Skip to main content
GWGovwatch
CongressBillsCommitteesPresidentMoneyPulseMisconductElectionsMap
Donate

Weekly accountability digest

One email a week with new votes, moving bills, and misconduct updates. No spam.

GW

Govwatch. Public data about Congress, in one place, in plain English.

Built with public data. Not affiliated with the U.S. government.

Explore

  • Officials
  • Legislation
  • Committees
  • Congress Pulse
  • Trending Topics
  • Bipartisan Leaderboard
  • Weekly Digest
  • Misconduct
  • Predictions

Learn

  • How Congress Works
  • How a Bill Becomes Law
  • Campaign Finance 101
  • Glossary

Tools

  • My Representatives
  • Compare Members
  • Bill Watchlist
  • Search
  • District Map
  • Follow the Money
  • Watch Live

Site

  • About
  • Contact
  • Corrections
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service

Data Sources

Congress.gov API v3
Bills, members, votes
GovInfo API
Floor speeches, reports, bill text
Federal Election Commission (FEC)
Campaign finance
VoteView (UCLA)
Ideology scores (DW-NOMINATE)
GovTrack.us
Misconduct data (CC0)
U.S. Census Bureau
District demographics

Data Last Updated

Bills & Votes: 1 hour ago
Support This Project

This site is free. Donations help cover hosting, API fees, and keeping the data fresh.

All data is sourced from official government APIs and public records. This site is for informational purposes only.

© 2026 Govwatch

Press ReleaseNeutral2026-06-11

<span class ="kicker">The Washington Times article on Smith-led letter to EPA Admin. Zeldin</span>'Republicans ask EPA to consider abortion drug as contaminant in public water systems'

Christopher H. Smith
Christopher H. Smith
RNJ-4 · Representative
Share:
HealthcareAbortionEnvironment

Context

This press release from Representative Christopher H. Smith (R-NJ) was published on 2026-06-11 and titled "<span class ="kicker">The Washington Times article on Smith-led letter to EPA Admin. Zeldin</span>'Republica".

Full Text

<span class ="kicker">The Washington Times article on Smith-led letter to EPA Admin. Zeldin</span>'Republicans ask EPA to consider abortion drug as contaminant in public water systems'

By Kerry Picket Published Thursday, June 11, 2026 A group of Republican lawmakers from the House and Senate are asking Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lee Zeldin to add a chemical abortion drug to the list of contaminants in public water systems. Rep. Chris Smith of New Jersey, and Rep. Josh Brecheen and Sen. James Lankford of Oklahoma led 16 GOP lawmakers in sending a letter to Mr. Zeldin urging the addition of mifepristone to the agency’s sixth Contaminant Candidate List (CCL 6), which identifies contaminants in public water systems that are not currently subject to regulation. The Republican lawmakers underscored the dangerous, adverse effects of mifepristone on women—impacting nearly 11% of women — and said there is a well-founded concern that mifepristone may be contaminating public water systems and posing serious environmental and public health threats. Mifepristone tablets sit on a table at a Planned Parenthood clinic in Ames, Iowa, July 18, 2024. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall, File) “In addition to killing unborn babies and threatening the well-being or lives of their mothers, Mifepristone has the potential to impact our national water system, a danger that was acknowledged by the Food and Drug Administration thirty years ago,” the lawmakers wrote. “In 1996, the FDA Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER) claimed that adverse environmental effects from mifepristone were ‘not anticipated,’ but acknowledged that ‘[m]ifepristone may enter the environment from excretion by patients, from disposal of pharmaceutical waste, or from emissions from manufacturing sites,’” they wrote. They argue the drug poses serious risks to women, stating that “more than one out of ten (10.93%) women who take this dangerous pill experience sepsis, infection, hemorrhaging or another serious adverse event within 45 days. “As the use of mifepristone has risen, its impact on drinking water should be closely researched and monitored,” the lawmakers asserted. The Republicans asked the EPA to add mifepristone to CCL 6 to “determine whether the active metabolites that enter our Nation’s water system through mifepristone abortions threaten access to our safe drinking water” and study “whether the level of mifepristone present in the Nation’s water system is significant enough to cause endocrine disruption.” The letter comes at a time when the FDA is moving forward on a safety study of mifepristone that will be an analysis of hundreds of thousands of cases, with interim results potentially released in July. What to know Republican lawmakers urge EPA to add mifepristone to water contaminants list. 19 GOP lawmakers signed a letter to EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin. They highlight mifepristone's adverse effects on women and public health. Mifepristone may contaminate public water systems, posing serious risks. This article was published on June 11, 2026 and can be found online at: https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2026/jun/11/republicans-ask-epa-consider-abortion-drug-contaminant-public-water/
View original source →