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John,
It was a busy week in Washington, and I want to take a moment this weekend to
share what I’ve been working on.
As co-chair of the Congressional Pro-Life Caucus, I was proud to join 91 of my
Republican colleagues in the House and Senate in filing anamicus brief
supporting the lawsuit to reinstate dispensing requirements for chemical
abortion drugs. The decision by the Biden administration to strip these
safeguards was reckless, and the consequences have been devastating. We have
seen cases where men obtained abortion pills online and secretly administered
them to pregnant women without their knowledge or consent. It is disgusting,
and it was made possible by a Biden policy that deliberately removed physician
oversight. No woman should be placed in that situation, and no unborn child
should lose the opportunity for life because the FDA caved to political
pressure. I strongly urge the court to grant the preliminary injunction,
suspend the Biden-era changes, and restore the protections that mothers and
their unborn children deserve.
The Supreme Court delivered a major victory for U.S. sovereignty and the rule
of law when the Court's conservative majority made clear that the executive
branch has the authority to end Temporary Protected Status. The Court also
ruled that people waiting in Mexico have no legal right to demand asylum
processing on U.S. soil, closing a loophole that has been exploited for years.
These decisions are a direct vindication of President Donald J. Trump's efforts
to secure the border and protect our communities. I am proud to support
President Trump and the justices who apply the law as written instead of
pushing their own political agenda from the bench. Despite what Democrats would
like us to think, our borders are not imaginary, nor is our immigration system
a free-for-all, and this week, the Supreme Court agreed.
Minnesota's long-term care facilities are facing a serious workforce crisis,
and our seniors are feeling it. That is why I signed on to theEnsuring Seniors'
Access to Quality Care Act, a commonsense, bipartisan bill that cuts
unnecessary red tape and helps facilities train the caregivers our communities
need. Right now, federal law can ban a nursing home from running its own CNA
training program for two years over minor administrative issues that have
nothing to do with patient care. That makes no sense. This bill fixes that by
ensuring training bans are only imposed for serious, care-related violations,
so facilities can keep building their local workforce pipelines. For rural
communities across Minnesota's Seventh District, in-house training programs are
often the only practical way to develop homegrown caregivers without relying on
outside staffing agencies. Our seniors deserve quality, consistent care from
people who know their communities; this legislation helps make that possible.
As always, thank you for your continued support and the privilege of serving
you. If my office can ever be of assistance, please don’t hesitate to reach out.
With gratitude,
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Michelle Fischbach
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