An open letter to the U.S. House of Representatives
Oppose/Vote NO on HR 1 The Only ‘Trickle Down’ This Time is Disaster
88 so far! Help us get to 100 signers!
Today I’m writing to urge you Vote NO on the Big Bad Bill for many reasons. This current legislation threatens to undermine civil rights and harm vulnerable communities by remove access to health care for many vulnerable people. It’s simply unacceptable.
Thousands will die. Health care in many underserved areas will collapse. The deficit will explode. Money for detentions but nothing for the poor, elderly and children?
Here’s more reasons to vote NO, and/or use all means to remove these catastrophic provisions in the bill, and disallow any others from being added.
1. The budget bill must not contain Tax cuts benefiting corporations and the wealthy should not come at the expense of vital programs like Medicaid, SNAP, and student financial aid.
2. Cuts to Medicaid, SNAP in any form are unacceptable, and will devastate access to healthcare, nutrition assistance, and higher education for millions of low-income families, children, seniors, people with disabilities, and communities of color.
3. The bill must not eliminate consumer protections and funding for agencies like the CFPB, or strip critical safeguards against predatory financial practices that disproportionately impact marginalized groups.
4. No increased funding for inhumane immigration detention and deportation operations. This raises serious civil liberties concerns and institutionalizes fear within communities.
5. No private school voucher schemes must be considered that would undermine funding for public education without ensuring accountability and non-discrimination protections for students.
6. The actions of the fictional entity DOGE must be thoroughly investigated, and any so-called ‘research’ discounted as part of the budget reconciliation.
7. Finally, Congress must ensure that taxpayer dollars and personal data are protected from misuse by DOGE for any purpose before moving forward with any fiscal measures in this bill. Period.
In short, Congress must prioritize the needs of everyday Americans over tax breaks for the wealthy and corporations. Reconciliation should protect essential programs, civil rights, and economic opportunity rather than exacerbating inequality.
Fiscal responsibility cannot come at the cost of dismantling the social safety net and abandoning our commitment to justice and equity. Budget decisions must uphold American values decency and humanity and shield vulnerable populations from discrimination. These values we hold dear, and are vital to a healthy and Constitutional democracy. Anything less and we are a failed democracy.
Thank you.