Tom Tiffany, U.S. Representative of Wisconsin's 7th congressional district | Official U.S. House Headshot
Tom Tiffany, U.S. Representative of Wisconsin's 7th congressional district | Official U.S. House Headshot
Rep. Tom Tiffany, currently serving in the U.S. Congress and representing Wisconsin’s 7th district since 2020, shared a series of tweets expressing his views on recent legislative actions and judicial matters. His remarks reflect the ongoing political discourse surrounding key policy issues.
On May 22, 2025, Rep. Tiffany highlighted several achievements by the House GOP in reconciliation efforts. He stated that they have delivered "a few big WINS" which include measures such as ending taxes on tips and overtime, securing the border, funding mass deportations, unleashing American energy, rooting out fraud and waste, preventing a large tax hike, and protecting Medicaid for vulnerable populations. "A few big WINS @HouseGOP delivered in reconciliation: Ends taxes on tips and overtime Secures the border Funds mass deportations ️Unleashes American energy Roots out fraud and waste Prevents the largest tax hike in history Protects Medicaid for the vulnerable"
Later that day, he criticized House Democrats for their voting decisions related to various policies. According to Tiffany's post from May 22 at 17:40 UTC, every Democrat voted to provide Medicaid to undocumented immigrants, tax tips and overtime earnings, reduce the child tax credit, allow criminal illegal aliens to remain in the country, and raise taxes overall. "Every House Democrat voted to give illegals Medicaid...This is who they are."
In another tweet posted on May 23 at 13:03 UTC, Rep. Tiffany voiced his opinion about Judge Hannah Dugan. He suggested that she should be disqualified from serving as a judge due to her perceived prioritization of criminal illegal aliens over victims within court rulings."Hannah Dugan should be barred from ever serving as a judge again..."
Tom Tiffany has served multiple terms across different levels of government prior to his current congressional role; he was part of Wisconsin State Assembly from 2011-2013 before moving onto Wisconsin State Senate until his election into Congress in 2020.