I have been in the room where it all happens.
Most of the time it's a boardroom, conference room or club room, where a politician's big political donors line up for cocktails, hors d'oeuvres and, for an extra charge, a personal photograph.
As a successful businessman, I was invited to countless functions like this over the past 20 years. And with each invitation, my frustration grew.
Politicians shouldn't be giving special treatment to people like me. In an enlightened democracy, the red carpet should be rolled out for everybody, not just a privileged few.
A campaign check should not be your ticket to representation. Our politicians should be listening to the folks who really matter, the ones who work hard to make ends meet, to provide for their families and give their children a future of possibilities.
That's why the first bill introduced by our new House Majority — and the first bill I co-sponsored — was H.R. 1, the For The People Act. It passed the House last Friday and represents the first step in our mission to make government more transparent and accountable to you.
Mitch McConnell has refused to bring it up for a vote in the Senate, attacking it as a "power grab." Well, it is a power grab — a power grab for you.
Our new Democratic Majority was ushered in with a promise to put power into your hands and earn back your trust by working for the common interest, not special interests.