[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 21 (Thursday, February 11, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S561-S562]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
90TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE LEAGUE OF WOMEN VOTERS
Mr. CARDIN. Mr. President, I would like to commemorate the League of
Women Voters on the occasion of the 90th anniversary of its founding.
Carrie Chapman Catt and many of the same women leaders who were part of
the women's suffrage movement founded the League of Women Voters in
Chicago on February 14, 1920, during the convention of the National
American Woman Suffrage Association. The convention was held 6 months
before the 19th amendment to the U.S. Constitution was ratified. The
19th amendment, of course, gave women the right to vote after a 72-year
struggle.
According to the league's Web site:
[T]he League began as a ``mighty political experiment''
designed to help 20 million women carry out their new
responsibilities as voters. It encouraged them to use their
new power to participate in shaping public policy. From the
beginning, the League was an activist, grassroots
organization whose leaders believed that citizens should play
a critical role in advocacy. It was then, and is now, a
nonpartisan organization.
The league is proudly nonpartisan; it neither supports nor opposes
candidates or political parties at any level of government. But the
league is actively engaged on issues of vital concern to its members
and the broader public.
The league has a long, rich history that grows more illustrious with
each passing year. For the past 90 years, the league has played an
active role in educating not just women but the entire American public
about our democracy and about those individuals who are candidates for
elective office. Carrie Chapman Catt founded the organization with a
call to women of all parties and political leanings to come together in
order to help pass legislation that would protect and aid major
political movements in the future. Her nonpartisan organization would
soon take on a prominent role in politics through its efforts on behalf
of citizen education and advocacy. Today, there are more than 850
chapters across the country advancing Carrie Chapman Catt's original
idea, including 16 local leagues in Maryland.
The League of Women Voters continues to play an important role in
helping shape public policy by ensuring that the public is well-
informed. Not only has the league been active on the policy front, but
it has helped make our democracy stronger by sponsoring debates that
educate citizens and by
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making voter information easily accessible. The league's election
information Web site--vote411.org--is an invaluable resource for many
Americans, providing information on voter registration and on local,
State, and national issues.
The league has been instrumental in promoting democracy and civil
society abroad, too. After World War II, for instance, the league
supported efforts to establish the United Nations, U.N., and became one
of the first organizations in the country officially recognized by the
United Nations as a nongovernmental organization, NGO. The league also
supported the creation of the World Bank, the International Monetary
Fund, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, and the Marshall plan.
The league maintains official observer status at the U.N. today and has
special consultative status to the Economic and Social Council. The
league served as an NGO delegate to the United Nations Framework
Convention on Climate Change in December. Through its Global Democracy
Program, the league has sponsored cultural exchange programs and
leaders from Azerbaijan, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Colombia, and
Brazil.
Throughout my career in public service, I have participated in many
League of Women Voters debates, and I have seen first-hand the impact
that the league has had on educating the voters about the issues that
most directly affect them. We are a stronger democracy thanks to the
continuing efforts of the League of Women Voters.
I ask my colleagues to join me in recognizing the profound impact the
League of Women Voters has had on our Nation throughout its 90-year
history. I look forward to working with the league in the future to
ensure that Marylanders and all Americans have the information they
need to make informed decisions on election day. And I welcome and
support the league's ongoing efforts to ``export'' what is best about
our democracy to countries around the world. We are fortunate indeed
such an organization exists.
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