Doctors You Didn't Know Were Republican
Ralph Abraham

Ralph Abraham was born in Alto, Louisiana, in 1954. He attended Louisiana State University (LSU) and earned a bachelor's degree before graduating from the LSU School Of Veterinary Medicine in 1980. Ralph Abraham became a certified pilot and flight instructor in 1980, then served in the Mississippi Army National Guard Special Forces as First Lieutenant with the 20th SFG Airborne Division from 1986 to 1989. Ralph Abraham obtained his medical degree from LSU School Of Medicine in 1994. He began his practice as a general family practitioner in 1995 and has been in practice ever since. Ralph Abraham was elected into the House Of Representatives in 2014 as a Republican and is still in office. Ralph Abraham is a former medical mission member of the Hospitals for Humanity in Haiti and a former medical mission member of the Bahamas Habitat Team. He is an active member of the Louisiana State Medical Society and the Civil Aerospace Medical Institute.
Ralph Abraham shares the same Republican views as President Donald Trump on many issues. Ralph Abraham voted in agreement with Donald Trump to oppose the bill condemning the Trump administration for calling on courts to invalidate the Affordable Care Act. He also voted to support the bill for expanding eligibility for health savings accounts, and the bill for eliminating the medical device tax.
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John Barrasso

John Barrasso was born in Reading, Pennsylvania, in 1952, and attended Georgetown University and earned a Bachelor's of Science in 1974 and a Doctorate in Medicine in 1978. He then completed a residency at Yale Medical School and settled down in Casper, Wyoming. John Barrasso became an orthopedic surgeon at Casper Orthopedic Associates and practiced there from 1983 to 2007. Following that, he became Chief Of Staff at Wyoming Medical Center while also serving the rodeo associations and state fair as a surgeon. John Barrasso also held the title as the President of the Wyoming Medical Society. He unsuccessfully ran for the United States Senate in 1996 but was elected to the Wyoming State Senate as a Conservative Republican in 2002 and held his seat until 2006. John Barrasso was then elected into the United States Senate as a Republican the same year and has held office ever since. He held the Minority Policy Committee Chair in the Senate in 2015, and Majority Policy Committee Chair from 2015 to 2019. John Barrasso is also a Chair in the Republican Conference of the Senate.
John Barrasso stands with President Donald Trump and the Republican Party positions on political, social, and economic issues. He voted to support the bill for setting requirements for the care of infants born after failed abortions and voted to support the bill to put a permanent ban on the use of federal funds for abortion or health coverage that includes abortions.
