A lifelong Nebraskan, Deb Fischer is the senior senator from Nebraska. In November 2012, Fischer was first elected to the U.S. Senate becoming the first Nebraska woman elected to a full term and the first Nebraska state senator elected directly after service in the state legislature. Six years later, in November 2018, Nebraskans overwhelmingly voted to send her back to the U.S. Senate for a second term.
Fischer is committed to working with Republicans and Democrats alike to advance sensible policies that will promote strong Nebraska families and communities.
Voted for the Stop Sanctuary Policies and Protect Americans Act. Senator Fischer cosponsored common-sense legislation, which says that if a jurisdiction is not cooperating with federal immigration enforcement, it should not be receiving federal funds. The bill also includes a provision known as Kate’s Law, named after Kate Steinle. Kate was murdered in San Francisco by an illegal immigrant who had been convicted of several felonies and deported multiple times. This provision would impose a mandatory minimum jail sentence of five years for illegal immigrants who have been convicted three or more times of illegally reentering the Unites States or who have committed a violent felony.