THE ISSUES:
1. The House is deciding whether to fund ICE alongside TSA — or pass the Senate’s bipartisan bill that funds DHS without ICE.
2. Virginia is holding a special election on April 21 that could determine which party controls the U.S. House.
THE ACTIONS:
1. Call your House representative and tell them that regulating ICE is your #1 priority.
2. Write letters to Virginia voters through VoteForward — letters must be mailed by April 14.
TOTAL TIME: 1 Hour
The Senate passed a bipartisan bill funding TSA, the Coast Guard, FEMA, and other DHS agencies — while withholding ICE funding until reforms are in place. Those reforms include requiring agents to obtain judicial warrants before entering homes and businesses, banning agents from wearing masks during operations, and reducing detention center capacity. The House rejected that bill and passed their own version funding ICE with no reforms attached. Both chambers are now on recess until April 14.
Your representative needs to hear from you before they return to Washington.
You do not need to explain yourself further. Congressional offices log the volume of calls on each issue and report it to the senator before votes.
Virginia is holding a special election on April 21 on redistricting — a vote that could determine which party controls the U.S. House. Most people don’t know it’s happening. You can help change that without leaving your home.
That’s it. Letters must be postmarked by April 14 to reach voters before April 21.
Congressional offices formally track constituent calls and report the volume to legislators before votes. A 2020 study by the Congressional Management Foundation found that a high volume of constituent contacts — especially phone calls — is one of the few things that reliably moves a legislator who is on the fence. You don’t need a script. You just need to call.
Republicans are coming after Voter Rolls. Voter rolls list actively registered voters who can vote in an upcoming election within a particular jurisdiction. These lists of registered voters are incredibly important as it informs whether or not a voter can cast a ballot. If your name is not on the voter roll where you plan to vote, you cannot vote. Go to nass.org/can-I-vote to check your Voter Registration Status and make sure you can vote come November.