It is unconscionable that with all the resources we have in the United States of America, 13.8 million children are food insecure.
Raphael Warnock
The Public Record
Raphael Gamaliel Warnock is an American pastor and politician currently serving as the junior United States senator from Georgia since January 20, 2021. A member of the Democratic Party, Warnock is the first African American to represent Georgia in the U.S. Senate. He previously served as the senior pastor of Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta, a position that has deep historical significance in the civil rights movement. Warnock's legislative focus includes issues such as voting rights, healthcare, and economic justice.
keeping hungry kids, it seems to me, should not be partisan. It is not partisan.
I am still trying to figure out who this 'we' is, for whom are you speaking when you say we do not need it.
Are extreme hunger and food insecurity good for kids' nutritional outcomes? Does it help with learning?
this should be a shared goal of all elected officials because it is the moral responsibility of any functioning society.
I rise today carrying the grief of all Georgians after a school shooting in the small town of Winder, GA, claimed the lives of two children and two educators just 5 days ago. I have been in the U.S. Senate a little over 3 years, and I have…
We – we have to begin with the fact that this is a tragic form of American exceptionalism. This doesn't happen all over the world. No – nowhere else – where you have a country that's not at war – do you have this kind of routine random…
This is not a debate between those who believe in the Second Amendment and those who don't – don’t. It is to the gun lobby's advantage that this has become a kind of culture war.
Donald Trump is for Donald Trump. And Kamala Harris has spent her life working for the people.
14-year-olds don't need AR-15s, and we need to get these military-style weapons off the streets.
Listen, JD Vance claims that this kind of random, routine carnage is a fact of life. No, it's not. It's a fact of American life. This, again, is a tragic form of American exceptionalism.





