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Derek Tran

04/01/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 04/01/2026 11:37

Representative Tran Joins Representatives Houlahan, Goodlander to Introduce WARRIOR Act to Protect Women’s Role in Combat

Washington, DC - U.S. Representative Derek Tran (CA-45) joined fellow Veterans Representatives Chrissy Houlahan (PA-06) and Maggie Goodlander (NH-01) to introduce legislation to protect women's ability to serve in the armed forces. The Women Add Resourcefulness and Resilience to Improve Operational Readiness (WARRIOR) Act codifies women's role in combat by creating gender-neutral evaluation standards for service members and preventing the exclusion of women in roles across the military.

Find the full text of the bill HERE.

"I'm honored to join Representatives Houlahan and Goodlander to introduce the WARRIOR Act and reaffirm what Veterans already know: women serving in our armed forces make our country stronger and safer," said Representative Tran. "The WARRIOR Act will ensure that anyone with the tenacity and talent for military service can join in the fight to defend our freedoms. This is about more than women's rightful place in our armed forces - it's about strengthening our military, improving readiness, and ensuring our national security for generations to come. We need the best possible soldiers in each and every role across our armed forces, and I'm proud to continue standing alongside the women who have served and continue to serve this country."

"Now more than ever, we should be supporting each and every servicemember willing to wear the uniform, not scrutinizing and pushing out qualified women simply because they are women," said Representative Houlahan. "The WARRIOR Act protects our servicemembers, ensuring that no one is excluded from a military assignment on the basis of gender. This bill is about strength - the strength of our military standards, the strength of the women who meet them, and the strength of our nation when we enable these women to serve."

"America is the land of the free because we are the home of millions of women who have worn the uniform and answered the call to serve," said Representative Goodlander. "The WARRIOR Act is about one simple principle: if you can meet the standard, you deserve a fair shot-full stop. This commonsense bill will make our military stronger, our country safer, and ensure every qualified service member is judged by their ability, not their gender."

In response to Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth's commentsquestioning women's role in the armed services, the WARRIOR Act proactively affirms women's qualifications to serve in combat. The bill amends outdated legislation to ensure that women are judged on their skills, performance, and the gender-neutral standards that women in combat are already meeting and exceeding.

Additional cosponsors of the WARRIOR Act include Representatives Gil Cisneros (CA-31), Jason Crow (CO-06), Pat Ryan (NY-18), and Mike Thompson (CA-04). The WARRIOR Act is endorsed by the Women in Service Coalition Inc. (WiSCI), Vet Voice Foundation, Minority Veterans of America, Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America (IAVA), and the National Women's Law Center Action Fund (NWLC AF).

"My fellow soldiers I served with in Iraq are heroes - every last one of them. Our nation is stronger because of the female servicemembers who love this country so much they're willing to risk their lives to defend it," said Representative Ryan. "Everybody who has served - including Hegseth, whether he's willing to admit it or not - owes a debt of gratitude to their heroism. Any attempt to desecrate that service or make it harder for the next generation of Patriotic young women to join up, is a massive disservice to their talent and readiness of our armed services as a whole. I'm proud to join my female combat veteran colleagues to introduce this critical legislation."

"As a United States Navy Veteran and former Under Secretary of Defense, I can say that some of the best individuals I have served with have been women. It is ridiculous that their value to our country in uniform is continuously being questioned by this administration," said Representative Cisneros. "Over 4,500 women currently serve in combat related roles; no one bent the rules on fitness standards to get them there. They earned it by merit. With the WARRIOR Act, we can ensure that anyone qualified for a military service role is eligible to be considered through fair, holistic evaluation based on their ability, regardless of their gender identity."

"We know from history that women have always had the grit and courage to face enemy fire, fight, lead, and rescue their fellow service members. Today's women have met and exceeded the standards for military service, including the grueling male standards for combat arms," said Sue Fulton, Executive Director of WiSCI. "Five thousand women currently serve in these roles; and while they have met these challenging physical standards, they have often outpaced their peers with superior problem-solving skills, maturity, and long-term endurance. Women have made our military stronger, smarter, and better across the Services - and in the past ten years, they have made our tip-of-the-spear fighting force - infantry, armor, artillery, combat aviation - stronger, smarter, and better. We can't afford to weaken our fighting forces by disqualifying people based on someone's personal feelings or ideology."

"We have more than a decade of data, thousands of women in combat arms, and zero evidence that women weaken the force. In fact, the opposite is true. Women have met the standard, exceeded it, and proven their place on the battlefield. Reopening this question now is a distraction at best and a threat to military effectiveness at worst," said Janessa Goldbeck, CEO, Vet Voice Foundation. "If you sideline qualified warfighters because of extremist ideology, you don't get a stronger military, you get a weaker one. Vet Voice is proud to support the WARRIOR Act. We applaud Representative Houlahan's leadership and urge all Members to come together and pass this important bill without delay."

"Service members have been meeting rigorous, job-specific standards for decades, particularly in operational and combat roles where requirements are tied to mission demands. This legislation affirms that service members must meet the standards required to succeed in today's military and recognizes that excellence is defined by skill, performance, and ability, not gender," said Lindsay Church, Executive Director of Minority Veterans of America. "Military readiness is best ensured by allowing every qualified person the opportunity to serve in any role, including in combat."

"Since the founding of our nation, women have proudly and honorably served in defense of our country. This commonsense update to gender-neutral occupational standards reflects what we already know to be true: women are a force multiplier across the military," said Dr. Kyleanne Hunter, CEO of IAVA. "As the fastest-growing group of recruits, ensuring women remain eligible to serve in all roles is not only grounded in science-it's essential to our national security. IAVA is encouraged to see standards that reflect both our nation's mission and the modern force that serves it."

"Women serve an invaluable role in our military, displaying courage, skill, and commitment. Our national security and today's military readiness, recruitment and retention depend on the many women serving their country in the military, including in combat," said Gaylynn Burroughs, Vice President for Education and Workplace Justice at NWLC AF. "But as this administration has made clear, too often their role is undermined and even attacked. The WARRIOR Act reinforces that individuals should be judged on individual merit and ability, not gender-based stereotypes. The bill recognizes the important role of women in the military by prohibiting any exclusions from military occupational specialties or assignments because of gender. We thank Congresswomen Houlahan and Goodlander for taking action and introducing this timely and important legislation."

An Army Veteran, Representative Tran is dedicated to expanding protections and benefits for Veterans and service members in Washington. The first bill Tran introduced in Congress was H.R. 1637, the Protect Veteran Jobs Act, to restore the livelihoods of Veterans wrongfully fired from their civil service positions. In September 2025, Tran's bipartisan Delivering Digitally for our Veterans Act, which aims to streamline the administration of Veterans' educational benefits through the G.I. Bill, unanimously passed the House. Following offensive U.S. military actions against Iran conducted without Congressional oversight in February 2026, Tran voted in favor of a Congressional war powers resolutionreaffirming that Congress, not the executive branch, reserves the right to declare war.

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Congressman Derek Tran represents California's 45th Congressional District. Serving his first term in Congress, Congressman Tran is a member of the House Armed Services Committee and House Small Business Committee, where he is Ranking Member of the Oversight, Investigations, and Regulations Subcommittee. Congressman Tran is the son of Vietnamese refugees, a Veteran, and fought for consumers as an attorney before entering Congress.

Derek Tran published this content on April 01, 2026, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on April 01, 2026 at 17:37 UTC. If you believe the information included in the content is inaccurate or outdated and requires editing or removal, please contact us at [email protected]