Demand Congress stop funding the inhumane and lethal tactics of DHS and ICE amidst ongoing investigations.
Reckless disregard for human life is rampant in the Trump administration’s attacks on immigrants and their neighbors and supporters.
From Chicago to California, immigrants have been killed during ICE raids and traffic stops. And there have been at least eleven non-fatal shootings by ICE and Border Patrol agents in places around the country, including another two victims in Portland, Oregon.
The killings of Renee Nicole Good and Alex Pretti by ICE agents in Minneapolis are not an isolated tragedies, but part of a disturbing pattern of callous and inhumane disregard of life and law. These deaths, and the shockingly high number of deaths and harm inflicted in ICE detention and raids, require Congress to stop negotiations on the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) funding bill until careful investigations lead to Congress’ reining in of the reckless tactics of Secretary Noem, ICE Acting Director Lyons, and their underlings.
Last year was the deadliest year in ICE detention facilities in over 20 years, with 32 deaths in 2025.
Right now, Congress is negotiating government the funding bill. We can stop this if we raise our voices together.
Click here to start writing to send a message to your senators and representative demanding Congress immediately stop funding DHS and ICE’s inhumane and lethal tactics amidst ongoing investigations.
The 115th Congress convened on Jan. 3 and hit the ground running. CHN just released our latest edition of the Human Needs Report, with a look at what Members have been working on in their first two weeks as they prepare for the swearing in of Donald Trump as the 45th President of the United States on Friday, Jan. 20. Read on for articles on Congress’s work to repeal the Affordable Care Act, confirmation hearings for President-elect Trump’s Cabinet picks, and rules and regulations under threat from Congress and the new Administration.
Click here for a full PDF of the Human Needs Report.
House and Senate Pass FY17 Budget Resolution On Jan. 12 and 13, Congress passed a shell of an FY17 budget resolution whose only purpose is to lay the groundwork for repealing the Affordable Care Act. The resolution is a plan through which Congress sets certain spending/taxation rules for itself; it does not go to the President for his signature and does not become law. Two amendments focused on protecting Medicaid, Medicare and Social Security failed along near party-line votes. READ MORE »
Republicans Begin Process of Repealing Affordable Care Act Congress took the first concrete steps towards repealing the Affordable Care Act last week, passing a budget resolution that lays the groundwork for eviscerating major portions of the landmark health care reform bill that has helped millions of Americans. It’s widely expected that the reconciliation bill that follows would eliminate the billions of dollars provided to the states that have chosen to expand Medicaid eligibility, and repeal the subsidies that help lower-income individuals afford insurance through the exchanges. READ MORE »
Hearings Begin on President-elect Trump’s Cabinet Picks Human needs advocates have opposed several nominees to President-elect Trump’s cabinet, including his picks to head the Departments of Health and Human Services, Housing and Urban Development, Labor, Justice and Education, as well as his pick for director of the Office of Management and Budget. READ MORE »
Rules and Regulations under Threat A number of rules and regulations put into place in the last several months of the Obama Administration are being targeted by Republicans in Congress and the new Trump Administration for the potential chopping block. These include worker protections for overtime and earn paid sick days, consumer protections on prepaid debit cards, environmental protections and many more. READ MORE »
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