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
Latest News

January 21, 2020 by admin

On Roe Day We Must Vow to Protect Abortion Care

Statement from NOW President Toni Van Pelt:

Washington, D.C. — On January 22, 1973, the United States Supreme Court afforded Constitutional protection to women’s right to abortion care. Forty-seven years later, Roe v. Wade is still a critical victory for reproductive freedom, but it is one that is being chipped away piece by piece. 

In 2019 alone, according to the Guttmacher Institute, lawmakers across the United States have enacted 58 new restrictions on access to abortion care and family planning. By stacking the Supreme Court and lower courts with anti-abortion extremist judges, President Donald Trump and is doing everything he can to overturn or severely limit Roe. This would come at the grave cost of the health, safety and autonomy of women across this nation.  

In 1967, NOW was the first national organization to publicly endorse the legalization of abortion and we have been fighting for women’s right to choose ever since. We have hundreds of thousands of members and supporters across the country who are committed to keeping abortion safe, legal and accessible.  

A recent study showed that five years after an abortion, 99 percent of women surveyed felt they have made the right decision and 84 percent of women expressed positive or no emotion with regard to their abortion after five years.  Yet politicians and religious extremists are pushing for needless regulations that harm abortion care clinics and promote horrific lies about fetal pain and infanticide that have no basis in medical reality. These vicious actions encourage violence against abortion providers and threaten the fundamental right of women to control their own bodies and lives.  

For more than 50 years NOW has been at the forefront of protecting women’s reproductive freedom and we are just getting started. This Friday we will join our fellow activists in counter-protesting the so-called “Right to Life” protest at the Supreme Court. We call on our grassroots activists across the country to join similar efforts. By taking to the streets, and to the voting booths, we will protect Roe for generations of women to come.  

Contact

Kimberly Hayes, Press Secretary, press@now.org, 202-570-4745

January 17, 2020 by admin

Why We March—And Won’t Stop Marching

Statement from NOW President Toni Van Pelt:

Today a mass mobilization of activist women is rising up to march for women’s rights around the country, and NOW is proud to be part of these historic actions.  We turn our attention to the power women have as citizens, activists and voters to defend women’s rights and elect feminist women and allies to office.  

I am proud to be delivering the keynote speech at the Women’s March in Seneca Falls, NY, birthplace of the women’s suffrage movement. I will stand on this hallowed ground and speak to my sister activists about ending violence against women, protecting the environment, defending reproductive rights, LGBTQIA+ rights and rights for immigrants, and so many other of our core issue areas.  

This week women achieved a historic victory with the ratification of the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) by the Virginia General Assembly, making Virginia the 38th and last state needed for the ERA become part of the U.S. Constitution.  There are a few more steps to take, and NOW, our grassroots activists and our partners will lead us this final mile. That is why NOW Vice President Christian F. Nunes, along with NOW staff, local chapters and supporters, are marching our historic ERA-banner down the streets of Washington, D.C. today. 

The first women’s march came together like lightning in a bottle—as the idea spread, it became unstoppable. In the weeks after Donald Trump defeated Hillary Clinton in the Electoral College women realized they could not stand by in silence.   

Today we are just as determined, just as resolute, and just as on course for a transformational change in 2020.  NOW is proud to join the countless women who are marching today.  Our journey is far from over. 

Contact

Kimberly Hayes, Press Secretary, press@now.org, 202-570-4745

January 15, 2020 by admin

We’re All Part of the History Being Made in Virginia Today

Statement from NOW President Toni Van Pelt:

RICHMOND, VA – After a hundred-year journey full of heartbreaks and triumphs, the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) is poised to finally be part of the Constitution of the United States.  NOW President Toni Van Pelt is standing on the floor of the Virginia’s House of Delegates today as they vote to become the 38th and final state needed to ratify the ERA.   

In a historic election in November, voters swept in a feminist majority in the state legislature committed to passing the ERA, and those legislators fulfilled their promise.  For more than a half century winning a constitutional guarantee of equality for women has been a top priority for NOW, with our grassroots activists mounting countless protests, rallies and marches.  Now we are about to see those years of mobilizing come to fruition. 

“I am proud and honored to be walking in Eleanor Smeal’s footsteps as the president of NOW, especially as we cross the finish line of ratification of the Equal Rights Amendment,” Van Pelt said. “I’m also so grateful to NOW activist and leader Virgina Delegate Hala Ayala for her grit and determination to make women’s equal rights a reality in our lifetime.” 

“I have fought for the passage of the ERA for over a decade, long before I was elected to office,” Delegate Ayala said. “That is why I am proud to be the Chief Co-Patron for the Equal Rights Amendment as its passage finally guarantees true gender equality in the US Constitution. Today is a major victory for women and girls throughout the country.” 

“Virginia has taken a huge step forward for Women’s Rights and Equality in passing the Equal Rights Amendment,” said Virginia NOW President Connie Cordovilla. “The rights of women under the law in our United States have moved forward 400 hundred years in a single day! How fitting it is that Hala Ayala, a Latina, has brought change to the lives of women in the Commonwealth and United States from this day forward.” 

Just like Alice Paul when she first started her brave journey for the ERA in the 1920’s, Virginia’s House of Delegates made history today. Next, the bills from the state Senate and House of Delegates will each be agreed to by the other body and ratification will become official.

NOW salutes the new leadership of the Virginia General Assembly, the feminist majority that took this vote, and all the activists, NOW members, women voters and believers in true democracy who made this happen. 

Contact

Kimberly Hayes, Press Secretary, press@now.org, 202-570-4745

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 47
  • 48
  • 49
  • 50
  • 51
  • …
  • 125
  • Next Page »

Take Action

Become a Florida NOW Member

Update Your Contact Info or Chapter

Learn About Our Seek Then Speak Campaign

2025 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