Tag: congressman

  • Congressman Eric Burlison introduces the ‘Life at Conception Act’ – Newstalk KZRG


    WASHINGTON, D.C. — Today, Congressman Eric Burlison introduced the Life at Conception Act, to affirm the fundamental right to life for every human being, born and unborn. This landmark legislation declares that unborn children are “persons” under the 14th Amendment to the United States Constitution, allowing their right to life to be legally recognized and protected.

    Every life is a sacred gift from God, deserving of dignity and protection from the moment of conception,” said Congressman Burlison. “The Life at Conception Act uses Congress’ constitutional authority to define personhood, fulfilling our moral and legal obligation to safeguard the lives of the unborn.

    The 14th Amendment states, “No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.” The Life at Conception Act ensures this promise applies to the unborn, recognizing them as persons with equal protection under the law.

    Congressman Burlison pointed out that the Supreme Court’s landmark decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization overturned Roe v. Wade but left unresolved the vital question of personhood. “This Act fills that gap by making it clear that unborn children are human beings entitled to protection under the Constitution,” he said. 

    Medical advances in recent decades have only strengthened the case for life beginning at conception. Science confirms that a unique human life begins at fertilization, with distinct DNA, a heartbeat that can be detected as early as five weeks, and measurable brain activity by eight weeks.

    The Life at Conception Act has garnered support from legal experts, medical professionals, and pro-life advocates nationwide. 

    I am strongly pro-life and will always fight to protect the lives of the unborn,” said Burlison. “My record is clear, both in Missouri and Washington, D.C., I have consistently voted to protect the life of the child and the health of the mother. I will continue to do so moving forward.” 





    Congressman Eric Burlison introduces the ‘Life at Conception Act’

    In a groundbreaking move, Congressman Eric Burlison has introduced the ‘Life at Conception Act’ in the House of Representatives. This bill aims to protect the sanctity of life from the moment of conception, recognizing the inherent value and rights of unborn children.

    The ‘Life at Conception Act’ seeks to establish legal personhood for fetuses, ensuring that they are entitled to the same rights and protections as any other individual. This legislation is a significant step towards recognizing the humanity of unborn children and providing them with the protection they deserve.

    Congressman Burlison’s bill has already garnered support from pro-life advocates and organizations, who see it as a crucial step towards ending the tragedy of abortion in our country. By recognizing the humanity of unborn children, we can work towards building a culture of life and protecting the most vulnerable members of our society.

    Stay tuned for updates on the progress of the ‘Life at Conception Act’ and join us in supporting this important legislation. Together, we can work towards a future where every life is valued and protected.

    Tags:

    Congressman Eric Burlison, Life at Conception Act, pro-life legislation, Missouri congressman, abortion ban, KZRG news, pro-life news, political news, legislative update

    #Congressman #Eric #Burlison #introduces #Life #Conception #Act #Newstalk #KZRG

  • Maryland’s GOP congressman Andy Harris remains undecided on speaker Johnson’s future

    Maryland’s GOP congressman Andy Harris remains undecided on speaker Johnson’s future


    Rep. Andy Harris, Maryland’s lone republican congressman and Chairman of the House Freedom Caucus, remains undecided on whether he will support Speaker of the House Mike Johnson on Frida, when the House of Representatives is expected to decide who will lead Congress.

    Congressman Harris is concerned with the current national debt, which now amounts to $36.19 trillion, according to the U.S. Department of Treasury, and is critical of Speaker Johnson’s handling of the budget.

    “Since President Trump’s historic election to bring down spending, deficits, and inflation, the ‘Republican’-led House has INITIATED $300 billion in unpaid for new spending, without even ATTEMPTING offsets to prevent skyrocketing the deficit and debt. Future generations deserve better,” the congressman told FOX45. “I am now undecided on what House leadership should look like in the 119th Congress.”

    On Dec. 21st, the House approved a stopgap measure to keep the government funded. Rep. Harris was one of 34 Republican representatives who voted against the spending bill.

    In an interview with FOX45 on Dec. 20th, Harris said he was still supportive of the Speaker, but added that some of his Republican colleagues were “much more questionable” of leader Johnson.

    ALSO READ | Key Bridge funding at risk as Maryland lawmakers oppose trimmed spending bill

    “I am still supportive of Speaker Johnson. There are some of my colleagues who are much more questionable after what has happened in the last two weeks. But, again, we still have a while to go not only on this ball, but until January 3rd. We’ll see what develops,” Harris said.

    On Dec. 30, only a few days prior to the Speaker’s vote on Jan. 3, President-elect Donald Trump endorsed Speaker Johnson. “Speaker Mike Johnson is a good, hard working, religious man. He will do the right thing, and we will continue to WIN. Mike has my Complete & Total Endorsement. MAGA!!!” Trump wrote on Truth Social.

    GOP Rep. Thomas Massie from Kentucky said that, while he supports and respects Trump, he does not plan to protect Johnson’s leadership.

    “I respect and support President Trump, but his endorsement of Mike Johnson is going to work out about as well as his endorsement of Speaker Paul Ryan. We’ve seen Johnson partner with the democrats to send money to Ukraine, authorize spying on Americans, and blow the budget,” Rep. Massie wrote.

    As his influence grows in Congress, some have suggested that Congressman Harris himself might be a good fit for the speakership. “His stock has been rising. It’s certainly plausible he could be a name out there,” Flavio Hickel Jr., a political science professor at Washington College in Chestertown, told FOX45’s media partner, The Baltimore Sun.

    However, during an interview with Rob Finnerty from Newsmax on Monday, Harris said that his “undecided” position is not in reference to him seeking the leadership position.



    In the midst of the turmoil surrounding Speaker Johnson’s future, Maryland’s GOP congressman Andy Harris has yet to make a decision on where he stands. With tensions running high within the Republican party, Harris’s hesitation to choose a side has left many constituents wondering where his allegiance truly lies.

    As the debate over Speaker Johnson’s future continues to dominate headlines, Harris’s indecision has not gone unnoticed. Some have criticized him for not taking a firm stance on the issue, while others believe that he is carefully considering all aspects before making a decision.

    Harris’s constituents are eagerly awaiting his announcement on how he plans to vote on the matter. As one of Maryland’s representatives in Congress, his decision could have a significant impact on the outcome of the vote.

    As the pressure mounts for Harris to make a choice, all eyes are on him to see which direction he will ultimately choose to go in. Only time will tell where his allegiance truly lies in this high-stakes political battle.

    Tags:

    Maryland GOP congressman, Andy Harris, Speaker Johnson, Republican Party, undecided, future, Congress, political news, Maryland politics, leadership, House of Representatives, GOP, Andy Harris on Speaker Johnson, Congressional decisions, Republican congressman, political stance, Maryland representative, Speaker of the House.

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  • Republican congressman says party should drop ‘food fight’ over leadership | Republicans

    Republican congressman says party should drop ‘food fight’ over leadership | Republicans


    The US House member Mike Lawler attempted on Sunday to tease out two pressing issues facing the new Congress beginning in 2025, telling an American political talkshow that this was not the moment for his fellow Republicans to have a “food fight” over leadership in Capitol Hill and that the country “needs an immigration system that works”.

    Both issues have dominated political headlines in recent days, as potential policy splits become apparent between far-right congressional Republicans and the executive team being assembled for their party leader Donald Trump’s second presidency beginning in January.

    Lawler told ABC’s This Week that the US House speaker, Mike Johnson, should be re-elected despite Republican infighting over whether he should keep the position after his handling of negotiations over a government funding bill.

    “Mike Johnson inherited a disaster when Matt Gaetz and several of my colleagues teamed up with 208 Democrats to remove Kevin McCarthy, which will go down as the single stupidest thing I’ve ever seen in politics,” Lawler said, referring to the spectacle of mutinous Republicans led by Gaetz in the fall of 2023 taking the speaker’s gavel away from McCarthy.

    McCarthy left Congress months after his removal. Gaetz also left Congress in November in an unsuccessful attempt to prevent the House ethics committee from releasing a report which found “substantial evidence” that he paid for sex with a minor, among other serious violations of congressional rules and laws in his home state of Florida.

    “Removing Mike Johnson would equally be as stupid,” Lawler – a New York representative – remarked. “The fact is that these folks are playing with fire, and if they think they’re somehow going to get a more conservative speaker, they’re kidding themselves.”

    Lawler said: “We can’t get anything done unless we have a speaker” – including certifying Trump’s victory in the November election, which is scheduled to take place in early January.

    “So, to waste time over a nonsensical intramural food fight is a joke. And I think my colleagues, if they didn’t learn anything from the [outgoing] Congress, it should be that we absolutely do not need a fight over the speakership,” Lawler said.

    Lawler won a key New York congressional race in November by a 57% to 41% margin, affording him a significant platform within the party. On Sunday, he also used that platform to weigh in on immigration as the party attempts to reconcile a hardline, anti-immigration faction with the economic need for both high- and low-skilled workers in various industries.

    That conflict broke out into the open last week when Trump’s most prominent backers from the tech industry – including SpaceX, Tesla and X’s Elon Musk and the AI-crypto czar David Sacks – clashed with the ultra-right Trump supporter Laura Loomer after she made reference to “third-world invaders” purportedly taking desirable jobs from those born in the US.

    On Sunday, Lawler weighed in on the side of the tech leaders like Musk, who himself had dismissed far-right proponents of Trump’s “Make America Great Again” (Maga) faction “contemptible fools” and “unrepentant racists”.

    “We need immigration,” Lawler said. Mentioning that his wife is an immigrant, he added: “We need an immigration system that works, that is legal, and I fundamentally believe that you need to have a system that is focused on our economic needs as a country and a more merit-based immigration system than anything else.

    “I have been through this process with her. It is a fundamentally broken system.”

    The New York Republican also pointed out that H-1B visas, which often go to skilled tech programmers and are being fought over, amount to just 65,000 visas with an additional 20,000 for applicants with master’s degrees.

    The visas, he said, are “critical to our economy, and as President Trump said, it’s a program he’s used over the years for his businesses, and it’s something that has obviously been beneficial to our economy”.

    The Democratic congressman Ro Khanna of California, who is seeking common ground with the so-called “department of government efficiency” that Trump wants Musk to lead, said on Sunday that the debate over H-1B visas for the tech industry was missing the point. If the US did not celebrate “the talent and genius and skills of people of diverse backgrounds” while also seeking to limit undocumented immigrants, the country would not lead the world in Nobel laureates in physics, medicine and chemistry, Khanna said.

    “If there was some problem with the culture we wouldn’t be the world’s greatest economy of 30 trillion,” Khanna told Fox News.

    But Khanna also argued that the H-1B system keeps foreign workers in limbo because they are less able to negotiate salary and benefits compared with domestic hires – and they are hurt by unfair labor conditions.

    The system, he said, “needs major reform – and if you don’t see that either you don’t understand what’s happening or you’re not being truthful.”

    The larger question, Khanna added, was not over H-1Bs and getting into “epic fights on social media” – but how the US had lost existing industries to foreign competition.

    “The real challenge in America is, how did we lose steel? How did we lose aluminum? How did we allow for de-industrialization?” Khanna said. “You want to bring back new jobs, you need to have the investment in reindustrialization of America in places left out. And that’s what we should be talking about.”

    The California governor, Gavin Newsom, Khanna’s fellow Democrat, also joined the immigration debate on Sunday, saying it was “good to see Trump embrace Elon’s position”.

    “Hardworking immigrants should continue to be part of our great nation,” Newsom added. “We are better off when we have competition and top talent – from farm workers, construction workers, CEOs and beyond.”



    In a recent statement, a Republican congressman called for an end to the internal “food fight” within the party over leadership. He emphasized the need for unity and focus on important issues facing the country.

    The congressman highlighted the importance of coming together as a party to address pressing challenges such as the economy, national security, and healthcare. He urged his fellow Republicans to put aside personal differences and work towards a common goal of serving the American people.

    This call for unity comes at a time when tensions within the Republican party have been high, with debates over leadership roles and the direction of the party. The congressman’s message serves as a reminder that in order to be effective in governing, Republicans must work together and present a united front to the American public.

    As the party continues to navigate the political landscape, it is crucial that Republicans prioritize cooperation and collaboration in order to effectively represent their constituents and advance their policy goals. Let’s hope that this call for unity will resonate with all members of the party and lead to a more cohesive and productive Republican party.

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    10. Republican party unity

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