Tell Congress: Support the Child Care for Working Families Act


Sign the petition by FEBRUARY 22, 2018, to make sure your voice is heard!
Dear Friends,

Last week, Congress agreed on a budget deal that includes the largest increase for child care funding in our country’s history — but the fight isn’t over yet. For many families across the United States, child care costs more than rent, and child care workers are bringing home poverty wages at an average of less than $23,000 per year.

Tell Congress: Support the Child Care for Working Families Act
Add your name before February 22 so your voice is heard when we deliver the petition to Congress.

Take Action

The Child Care for Working Families Act works to expand access to affordable, high-quality child care for all children who need it. Passing this child care bill would mean…

  • Lowering the percentage of a family’s income spent on child care to 7 percent, making child care affordable.
  • More than doubling the number of children eligible for child care assistance, and ensuring all those who are eligible have the ability to enroll their child in a quality program.
  • Supporting universal access to high-quality preschool programs for all low- and middle-income three- and four-year-olds
  • Ensuring that all child care workers are paid a living wage
  • Building more inclusive, high-quality child care facilities for children with disabilities, and infants and toddlers with disabilities, including by increasing funding for the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act.

Sign the petition by FEBRUARY 22, 2018, so that we can deliver it to Congress in time!

That way, ALL families can access affordable high-quality #ChildCareNOW!

Sincerely,
Helen Blank
Director of Child Care and Early Learning
National Women’s Law Center

Lonnie G. Bunch III, Founding Director of the NMAAHC ~ American History


Celebrating Our American Story

Portrait of Dr. Carter G. Woodson

Dr. Carter G. Woodson, 1940s. Scurlock Studio Records, Archives Center, National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution.

It’s Black History Month; 28 days to recognize and celebrate some of the African Americans who have influenced, improved, and shaped our country.

In support of this tradition, I’d like to tell you about Carter G. Woodson, the visionary who first created Negro History Week in February 1926.

Woodson was an impressive scholar, the second African American to receive a Ph.D. in history from Harvard (W.E.B. Du Bois was the first). He was passionate about African American history and, by 1916, he had established the Association for the Study of Negro Life and Culture, an organization whose goal was to make black history accessible to a wider audience.

Ten years later, Woodson created Negro History Week to ensure that schoolchildren be exposed to black history. He believed Negro History Week—which became Black History Month in 1976—would be a vehicle for empowerment.

Today, Carter G. Woodson’s vision for black history as a means of pride and empowerment is as relevant as ever. While Black History Month has evolved from its roots, it is still a catalyst for change … and it is still needed to highlight the contributions, achievements, and continued progress of African Americans in our country.

The National Museum of African American History and Culture tells stories like Carter G. Woodson’s all year long. And during this special month of celebration and recognition, you’re invited to learn more about Carter G. Woodson and other African American individuals, groups, and moments that helped build our nation:

Tuskegee Airmen Tuskegee Airmen

From the early days of World War I, African Americans wanted to serve as pilots in the Army Air Force, but were repeatedly denied because of their race—until these patriotic Americans served with heroic success.Learn more about the Tuskegee Airmen.

America Sees the Truth America Sees the Truth

The 16th Street Baptist Church bombing, in which four young girls were killed, has been called a turning point of the civil rights movement. Learn more about how the 16th Street Baptist Church bombing awakened a complacent nation.

The Harlem Renaissance The Harlem Renaissance

The Great Migration drew to Harlem some of the greatest minds and brightest talents of the day. Between the end of World War I and the mid-1930s, they produced one of the most significant eras of cultural expression in the nation’s history. Learn more about the new spirit of self-determination, pride, and activism that came from the Harlem Renaissance.

Mahalia Jackson Mahalia Jackson: Gospel Takes Flight

“A voice like hers comes along once in a millennium.” That’s what Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. once said of legendary gospel singer Mahalia Jackson. Learn more about this iconic singer’s life and how she changed the future of music in America.

Autherine Lucy An Indomitable Spirit: Autherine Lucy

Despite determination and courage, many African Americans’ journeys along the road to equality did not end in a clear victory, but their stories helped shape our country and must be told. Learn more about Autherine Lucy’s long battle to attend the University of Alabama.

Read our full collection of stories, available worldwide on our award-winning website.

All the best,
DD YE year end 1 signature
Lonnie G. Bunch III
Founding Director

P.S. Our nation has been shaped by many brave African American heroes, visionaries, and leaders—including those whose stories have not been told until now. These stories remind us that history never stands still, but keeps marching forward. Thank you for your support. I hope you will consider joining as a Member or making a donation today.

Join

Marian Anderson, 2014.150.10.1. Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture, © Estate of Lloyd W. Yearwood

Rosa Parks, 2016.116.5. Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture, Gift of Roderick Lyons, © Roderick Lyons

Former President Barack Obama by Tony Powell/NMAAHC

Martin Luther King Jr., 2015.245.4. Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture

Building by Alan Karchmer/NMAAHC

The body of the PT-13D Stearman Kaydet aircraft in NMAAHC. Photo by Alan Karchmer/NMAAHC.

Stained glass rosette shared from the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Alabama. Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture, Gift of the Family of Rev. Norman C. “Jim” Jimerson and Melva Brooks Jimerson. 2013.138a-c.

Photograph of Louis Armstrong recording at the CBS Studio in New York. Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture. 2014.63.92ab.

Mahalia Jackson with Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture, Gift of Paul and Claire Blumenfeld. 2014.141.3

Rosa Parks, Eleanor Roosevelt, and Mrs. H.C. Foster (Autherine Lucy), prior to civil rights rally at Madison Square Garden, New York City. Library of Congress, LC-USZ62-111444.

Turn tragedy into action ~ Indivisible Team


Indivisibles,

We’re going to be honest… this week was hard.

When we sat down to write this email, we were ready to write all about recess, poke fun at Republicans, and get you pumped for 7 days of loud, bold action. We’re still going to do (some of) that, but we want to say something else first:

Our country is in a moral, political, democratic crisis.

Indivisible — and the thousands of groups across the country — was founded in reaction to the crisis of the election. And your work last year was in reaction to the crises repeatedly created by Trump and the GOP’s legislative agenda. But as each week passes, these crises compound on one another. At times, they feel insurmountable.

This week was one of the toughest weeks so far in the Trump era. 17 young people lost their lives in a horrific school shooting in Florida. And less than 24 hours later, Senate Republicans tried to use Dreamers as a bargaining chip for a mass deportation agenda written by a white supremacist. This all happened in just two days.

In the Trump era, it sometimes feels like our hearts grow heavier by the day. Trump and his enablers in Congress create real, deep trauma either through inaction or through attempting to advance harmful agendas. They refuse to pass laws to reduce gun violence, no matter how many lives are lost or how popular these bills are. They refuse to pass laws to create a more humane, common sense immigration system that protects Dreamers from deportation and keeps families together. They choose big donors and white supremacy (oftentimes big donors who are white supremacists!) over their constituents each and every day.

Republicans created this crisis. Period. End of story.

This is their strategy: a relentless assault on our values, our sanity, and our people. They’re hoping that we let cynicism take over. That we begin to opt-out. That we stop resisting. This has been their strategy long before Trump became president.

But it’s up to us not to let cynicism creep in and take over. We have to take the anger, the sorrow, the outrage and turn it to action… just like we did in the weeks and months after the election.

Next week is our opportunity to create a crisis for the Republicans.

Last year, the Indivisible movement turned outrage into action during February recess. You showed the world what’s possible when people show up to hold their members of Congress (MoCs) accountable. At town halls. At district offices. At public events. Then, over the course of 12 months, you ground the GOP’s legislative agenda to a halt and won groundbreaking elections from Alabama to Virginia and everywhere in between.

Next week, we can do it again. Recess is our opportunity to take back the narrative, tell our stories, and push our agenda and our people into the mainstream. Here’s what you can do:

  1. Visit our all-inclusive recess resource at recess.indivisible.org to get prepared to face your MoCs and ask the hard questions they have avoided for the past year. Both the House and Senate are on recess from February 17 (today) to February 25.
  2. Find a town hall near you and show up. Thanks to our friends at the Town Hall Project, we have all of next week’s halls up on our website right now.
  3. If your MoC is hiding from you, don’t worry — we have a solution. Hold a (not so) empty chair town hall for them: show them that whether they show up or not, their constituents will always be there to ask the hard questions and hold them accountable. Here’s our toolkit for planning your own event. Once you’ve planned an event, register it on our map here and we’ll help promote it to people in your area!

From DACA to gun violence to their 2017 votes on the tax scam and healthcare, your MoCs need to hear from you this week. We have the opportunity to shine a light on the GOP’s cynicism and their obstructionism with our collective action.

And just like last year, we can breathe new hope into the progressive movement that will carry us through the hard days, weeks, and months of the Trump Administration… all the way through to the blue wave in November.

Tom Steyer — Need to Impeach


 

For any president to properly perform their job leading our country, both their physical and mental health are critically important.

That’s why more than 70 mental health professionals are sending a letter to Rear Admiral Ronny L. Jackson, Chief Physician to the President. They’re requesting that the presidential physical include an evaluation of Trump’s mental health along with his physical health. It’s standard practice for patients of 66 years and older, and President Trump should not be the exception to this rule. Asking the most powerful person in the world to be subjected to the same evaluation as a rank and file member of the military is just common sense.

Please join us in asking for a comprehensive evaluation of the president’s physical AND mental health.

The American people have the right to ask these tough questions, and expect an honest answer:

  • Is self-described “very stable genius” Donald Trump competent enough to be near the nuclear codes?
  • Can this volatile person faithfully execute his duties as President of the United States?

As the World Health Organization says, “there is no health without mental health.” These are questions every American deserves to know the answers to when President Trump undergoes his annual physical at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center. And yet the White House has already said that there will be NO mental fitness evaluation.

Mental and physical health screens should be part of any physical — and for the president of the United States, these evaluations are particularly important.

Please join us in asking Rear Admiral Jackson to do right by the American people in evaluating the president’s overall health — head to toe.

Thanks,
Tom