Jubilee! 37 More Cosponsors!

October 26th, 2007 at 9:51 am | posted by Virginia Simmons

During the last two weeks, ONE members sent more than 48,000 letters and made 4,200 calls to their members of Congress urging them to support the Jubilee Act.

Before we took these thousands of actions, there was a Jubilee bill in the House with just 52 cosponsors, and no companion bill in the Senate.

Now, after Jubilee USA and ONE’s campaigns, 27 more representatives have signed on to cosponsor the Jubilee Act in the House, the Senate has introduced a companion bill and 10 key senators have signed on to cosponsor it.

You can see the full list of representatives and senators who have shown their support by cosponsoring here and here on Thomas.loc.gov.

If your representative or either of your state’s senators are signed on, please thank them using our online tool.

If your representative’s or either of your senators’ names aren’t on the list, there’s still plenty you can do to encourage them.

1.) Write a letter to your members of Congress.
2.) Call their office. All the talking points you need are here.
3.) Write a letter to the editor to your local paper about unjust debt in the developing world and the Jubilee Act.
4.) Schedule a meeting with your representative’s state or DC office. Email giveyourtime@one.org for all the resources you’ll need.

Use the comment thread below to let us know if your representative and senators have signed on yet - and to add your ideas or questions about how to get their support for this critical bill.

Call Now!

October 17th, 2007 at 12:55 pm | posted by Virginia Simmons

Representatives Waters (D-CA) and Bachus (R-AL) introduced the Jubilee Act in the House of Representatives in June.

If you don’t see your representative’s name in the list of co-sponsors below, please call 1800 786-2663 and encourage your elected leader to co-sponsor today!

Currently there are 68 co-sponsors.

Rep. Baldwin, Tammy [WI-2] - 10/2/2007
Rep. Berman, Howard L. [CA-28] - 9/24/2007
Rep. Bishop, Sanford D., Jr. [GA-2] - 7/11/2007
Rep. Blumenauer, Earl [OR-3] - 6/19/2007
Rep. Brady, Robert A. [PA-1] - 7/11/2007
Rep. Brown, Corrine [FL-3] - 6/28/2007
Rep. Capps, Lois [CA-23] - 6/28/2007
Rep. Carnahan, Russ [MO-3] - 10/15/2007
Rep. Carson, Julia [IN-7] - 6/26/2007
Rep. Christensen, Donna M. [VI] - 6/28/2007
Rep. Clay, Wm. Lacy [MO-1] - 6/19/2007
Rep. Cleaver, Emanuel [MO-5] – 6/7/2007
Rep. Cohen, Steve [TN-9] - 9/7/2007
Rep. Conyers, John, Jr. [MI-14] – 6/28/2007
Rep. Crowley, Joseph [NY-7] - 10/12/2007
Rep. Davis, Artur [AL-7] - 6/28/2007
Rep. Davis, Danny K. [IL-7] - 10/12/2007
Rep. Davis, Susan A. [CA-53] - 9/24/2007
Rep. DeLauro, Rosa L. [CT-3] - 7/11/2007
Rep. Doggett, Lloyd [TX-25] - 10/12/2007
Rep. Doyle, Michael F. [PA-14] - 8/2/2007
Rep. Edwards, Chet [TX-17] - 9/24/2007
Rep. Ellison, Keith [MN-5] - 10/12/2007
Rep. Fattah, Chaka [PA-2] - 7/30/2007
Rep. Filner, Bob [CA-51] - 7/11/2007
Rep. Green, Al [TX-9] - 7/11/2007
Rep. Grijalva, Raul M. [AZ-7] - 6/19/2007
Rep. Gutierrez, Luis V. [IL-4] - 6/7/2007
Rep. Hastings, Alcee L. [FL-23] - 6/19/2007
Rep. Hinchey, Maurice D. [NY-22] - 6/19/2007
Rep. Honda, Michael M. [CA-15] - 9/24/2007
Rep. Jackson, Jesse L., Jr. [IL-2] - 7/11/2007
Rep. Jackson-Lee, Sheila [TX-18] - 6/19/2007
Rep. Jefferson, William J. [LA-2] - 6/19/2007
Rep. Johnson, Eddie Bernice [TX-30] - 6/26/2007
Rep. Jones, Stephanie Tubbs [OH-11] - 10/2/2007
Rep. Kucinich, Dennis J. [OH-10] - 7/30/2007
Rep. Lee, Barbara [CA-9] - 6/7/2007
Rep. Lewis, John [GA-5] - 7/11/2007
Rep. Lofgren, Zoe [CA-16] - 7/11/2007
Rep. Maloney, Carolyn B. [NY-14] - 6/7/2007
Rep. McDermott, Jim [WA-7] - 9/7/2007
Rep. McGovern, James P. [MA-3] - 6/26/2007
Rep. McNulty, Michael R. [NY-21] - 6/26/2007
Rep. Miller, George [CA-7] - 7/11/2007
Rep. Moore, Gwen [WI-4] - 7/11/2007
Rep. Moran, James P. [VA-8] - 6/26/2007
Rep. Murphy, Christopher S. [CT-5] - 9/24/2007
Rep. Norton, Eleanor Holmes [DC] - 6/19/2007
Rep. Oberstar, James L. [MN-8] – 7/11/2007
Rep. Olver, John W. [MA-1] - 9/7/2007
Rep. Pastor, Ed [AZ-4] - 9/24/2007
Rep. Payne, Donald M. [NJ-10] - 6/7/2007
Rep. Rangel, Charles B. [NY-15] - 6/26/2007
Rep. Richardson, Laura [CA-37] - 10/12/2007
Rep. Rush, Bobby L. [IL-1] - 6/26/2007
Rep. Schakowsky, Janice D. [IL-9] - 6/26/2007
Rep. Serrano, Jose E. [NY-16] - 7/11/2007
Rep. Stark, Fortney Pete [CA-13] - 6/28/2007
Rep. Van Hollen, Chris [MD-8] – 10/12/2007
Rep. Wasserman Schultz, Debbie [FL-20] - 10/12/2007
Rep. Watson, Diane E. [CA-33] – 9/24/2007
Rep. Watt, Melvin L. [NC-12] - 7/11/2007
Rep. Welch, Peter [VT] - 9/24/2007
Rep. Wexler, Robert [FL-19] - 7/11/2007
Rep. Woolsey, Lynn C. [CA-6] - 7/11/2007
Rep. Wu, David [OR-1] - 6/19/2007

Take Action! Call for Jubilee!

October 17th, 2007 at 10:57 am | posted by Erin Erlenborn, ONE Policy Staff

Yesterday, Jubilee USA wrapped up their 40-day fast with a terrific victory! Senators Robert Casey (D-PA), Richard Lugar (R-IN) and Chris Dodd (D-CT) introduced the Jubilee Act with Senators Joseph Biden (D-DE), John Sununu (R-NH) and Barack Obama (D-IL) as original co-sponsors of the legislation.

Today, Jubilee members are walking the Halls of Congress trying to build support for their bill. Please encourage everyone to call using our ONE 800 number (1-800-786-2663) to garner support for this important legislation.

All the talking points you need are here.

Thanks!

-Erin Erlenborn, ONE’s Government Affairs Director

Take Action: The Jubilee Act!

October 12th, 2007 at 11:04 am | posted by Virginia Simmons

Today, ONE members are asking their representatives to support the Jubilee Act - a bill that would cancel debt in developing countries that promise to use the savings for poverty reduction.

Developing countries like Haiti and Lesotho, which should be building schools and distributing malaria nets and AIDS drugs, are stuck paying back billions of dollars of debt, often racked up by corrupt dictators.

Please ask your representative to support the Jubilee Act.

Canceling debt has a real success rate for reducing poverty. When Tanzania’s debt was canceled in 2000, for example, the government was able to eliminate school fees and 1.5 million Tanzanian children enrolled in school almost overnight.

Right now, Sub-Saharan Africa pays $13 billion in debt service to wealthy nations and financial institutions every year, almost enough to pay for life-saving drugs to reverse the AIDS crisis that claims 7,000 lives each day.

We hope to send at least 40,000 letters to Congress by Oct 17. Please contact your representative in support of the Jubilee Act today.

Jubilee on AIDS and Debt in Haiti

October 9th, 2007 at 1:04 pm | posted by ONE.Partners


ONE Partner Jubilee USA sent us the below post about AIDS, debt, and poverty in Haiti from Global Justice Co-Director Evelyn Sallah.

Haiti: Struggling to Fight the Devastation of HIV/AIDS in the Face of Debt

So I can’t show you how, exactly, health care is a basic human right. But what I can argue is that no one should have to die of a disease that is treatable.

According to the World Health Organization (WHO), Haiti is home to the highest prevalence of HIV/AIDS in Latin America, with reportedly the worst level of devastation in the Western Hemisphere.

Similar to many parts of the world, especially Southern Africa, HIV/AIDS in Haiti has created a population of hundreds of thousands of orphaned children. Meanwhile youth living in urban areas have three times the likelihood of contracting the disease than those living in rural areas.

Haiti’s crippling debt burden is a major factor in restraining government resources to adequately tackle this serious issue. The Jubilee Act, which would cancel the debt of 67 impoverished countries in the Global South, would free up resources for Haiti to fight the HIV/AIDS pandemic.

Race is directly related to this poverty and is exemplified clearly with the disproportionate number of those affected by HIV/AIDS within the African Diaspora.

We can further see this reality when comparing the devastation HIV/AIDS has in Sub-Saharan Africa to Haiti, and recognize similar levels of devastation. As nurses in hospitals in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) are fighting for space, and clean syringes, so are the nurses in Haiti’s hospitals.

In Haiti, all (more…)

Jubilee Member Blogs from Haiti

October 3rd, 2007 at 9:41 am | posted by ONE.Partners

Michelle Karshan, a member of ONE Partner Jubilee USA and former Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide foreign press liason, is fasting right now for Haiti. She blogs her perspective on how Haiti’s struggle with debt and economic recovery was ignored by the international press.


In May 2007, while in Haiti, friends told me of the rising cost of living. As I spent what seemed like a lot of money purchasing food to cook three meals a day, I wondered how folks were feeding their families even one meal a day at those exorbitant prices.

Michelet, a young man, considerably thinner since 2004, pointed out that he had personally seen a rise in TB in his own neighborhood. He explained that with the increase in the cost of living people could not nourish themselves enough to fend off disease.

Dr. Paul Farmer has so eloquently drawn this connection between infectious disease and poverty, yet the international financial institutions have yet to reprioritize their economic plans.

Former Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide often referred to structural adjustment and the debt as “Economic Terrorism”, because globalization and the way it revolves around creating and keeping impoverished countries impoverished results in starvation, disease, illiteracy and death. And, in the end millions of dollars spent on poverty reduction cannot turn a country around without debt reduction and forgiveness.

Last week, while Haiti and each Haitian there still suffers from the backbreaking debt inherited from the Duvalier regime, former dictator Jean-Claude Duvalier was heard on the airways apologizing for the atrocities and corruption during his administration.

Not coincidentally, his plea for forgiveness came immediately following Switzerland’s announcement that they would extend the Haitian government’s period of time to wage their legal battle to recover the millions of dollars in Duvalier’s Swiss bank accounts.

Haitian President Rene Preval rightly responded to Duvalier’s maneuvers, stating that while forgiveness is good, justice must prevail. Preval made it clear that his government would continue its pursuit of the monies, and that if Duvalier chooses to return to Haiti he will certainly be brought to justice.

It was extremely frustrating working as the Foreign Press Liaison to presidents Aristide, Preval and Aristide again. All the while, the international press ignored the debt that shackled any efforts towards recovery, ignored the U.S.-led embargo against Haiti’s government, and the economic “death plan” Aristide tried to resist. The U.S. Embassy waged a campaign denying that there was any financial embargo and they harassed press who dared to call the embargo an embargo!

The international press, distracting its readers from the real talking points, lay all blame at Aristide’s door, and characterized Haiti as: “spiraling downward;” “a basket case;” “a failed state;” and “a people unable to govern themselves.”

Yet inside the storm, at the eye of the storm, was globalization, the endless debt, the imposed impoverishment of a country up against a proud nation that believes that justice — economic justice — means accessible, universal health care, schools, literacy programs, and the right to work and farm.

It will not be hard for me to begin my fast today. What has been hard is to eat, knowing that more than 8 million people in Haiti cannot eat one meal a day.”