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Thursday, April 3, 2025

Ken Calvert addresses military actions, voting procedures, and IRS refund policies

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Congressman Ken Calvert, District 41 | Official Website

Congressman Ken Calvert, District 41 | Official Website

Representative Ken Calvert, serving California's 41st District in the U.S. Congress since 1993, has expressed support for military responses to foreign aggressions, security in electoral processes, and improvements in loss recovery for taxpayers through a series of tweets. Born in Corona, California, in 1953, Calvert graduated with a BA from San Diego State University in 1975 and has been living in Corona.

In a tweet dated March 31, 2025, Calvert stated his stance on consequences for aggressions toward the U.S. military and its overseas interests. He expressed gratitude to President Trump and the military for their actions, specifically mentioning the Houthi group. "Any terror group or nation that attacks the U.S. military and our interests overseas should expect to feel the consequences of those actions. I'm thankful President Trump and our military is demonstrating to the Houthi's their aggression will not go unanswered."

Additionally, on the same day, Calvert tweeted about an upcoming House vote on the SAVE Act. This legislation aims to require state verification of U.S. citizenship when people register to vote in federal elections. Calvert called this verification "a basic step to improve the integrity of our elections supported by an overwhelming majority of Americans." "This week, the House will be voting on the SAVE Act to require states to verify US citizenship when registering an individual to vote in federal elections. This is a basic step to improve the integrity of our elections supported by an overwhelming majority of Americans."

Later that day, Calvert announced the House’s passage of the Recovery of Stolen Checks Act on Twitter. He described how the IRS procedure does not currently allow taxpayers to receive refund check replacements via direct deposit if they are stolen. "If a taxpayer has a refund check stolen in the mail, the IRS will only replace it with a check - in the mail. There's no procedure allowing a taxpayer to have the replacement check sent via direct deposit. The House just passed the Recovery of Stolen Checks Act to fix that flaw."

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