Foreign Policy
For too long, U.S. Foreign Policy has been defined by erratic decisions that have upended our traditional alliances and created extreme upheaval. Rash actions, such as rushing into military action without understanding the long-term implications for a particular region, must be prevented. Entanglement in forever wars causes hardship to our service-members and their families, diverts resources for domestic priorities and has too often caused further destabilization of areas around the world. Effective foreign policy requires the United States to take a more proactive and diplomatic role within our global community in promoting peace, creating stabilization through effective foreign aid, protecting human rights, and ensuring open channels of communication with international partners and organizations.
More on Foreign Policy
December 17th, 2020
Rep. Grijalva Leads 12 House Colleagues in Letter to Secretary Pompeo Expressing Concern about Political Repression in Ecuador
July 8th, 2020
Rep. Grijalva Statement on Mexican President Lopez Obrador’s Visit to the White House
March 5th, 2020
Rep. Grijalva Joins Colleagues in Letter to Secretary Pompeo, Demands Rescission of Discriminatory Pregnancy Visa Rule
January 28th, 2020
Rep. Grijalva Statement on Trump-Kushner-Netanyahu Annexation Plan
January 9th, 2020
Rep. Grijalva Statement on House Passage of War Powers Resolution
January 3rd, 2020
Rep. Grijalva Statement on the Killing of Qasem Soleimani
December 17th, 2019
Reps. Grijalva, Lee, and Omar Send Letter to U.S. Treasury, Urge Humanitarian Relief on Iranian Sanctions
December 2nd, 2019
Rep. Grijalva Joins Bicameral Congressional Delegation to Madrid for COP25 on Climate Change
November 26th, 2019
Rep. Grijalva Joins in Calls to Stop Illegal “Safe Third Country” Agreement
October 2nd, 2019
Rep. Grijalva and Members of Congress Urge Secretary Pompeo to Support Human Rights and the Rule of Law in Guatemala