In the Senate, Angie’s focus will be on lowering costs, keeping our communities safe and fixing a broken Washington.
If elected to the Senate, Angie Craig will focus on lowering costs, keeping communities safe, and fixing a broken Washington.
Occurrences
lowering health care/housing/childcare/grocery/education costs
Evidence
The campaign site says: "In the Senate, Angie’s focus will be on lowering costs, keeping our communities safe and fixing a broken Washington."
The official House biography says Angie Craig represents Minnesota's Second Congressional District and describes her work on lower health care costs, public safety, and reducing red tape.
Craig said her bipartisan bill to make E15 available year-round would "move us toward the all-of-the-above energy policy we need" while helping "lowering costs" and "lower prices at the gas pump."
Craig's RECONNECTIONS Act was signed into law and the release says her work has been "one of my top priorities in Congress" in the fight to end the opioid epidemic and expand resources for law enforcement and recovery support.
Craig said that increasing rest spot availability means "a safer and more efficient road" for truck drivers and commuters, and the bill addresses the shortage in safe parking spaces for large commercial trucks.
Assessments
The promise is explicitly conditional on Craig being elected to the U.S. Senate and describes broad future priorities in that Senate role. The evidence shows she remains a U.S. Representative and has taken House actions related to costs and safety, including at least one enacted bill, but those actions do not fulfill the Senate-specific campaign promise. Because the relevant Senate term has not begun and the promised office context has not occurred, the outcome is not yet adjudicable as delivered or failed.
The promise is explicitly conditional on Craig being elected to the Senate and focusing on these priorities in that office. The evidence shows she remains a U.S. Representative, not a Senator, so the Senate-specific promise has not yet reached the point where it can be fulfilled or definitively failed. Her House actions on costs and safety show related effort, but they do not deliver the promised Senate-office outcome.