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SEEKONK, MASSACHUSETTS, United States

Friday, September 7, 2018

60 days until the election. JENNIFER BOYSKO, RUN EVERYWHERE.

David,
We have only 60 days left until the election! That's why right now we have to maintain our focus on making big changes here in Virginia. Republicans are threatening to remove our rights and they are placing roadblocks to our success. We must stay motivated in the next two months to fight them with our ballots.

In Virginia, we have flipped districts and corrected the errors of past politicians who implemented gerrymandering to aid the Republicans in elections. But there is still so much more to do and we only have two months left to do it!


Thank you,
Jennifer Boysko
Finance Chair, Virginia Democratic House Caucus
Chair of Run Everywhere
 

1,000 words. U.S. Representative David Cicilline.

SERVING YOU   |   MEDIA CENTER   |   LEGISLATIVE WORK   |   OUR DISTRICT
 September 7, 2018  
Dear David,

Right now, Republicans in the United States Senate are rushing to confirm the nomination of Judge Brett Kavanaugh to the United States Supreme Court. Judge Kavanaugh is one of the most extreme right-wing nominees to the Supreme Court in history. If he is confirmed, it will mean that women’s health care, LGBT equality, workers’ rights, and environmental protections will be endangered by a new right-wing majority. We can’t let this happen.

That’s why I spoke on the House floor last night to urge the Senate to reject his nomination. Click the image below to watch my remarks right now.

 


USO Care Packages 

As our nation’s veterans bravely stand watch, keep our country safe, and protect the liberties we hold dear, we must remember the responsibility we have to these very courageous men and women. While they have never demanded anything in return for their service, our veterans deserve to know that our country honors them, as well as the countless sacrifices made every day by their families and loved ones. On Wednesday, I took some time to put together care packages with the United Service Organizations to support those members of the military and their families.

We owe all our troops and veterans an enormous debt of gratitude, as well as the benefits they’ve earned. Please know that I’ll continue to support our troops and do whatever I can to deliver real results on their behalf.




Congressional App Challenge

I’m delighted to host this year’s 2018 Congressional App Challenge for students in Rhode Island’s First Congressional District and would love to encourage all students residing or attending school in the district to take part in this challenge by submitting their design of an app for mobile, tablet, or personal computers on a platform of their choice.

This competition offers young people the opportunity to gain real-world experience and develop skills in the cutting-edge field of computer programming and Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM). Students are allowed to compete individually or in teams of up to four people. In addition to submitting an app for the Congressional App Challenge, students will also prepare a video explaining what they learned during the competition.

Interested students and who have not yet graduated high school can register for the 2018 Congressional App Challenge by clicking here or by calling Jakub Lis at 729-5600. The deadline for submissions is November 1, 2018.

Apps will be judged by a panel of local experts in the academic, software, and entrepreneurial fields and the winning app will be featured on the U.S. House of Representatives website, as well as in an exhibit in the U.S. Capitol. Additional resources for students interested in participating are available by clicking here .

I look forward to seeing the apps that are submitted for this competition.

In Case You Missed It

I spoke with Wolf Blitzer on CNN yesterday afternoon to discuss the President’s meltdown this week over Bob Woodward’s upcoming book and the anonymous New York Times op-ed that was authored by a Trump administration insider. Each day it seems, there’s a new self-induced crisis from this White House that distracts from the important work we need to do for the American people. The President could end all of this by coming clean about his campaign and his administration, but he’d rather start a new witch hunt to find out which staffers aren’t 100% loyal to him.

Click here to watch my interview right now.

As always, if you or someone you know has any questions or concerns, please call my office at 729-5600 or send me an email at David.Cicilline@mail.house.gov . You can also click here  to follow my work on Twitter.

Warm Regards,

David Cicilline
Member of Congress                                 


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Washington D.C. Office
2244 Rayburn HOB
Washington, DC 20515
Phone: (202) 225-4911
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Phone: (401) 729-5600
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Thursday, September 6, 2018

ONWARD TOGETHER. HILLARY CLINTON.


 
 

David --

One of the most incredible things to come out of the 2016 election has been how many members of this big-hearted team have turned frustration into action.

...leading local campaigns and organizing protests. ...showing up at town halls, rallies, and phone banks. ...using your voices to support candidates who are breaking barriers and to speak out against policies that do harm instead of good.


Because of...dedication and generosity, we’ve been able to provide 12 groups with mentorship, resources, and more than $1 million in financial support -- and that’s only in our first year. As the midterms draw closer, we’ll be backing even more hard-working, groundbreaking organizations and candidates.
Onward!

Hillary

NPR BREAKING NEWS- India's Supreme Court Strikes Down Ban On Gay Sex.


Celebrations by India's LGBTQ community stretched into the night Thursday, after the country's Supreme Court struck down a long-standing ban on gay sex in a unanimous decision that marks a watershed in the socially conservative country of 1.3 billion people.
It is a landmark ruling in a nation where attitudes about gays and lesbians are beginning to change — and the decision points to more questions of how India will extend equal protections to the LGBTQ community.
"No one can escape from their individuality," Chief Justice Dipak Misra, who is due to retire next month, said, reading from the judgment.
"We have to bid adieu to prejudices and empower all citizens," said Misra, who also spoke on behalf of four concurring judges.
The central courtroom, under the Indian Supreme Court's iconic ivory dome, was packed with dozens of plaintiffs, lawyers and activists. Members of the public squeezed past security guards.
The ban, Section 377 of the Indian penal code, outlawed any sex that goes "against the order of nature." The law dates to 1861, when the country was under British colonial rule. The law is interpreted as a ban on all anal and oral sex, though it is generally used to prosecute men for having sex with other men.
"It felt validating, exciting, emotional — I cried," said one of the plaintiffs, Keshav Suri, a prominent hotelier in Delhi. "And more importantly, I felt an acceptance of my existence."
Thursday's ruling reversed a 2013 decision rescinding a Delhi high court order that sought to decriminalize homosexuality.
"Consensual sex between adults in [a] private space, which is not harmful to women or children, cannot be denied as it is a matter of individual choice," the court said."Section 377 results in discrimination and is violative of constitutional principles."
Outside on the Supreme Court lawn, cheers went up through a crowd of mostly young activists, some of whom had traveled across the country to be there. They unfurled rainbow flags and took selfies.
"I'm feeling what most Indians must have felt at the time of independence," said Yashwindar Singh, who was wrapped against the sun in a multicolored scarf. He hadn't slept the night before, in anticipation.
"This is the dawn of freedom for me," he said.
One of the plaintiffs, Arif Jafar, was arrested in 2001 and charged with "promotion and abetment of crime" and criminal conspiracy under Section 377. He had been standing near a train station, handing out condoms with cartoons that demonstrated how to use them. He was beaten by police and spent 47 days in jail.
The law had also been a means to blackmail or assault gay and transgender people.
In India's largest city, Mumbai, a nonprofit group called the Humsafar Trust, which advocates for queer rights, hung a rainbow curtain across the facade of its office. Workers handed out rainbow flags and broke out into cheers.
"A golden morning has dawned! The era of 377 is gone!" they chanted in the local language, Marathi.
The hearing fell on a rare day of sunshine in both Delhi and Mumbai, near the end of a torrential monsoon season.
"I was considered as a criminal just because the person with whom I wanted to make love was of the same gender," said Ankit Bhuptani, a gay rights activist and founder of the Gay and Lesbian Vaishnava Association. "I am no longer a criminal now."
In recent years, pride parades have become more common in Indian cities, though they are not always understood, The Washington Post reports:
" 'Many watching the modest pride parade in Bhubaneswar did not understand what the slogans and posters meant. 'This is against society,' said Benudhar Baliavsingh, upon learning the purpose of the march. 'What's good about this?'
"Another puzzled onlooker was more positive when he was told the meaning of the rainbow flag. 'This is good. If people love each other freely, they will live together happily. They won't fight,' he said."
Furkan Latif Khan is an NPR producer in New Delhi; Sushmita Pathak is an NPR producer in Mumbai.