GOP lawmakers demand accountability from WNBA after āattacksā on Caitlin Clark
GOP lawmakers demand accountability from WNBA after āattacksā on Caitlin Clark

Mitchell Northam, USA TODAYWed, July 8, 2026 at 9:49 PM UTC
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The discourse around WNBA superstar Caitlin Clark and her incident with Alyssa Thomas has reached Washington, D.C.
A group of Republican lawmakers ā led by Texas Rep. August Pfluger ā penned a letter to WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert this week āpressing for greater accountability following repeated acts of physical violenceā against Clark.
In the letter, signed by the 11 members of the Republican Study Committee, Pfluger writes āClark has been hip-checked, poked in the eye, and struck in the throat during games. These incidents go far beyond routine physical play, yet the WNBA and its officiating have too often failed to address these unacceptable incidents and hold players accountable.ā
The Texas congressman went on to add that if Engelbert and the WNBA donāt act to protect the Indiana Fever guard, action from the Department of Justice, Department of Labor or Equal Employment Opportunity Commission could follow.
āI'm putting the league on notice that if it keeps letting the violent targeting slide, they could find themselves facing a DOJ and EEOC crackdown for violating federal civil rights law,ā Pfluger wrote in a tweet.
Adding their signatures to the letter were Indiana Reps. Erin Houchin, Marlin Stutzman and Victoria Spartz, Tennessee Reps. Diana Harshbarger, Tim Burchett and John Rose, Iowa Rep. Zach Nunn, Missouri Rep. Mark Alford, Texas Rep. Pete Sessions and South Carolina Rep. Sheri Biggs.
āCaitlin Clark has transformed womenās basketball and inspired a new generation, while getting hammered for it with no accountability,ā Alford said in a statement. āThatās not competition, thatās failure. Protect your players, enforce your rules, or donāt be surprised when it raises serious federal civil rights questions.ā
More: Caitlin Clark talks scrutiny, hate and WNBA controversy: āI'm not a robotā
When reached for additional comment by USA TODAY Sports on Wednesday, Pfluger said: āThe question we're asking is simple: Will the WNBA protect its players or won't it? Commissioner Engelbert can hold those responsible for the violence against Caitlin Clark accountable and show the next generation of female athletes this league is safe, or she can keep turning a blind eye to it while the violence continues on national television.ā
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The members of Congress asked that Engelbert respond to their letter by July 24. Specifically, they asked her three questions:
What is your review mechanism for physical hostility and violence on the court?
How will you hold players accountable for overly aggressive actions on the court, including towards Caitlin Clark?
What steps are you taking to protect WNBA players from online harassment and off the court threats?
In a statement to the Indianapolis Star, the Indiana Fever said neither the organization nor Clark has talked to anyone within the Republican Study Committee and they were unaware of the letter.
āWe have been clear in our public comments and in our ongoing dialogue with the league about the priority of player safety,ā the Fever said.
The WNBA was pushed into this spotlight on June 24 when, during the Feverās 111-109 loss to the Phoenix Mercury, Alyssa Thomas landed on Clark, pushed her fist into Clarkās throat, then stepped over her amidst a scramble for a loose ball. No foul was called in the moment, but the WNBA reviewed the play the next day and charged Thomas with flagrant-2 foul, suspending her for a game, saying the veteran forward "recklessly" made contact with Clark and "committed a non-basketball act."
In the following days, Thomas said she received death threats and said Engelbert never reached out to her. Engelbert then issued a statement that said the league "vehemently condemns any and all forms of hate."
Politicians and media personalities have taken turns weighing in on the incident. President Donald Trumpeven mentioned it, saying Clark was ātreated rather rough.ā
Clark said last week she was ready for the discussion around the incident with Thomas to be finished.
"Discuss my play. Discuss if I played bad, discuss if I played good,ā Clark said. āI tend to understand there's other things that need to be talked about. Great, whatever, but let's continue to move on. I think just focusing on the joy and amazing parts of this game."
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Republican lawmakers say Clark is being āattacked,ā threaten WNBA with DOJ action
Source: āAOL Sportsā