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Washington
Related: About this forumSen. Patty Murray said she will not support a bill to inject new funding into the Department of Homeland Security
Federal agents cannot murder people in broad daylight and face zero consequences. I will NOT support the DHS bill as it stands, she wrote on social media Saturday, adding: I will continue fighting to rein in DHS and ICE.
The bill which would allocate $64.4 billion to DHS, including $10 billion for ICE was approved in the House on Thursday, but some Senate Democrats have vowed to block it next week.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2026/01/24/minneapolis-shooting/#link-GUQTIWPSMRAMZA5B35UD77QRJA
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Sen. Patty Murray said she will not support a bill to inject new funding into the Department of Homeland Security (Original Post)
Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin
16 hrs ago
OP
RainCaster
(13,416 posts)1. Good for her!
SheltieLover
(77,684 posts)2. Good!
orleans
(36,704 posts)3. ALL senate dems should vote against it. they all need to be shown these murder videos of pretti i've been seeing
and they should imagine this happening to their old moms, their spouses, their adult kids, teens.
yes, senator, let's pretend this really could happen to you or someone you love.
because it actually could!
littlemissmartypants
(32,107 posts)4. Thank you, Senator Murray.
https://www.britannica.com/biography/Patty-Murray
Also known as: Patricia Lynn Jones
Patty Murray (born October 11, 1950, Bothell, Washington, U.S.) is an American politician who was elected as a Democrat to the U.S. Senate in 1992 and began representing Washington the following year. Murray was the first female senator from the state, and she later became the first woman to serve as president pro tempore of the Senate (2023 ).
Jones grew up in Bothell, near Seattle. Her father, a World War II veteran, owned a general store, and after he fell ill with multiple sclerosis, the family struggled financially. While attending Washington State University, she worked as an intern in a Veterans Administration psychiatric hospital. In 1972 she received a bachelors degree in physical education, and that year she also married Rob Murray; the couple later had two children. She subsequently taught a course in parenting skills at a community college.
After overseeing a community effort to save an endangered school program, Murray successfully ran for a seat on her local school board. She served from 1985 to 1989, when she entered the Washington Senate. In 1992 Murray ran a grassroots campaignbuilt around a tongue-in-cheek image of herself as just a mom in tennis shoesfor the U.S. Senate. In the general election, she defeated a five-term Republican member of the U.S. House of Representatives and took office the following year.
Murray was considered a moderate to liberal Democrat who usually voted with her party leadership, although she broke from it on several points. Notably, she supported efforts by the administration of Pres. Barack Obama, opposed by most congressional Democrats, to secure free-trade agreements, arguing that they were vital to her home state, which relied on international trade. She also led her partys efforts to secure increases in the federal minimum wage. Murray voted against authorizing the Iraq War in 2002, and she championed expanded health care coverage for women, introducing legislation in 2014 to provide victims of rape with emergency contraceptive care. After the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade (1973) in 2022, Murray sought to codify abortion rights.
Also known as: Patricia Lynn Jones
Patty Murray (born October 11, 1950, Bothell, Washington, U.S.) is an American politician who was elected as a Democrat to the U.S. Senate in 1992 and began representing Washington the following year. Murray was the first female senator from the state, and she later became the first woman to serve as president pro tempore of the Senate (2023 ).
Jones grew up in Bothell, near Seattle. Her father, a World War II veteran, owned a general store, and after he fell ill with multiple sclerosis, the family struggled financially. While attending Washington State University, she worked as an intern in a Veterans Administration psychiatric hospital. In 1972 she received a bachelors degree in physical education, and that year she also married Rob Murray; the couple later had two children. She subsequently taught a course in parenting skills at a community college.
After overseeing a community effort to save an endangered school program, Murray successfully ran for a seat on her local school board. She served from 1985 to 1989, when she entered the Washington Senate. In 1992 Murray ran a grassroots campaignbuilt around a tongue-in-cheek image of herself as just a mom in tennis shoesfor the U.S. Senate. In the general election, she defeated a five-term Republican member of the U.S. House of Representatives and took office the following year.
Murray was considered a moderate to liberal Democrat who usually voted with her party leadership, although she broke from it on several points. Notably, she supported efforts by the administration of Pres. Barack Obama, opposed by most congressional Democrats, to secure free-trade agreements, arguing that they were vital to her home state, which relied on international trade. She also led her partys efforts to secure increases in the federal minimum wage. Murray voted against authorizing the Iraq War in 2002, and she championed expanded health care coverage for women, introducing legislation in 2014 to provide victims of rape with emergency contraceptive care. After the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade (1973) in 2022, Murray sought to codify abortion rights.