The current humanitarian situation is not acceptable. Humanitarian access through the Lachin corridor and other routes must be available now.
Bob Menendez
The Public Record
Robert Menendez is a prominent Democratic politician currently serving as a member of the United States Senate, representing New Jersey. He was first elected to the Senate in 2006 and has since been re-elected multiple times. Menendez has played a significant role in various policy areas, including foreign relations, immigration reform, and healthcare. He has served on several Senate committees, including the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, where he has been an advocate for human rights and democracy abroad.
If we allow for whatever reasons, whatever security--border security, counternarcotics--for ethnic cleansing to take place and we look the other way, we send a global message of what our priorities are.
The issue of fentanyl and its impact on our country is something that I believe we all take seriously.
We should be thinking about how we can grow that program as opposed to just trying to ignore it.
Thankfully, the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act that passed the last Congress injected as much as $550 billion into reviving our Nation's transportation system.
One key problem, seems to me that all too often, first-time homebuyers are competing with institutional investors who can afford to purchase the home with cash.
The National Low Income Housing Coalition's 2022 Out of Reach report showed just how hard it is for low-income renters to afford even modest housing.
One key problem, seems to me that all too often, first-time homebuyers are competing with institutional investors who can afford to purchase the home with cash.
The fact is that there are not just enough rental homes being built, and part of that is because Federal lending programs, through HUD and the Federal Housing Administration, have not kept pace with the market.
The National Low Income Housing Coalition's 2022 Out of Reach report showed just how hard it is for low-income renters to afford even modest housing.
Thankfully, the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act that passed the last Congress injected as much as $550 billion into reviving our Nation's transportation system.





