Tram Nguyen will fight for:
Safe Communities
Tram Nguyen will fight for:
Safe Communities
Tram is fighting to build secure, thriving communities where every family has the stability they need to succeed. As a State Representative, Tram has been out front on numerous areas of safety and community care.
She was proud to help shape and pass our state's landmark 2024 gun safety modernization package, which dramatically expanded our Red Flag law to allow medical and school professionals to intervene before a crisis turns deadly. She also was the author of the Commonwealth’s first piece of legislation to specifically protect undocumented immigrants, giving them a standardized pathway to seek visas when reporting abuse or trafficking. In Congress, Tram will be a voice for survivors, for safety, and for proactive reforms to gun laws in our country.
Ban federal law enforcement officers from wearing masks or tactical military gear,
Advocate for full, permanent federal funding for the Violence Against Women Act to expand transitional housing, mental health resources, and legal assistance for survivors, while expanding federal funding to provide for culturally competent counseling and legal aid so survivors can escape dangerous situations,
Fight to pass federal common-sense gun reform legislation modeled on our success here in Massachusetts, including universal background checks, a federal ban on assault weapons and high-capacity magazines, and a real crackdown on the proliferation of untraceable firearms,
Champion federal legislation to incentivize and implement robust Red Flag laws nationwide, ensuring the people closest to a person in crisis have the tools to keep our communities safe,
Protect immigrant survivors of human trafficking and violent crime by working to lift the federal caps on U-visas (violent crime victims) and T-visas (human trafficking victims), ensuring victims can safely report abuse and cooperate with law enforcement without fear of deportation, and
Strengthen federal civil rights protections and combat the rise of hate crimes by expanding funding for federal civil rights enforcement, improving tracking metrics, and supporting localized, community-led prevention and victim-support frameworks.