Florida NOW

National Organization for Women

Donate Join, Re-Join or Renew

Current Action Alerts

  • About
    • Who We Are
    • Gallery
    • Chapters
    • FLNOW Ed Fund
    • FL Collegiate NOW
    • Seek Then Speak
  • Events
    • Book Club
    • Get Involved
  • Issues
    • Constitutional Equality
    • Economic Justice
    • Freedom from Violence
    • LGBTQ Rights
    • Racial Justice
    • Reproductive Rights
    • Book Bans
    • More Issues
  • News
    • News
    • Newsletters
  • Resources
  • PAC
    • Florida NOW PAC
      • #4320 (no title)
      • #4325 (no title)
      • #4314 (no title)
    • Endorsement Questionnaire
  • Members
  • Join or Renew
  • REPORT SEXUAL ASSAULT

July 18, 2020 by admin

NOW Celebrates the Life of John Lewis — And We Pledge to Honor His Legacy

Released on July 18, 2020

WASHINGTON, D.C. – At Congressman John Lewis’s last appearance in Selma, Alabama to commemorate the historic 1965 march across the Edmund Pettus Bridge—where state troopers launched a vicious attack on peaceful demonstrators that left him with a fractured skull,–– he returned to a message that he advocated for throughout his life, the power of the right to vote. 

Already diagnosed with stage four pancreatic cancer, John Lewis looked back on that day and said, “We were beaten, we were tear-gassed.  I thought I was going to die on this bridge.  But somehow and some way, God almighty helped me here.” 

“I’m not going to give up.  I’m not going to give in…We must go out and vote like we’ve never, ever voted before.  We must use the vote as a nonviolent instrument or tool to redeem the soul of America.” 

As we enter an election season where voter suppression is increasingly used as a tool of white supremacy, bigotry, and prejudice, we draw inspiration from John Lewis’s life, and motivation from his tireless faith in the power of the people to defeat injustice. This November we will mobilize and vote as our lives depend on it, making “good trouble.” 

NOW joins the call for the Edmund Pettus Bridge to be renamed in honor of John Lewis, and we also call on Congress to govern under the guidance of his principles and his example.  

Our activists are dedicated to following in his footsteps – making sure we continue to advocate against racial injustice. We will work for a “real” civil rights act that goes beyond necessary police and law enforcement reforms and makes reparations that lead to racial and economic justice by supporting schools, job opportunities, access to housing and health care and so much more.  

The legacy of John Lewis will never be forgotten – may he rest in power.  

Contact: Press Team, press@now.org,

July 17, 2020 by admin

Trump’s Effort to Deny Asylum to Victims of Violence is Inhumane

Released on July 17, 2020

WASHINGTON – One of the cruelest initiatives yet proposed by the Trump Administration threatens to send victims of violence applying for asylum in the U.S. back home to face even more violence or perhaps death. The National Organization for Women (NOW) and our allies in the domestic violence and sexual assault prevention communities have worked for over 20 years to establish a safe, legal path for survivors of violence to reach the U.S. Border safely under provisions in the Violence Against Women Act (VAWA) and Trafficking Victims Protection Act (TVPA).  

NOW submitted a formal comment on July 15th, objecting to adoption of this harmful rule. Since the passage of VAWA in 1994, Congress has acknowledged that gender-based violence remains the most widespread form of violence in the world. Also, that domestic violence is often exacerbated in marriages where one spouse is not a citizen and their legal status depends on the marriage to the abuser. VAWA is so important because it also allows a battered undocumented woman to petition for lawful status on her own, eliminating the need for the cooperation of a violent spouse.  

The Department of Homeland Security, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Service’s proposed rule change would limit protections for asylum seekers and essentially eliminate the previously established recognition of “gender-based asylum.” It would cut off access to asylum for women fleeing rape, severe domestic violence, human trafficking, and other forms of gender-based violence. This rule would shortcut the screening process such that most asylum-seeking survivors would never get a day in court and instead be deported without a hearing and through a streamlined removal process. 

In an effort that promises to further undermine U.S. standing as a beacon for democracy, the proposed rule narrows sharply the definition of “political persecution,” and thus denies protections to advocates whose efforts to obtain equal and often basic human rights in their home counties have made them a target of violence.  

If this rule change becomes reality, a large group of immigrant women who have been deemed survivors of domestic violence and have been vetted by immigration authorities specifically trained in this issue, will lose access to police protection and other community resources, restraining order protections, child custody determinations, and child support. This will also discourage these women from accessing justice and safety, forcing them to remain with abusive spouses and raise their children around violence.  

With the #MeToo movement, people around the world have been inspired to uplift survivors in their community. If this new rule passes, we will be leaving these asylum-seeking women in the shadows.  NOW stands with our allies in voicing our objection to yet another inhumane policy from the Trump Administration.

Contact: Press Team, press@now.org,

July 17, 2020 by admin

Washington’s Football Team Must Change Its Toxic Culture—Not Just Its

Released on July 17, 2020

WASHINGTON, D.C. – The Washington Post’s extensive reporting on years of sexual harassment and verbal abuse directed at female employees, and ignored or condoned by top executives within Washington’s football organization is shocking, but not surprising.  The culture of contempt for women, violence against women, and disregard for women’s safety has long been a blight on the NFL. 

Team owner Daniel Snyder has done the easy part by issuing a statement designed to deal with today’s headlines, but we’re watching to see what his team—and the NFL do moving forward.  We’ve seen these empty words and promises before. Too often, sports teams and leagues have proven that profit is their sole priority. They see this as a PR problem they think they can fix by shuffling their staff, hiring lawyers, and making vague promises to do better in the future. 

NOW has long spoken out against the NFL’s culture that treats women—whether they’re cheerleaders, team staff, or intimate partners of players—as sex objects, playthings, or targets of abuse.  But the league persists with half-measures, empty gestures and circling the wagons–as Daniel Snyder is doing by hiring the same lawyer Brett Kavanaugh retained to defend him against charges of sexual assault to conduct a review of the team’s culture, policies and allegations of workplace misconduct.   

Washington’s football team thinks it can erase decades of racism by changing its name, and decades of sexism by firing a few executives.  But women—who are pro football’s fastest growing fan demographic—won’t settle for window dressing.  The toxic culture has to change—today.  Enough is enough.  

Contact: Press Team, press@now.org,

  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • …
  • 89
  • Next Page »

Take Action

Become a Florida NOW Member

Update Your Contact Info or Chapter

Learn About Our Seek Then Speak Campaign

2024 Legislative Recap

Get Florida NOW Updates

Sign up for our mailing list, choose only the news you want to receive.

MERCH

Order a Florida NOW T-Shirt online! Shipping in 5-10 days. Go to: https://www.etsy.com/shop/TheKatylist

Florida NOW

Florida NOW’s purpose is to take action through intersectional grassroots activism to promote feminist ideals, lead societal change, eliminate discrimination, and achieve and protect the equal rights of all women and girls.

Learn more about us.

Contact

E-Mail
web@flnow.org

Social

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter