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Age
71
Education
Masters in Business Administration
Hometown
Altamonte Springs
County
Seminole
Review all applications and vet all requests. Deport these who make false and misleading statements.
No. Weather cycles have always changed.
Remove members of the house that commit stolen valor, file false reports and use their office for personal gain. Require agencies to stop sending money overseas.
All expression is free speech.
Congress and the President both.
Families should help.
Education at that age is responsibility of the parents.
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Age
44
Education
BSBA Finance | MBA
Hometown
Green Cove Springs, FL
County
Volusia
Instagram
https://www.instagram.com/sarahulrichforcongress/
LinkedIn
https://www.linkedin.com/in/ulrichsarah/
Campaign Phone
407-883-2360
America is a nation of laws and a nation of opportunity. We need an immigration system that is secure, fair, and functional. I support securing our borders, enforcing existing immigration laws, and modernizing our legal immigration system so it works efficiently for families, workers, and employers.
Legal immigrants who follow the rules should not be forced to wait years or even decades for decisions. Green card processing times must be significantly reduced, bureaucratic delays eliminated, and the system modernized so qualified applicants can move through the process in a timely manner. We must also update outdated visa and green card quotas to better reflect America's current economic needs, workforce demands, and family reunification priorities. At the same time, we must ensure that immigration policies serve the interests of American citizens, protect national security, and preserve the rule of law.
Climate change is affecting everyday costs for families. People are paying more for electricity, insurance, and healthcare as weather patterns shift and extreme events become more common.
The truth is, the climate has always changed throughout Earth’s history, and we still don’t fully understand all the factors that drive it. Because of that, we should focus less on one-size-fits-all solutions and more on mitigation and adaptation—making sure we are prepared for whatever happens next.
That means strengthening infrastructure, improving disaster response, protecting key resources, and investing in practical ways to help communities handle changing conditions. The goal should be simple: reduce risk, lower costs where we can, and make sure families are not left paying the price when conditions shift.
In my first term in Congress, I will work to pass the PELOSI Act to ban stock trading by members of Congress. Public service should mean serving the public—not using inside knowledge for personal gain.
I will also push for additional reforms to restore trust in government. That includes term limits for members of Congress, residency requirements so candidates actually live in and understand the communities they want to represent, and limits on campaign lengths so lawmakers spend less time fundraising and more time doing the job they were elected to do.
Congress should not be a stage for endless campaigning and personal enrichment. It should be a place where people go to work, represent their constituents, and then go home. These reforms are about getting back to that basic standard.
Freedom of speech is about being free from government intimidation, control, and punishment for speaking your mind. It means Americans should be able to speak openly without fear of retaliation from those in power.
Today, political parties are increasingly trying to control which candidates can run, who gets support, and what ideas are allowed into the conversation. That kind of control limits real choice and interferes with the people’s right to decide who represents them. When voices are silenced or pushed out, we all lose something important in a free society.
Greed always pushes back against freedom. Greed for power, greed for control, greed for influence, and greed for things. These forces can quietly shape what gets heard and who gets heard.
In America, speech must stay free, and the political process must stay open. Americans should never be afraid of their government, and they should always have the right to choose their leaders without interference or intimidation.
Federal agencies exist within a system of checks and balances that is central to how our government is designed. Congress has the power to make the laws and control the power of the purse, deciding how taxpayer dollars are allocated and how agencies are funded. The President is responsible for ensuring those agencies carry out the law and enforce the policies Congress has passed.
This shared responsibility is intentional. It is meant to prevent any one branch from gaining too much control. When Congress legislates and oversees funding, and the President directs execution and enforcement, each branch serves as a check on the other.
That balance is essential to our stability. Without it, power can concentrate in one branch, and when that happens, accountability breaks down. Maintaining this structure is what keeps government limited, responsive, and ultimately accountable to the people it serves.
Yes, I support it. For the celebrated U.S. system of peaceful transfers of power to continue, we must have trust in the integrity of the system. Only United States citizens are allowed to vote in our elections, and anything less would invite chaos and the collapse of our republic.
Showing proof of citizenship is not unreasonable. If people are having difficulty obtaining the documents they need to do this, those breakdowns should be addressed and remedied at the most local level possible.
The Federal government was created to protect the American people, period. It was not designed to educate us, and it has shown itself susceptible to inefficiency, incompetence, and waste wherever it overextends its role. Local communities are best positioned to understand how to educate their children and care for them within their own environments.
I also believe the rise of parent student loans has created a sense of obligation and pressure for many parents, leading them to overextend themselves and even put their retirement at risk in order to pay for their children’s college education. Over time, this has contributed to the dilution of the value of a college degree, a shortage of skilled trades, parents moving in with adult children, and a significant increase in the cost of higher education.