeted stabilization funding, smaller localities will be unable to continue providing these critical services to our constituents at the rate they are currently. We applaud you for including a $200 billion Coronavirus Relief Fund as part of H.R. -
Leadership PAC $6000 Byrne for Congress Rep. Bradley
L3Harris Technologies, Inc. PAC 2020 Cycle Contributions Name Candidate Office Total ALABAMA American Security PAC Rep. Mike Rogers (R) Leadership PAC $6,000 Byrne for Congress Rep. Bradley Byrne (R) Congressional District 1 $2,000 Defend America PAC Sen. Richard Shelby (R) Leadership PAC $5,000 Doug Jones for Senate Committee Sen. Doug Jones (D) United States Senate $5,000 Martha Roby for Congress Rep. Martha Roby (R) Congressional District 2 $3,000 Mike Rogers for Congress Rep. Mike Rogers (R) Congressional District 3 $11,000 Robert Aderholt for Congress Rep. Robert Aderholt (R) Congressional District 4 $3,500 Terri Sewell for Congress Rep. Terri Sewell (D) Congressional District 7 $10,000 Together Everyone Realizes Real Impact Rep. Terri Sewell (D) Leadership PAC $5,000 (TERRI) PAC ALASKA Alaskans For Dan Sullivan Sen. Dan Sullivan (R) United States Senate $5,000 Lisa Murkowski For US Senate Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R) United States Senate $5,000 ARIZONA David Schweikert for Congress Rep. David Schweikert (R) Congressional District 6 $2,500 Gallego for Arizona Rep. Ruben Gallego (D) Congressional District 7 $3,000 Kirkpatrick for Congress Rep. Ann Kirkpatrick (D) Congressional District 2 $7,000 McSally for Senate, Inc Sen. Martha McSally (R) United States Senate $10,000 Sinema for Arizona Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D) United States Senate $5,000 Stanton for Congress Rep. Greg Stanton (D) Congressional District 9 $8,000 Thunderbolt PAC Sen. Martha McSally (R) Leadership PAC $5,000 ARKANSAS Crawford for Congress Rep. Rick Crawford (R) Congressional District 1 $2,500 Womack for Congress Committee Rep. Steve Womack (R) Congressional District 3 $3,500 CALIFORNIA United for a Strong America Rep. -
The Washington Post's “Afghanistan Papers” and US Policy
The Washington Post’s “Afghanistan Papers” and U.S. Policy: Main Points and Possible Questions for Congress January 28, 2020 Congressional Research Service https://crsreports.congress.gov R46197 SUMMARY R46197 The Washington Post’s “Afghanistan Papers” January 28, 2020 and U.S. Policy: Main Points and Possible Clayton Thomas Questions for Congress Analyst in Middle Eastern Affairs On December 9, 2019, the Washington Post published a series of documents termed “the Afghanistan Papers.” The Papers comprise two sets of documents: about 1,900 pages of notes and transcripts of interviews with more than 400 U.S. and other policymakers that were carried out between 2014 and 2018 by the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR), and approximately 190 short memos (referred to as “snowflakes”) from former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, dating from 2001 to 2004. The documents, and the Washington Post stories that accompany them, suggest that U.S. policies in Afghanistan often were poorly planned, resourced, and/or executed. These apparent shortcomings contributed to several outcomes that either were difficult to assess or did not fulfill stated U.S. objectives. Key themes of the SIGAR interviews include: Negative effects of U.S. funding. The most frequently discussed subject in the SIGAR interviews was (a) the large sum of U.S. money ($132 billion in development assistance since 2001) that poured into Afghanistan and (b) the extent to which much of it was reportedly wasted, stolen, exacerbated existing problems, or created new ones, particularly corruption. Unclear U.S. goals. Many of the interviewees argued that, from the beginning, the U.S.