US House of Representatives | SabrangIndia News Related to Human Rights Tue, 10 Dec 2019 11:20:23 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2.2 https://sabrangindia.in/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Favicon_0.png US House of Representatives | SabrangIndia 32 32 Kashmir resolution introduced in US House of Representatives https://sabrangindia.in/kashmir-resolution-introduced-us-house-representative/ Tue, 10 Dec 2019 11:20:23 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2019/12/10/kashmir-resolution-introduced-us-house-representative/ Congresswoman Pramila Jayapal, an Indian origin US lawmaker, has moved a resolution in the House of Representatives urging India to “to end the restrictions on communications and mass detentions in Jammu and Kashmir as swiftly as possible and preserve religious freedom for all residents.”

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The resolution, that is co-sponsored by Republican Congressman Steve Watkins, says, “on August 5, 2019, the Government of India cut all telephone service and internet access in Jammu and Kashmir, the 53rd time the Indian government restricted communication in Kashmir in 2019.” It explains developments leading to the partial lifting of the communication blockade saying, “Government of India announced it had restored landline phone service to Jammu and Kashmir on September 5, 2019, and partially restored cellphone service on October 14, 2019.”

The resolution further says, “60 percent of the 6,000,000 mobile subscribers in Jammu and Kashmir rely on prepaid cellphones, which remain inoperable for communication, and text messaging and mobile internet services remain suspended.” It adds, “people across the United States maintain ties with family and friends in Jammu and Kashmir and have reported difficulty contacting their loved ones since the communications blockade was imposed on August 5, 2019.”

On the subject of the brewing human rights crisis in Kashmir, the resolution says, “Committee to Protect Journalists, Reporters Without Borders, Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press, and independent reporters have documented detentions and harassment of journalists in Jammu and Kashmir;” and that, “international human rights observers have documented the police’s use of excessive force against detained people and excessive and indiscriminate use of pellet shotguns, tear gas, and rubber bullets against protesters.” As a chilling reminder of how children are perhaps the worst affected, the resolution says, “Jammu and Kashmir police have acknowledged that 144 children, as young as 9 years old, have been arrested.”

The resolution goes on to urge the government of India “to ensure 8 that any actions taken in pursuit of legitimate security priorities respect the human rights of all people 10 and adhere to international human rights law.” The resolution makes the following requests:

(A)   lift the remaining restrictions on communication and to restore internet access across all of Jammu and Kashmir as swiftly as possible;

(B)   refrain from the use of threats and excessive force against detained people and peaceful protesters;

(C)   swiftly release arbitrarily detained people in Jammu and Kashmir;

(D)   refrain from conditioning the release of detained people on their willingness to sign bonds prohibiting any political activities and speeches;

(E)    allow international human rights observers and journalists to access Jammu and Kashmir and operate freely throughout India, without threats;

(F)    condemn, at the highest levels, all religiously motivated violence, including that violence which targets against religious minorities.

The entire resolution may be read here:

Previously, Congresswoman Rashida Tlaib had also raised concerns about the situation in Kashmir. In a statement on September 13, 2019 Tlaib had said, “While I have deep respect for India and its important relationship with the United States, I condemn the Indian government’s revocation of Articles 370 and 35A, the communications blockade it has imposed, its suppression of life-saving medical care, and the reports of widespread violence, torture, and other human rights violations being carried out in Jammu and Kashmir.” The entire statement may be read here.

In November, Tlaib moved a resolution before the House of Representatives “condemning the human rights violations taking place in Jammu and Kashmir and supporting Kashmiri self-determination.”

Tlaib’s resolution said, “Government of India has unilaterally changed the status of Jammu and Kashmir without a direct consultation or the consent of the Kashmiri people.” It added, “Government of India has used the arrest and indefinite detention of thousands of people to control civilians of all ages, including minors as young as nine, in Jammu and Kashmir using the Public Safety Act, which violates article 9(2) of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights;”and that “Government of India has detained Kashmiri civil society leaders of all political perspectives without charge or trial.” The entire text of Tlaib’s resolution may be read here.

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Women candidates break records in the 2018 US midterm elections https://sabrangindia.in/women-candidates-break-records-2018-us-midterm-elections/ Sat, 10 Nov 2018 07:39:41 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2018/11/10/women-candidates-break-records-2018-us-midterm-elections/ Sharice Davids, the first lesbian Native American Congresswoman. EPA-EFE   The 2018 midterms broke the records on female candidates in US elections. More than 20 women were on the Senate ballot, while more than ten times that number stood for the House of Representatives. If we also consider state elections for executive roles such as governor as well as state legislatures, the […]

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Sharice Davids, the first lesbian Native American Congresswoman. EPA-EFE

 
The 2018 midterms broke the records on female candidates in US elections. More than 20 women were on the Senate ballot, while more than ten times that number stood for the House of Representatives. If we also consider state elections for executive roles such as governor as well as state legislatures, the number of female candidates in 2018 rises by another 3,500. The results mean that several states (including Arizona and Tennessee) will now send their first ever women to the Senate, and more than 100 women will enter the House.

After the new senators and representatives are sworn in, Congress will be more diverse in terms of race and religion – with women making a major contribution to this shift.

Rashida Tlaib (Michigan) and Ilhan Omar (Minnesota) share the distinction of becoming the first Muslim women in Congress. Texas sends both of the first two Latina women to Congress, Sylvia Garcia and Veronica Escobar. Several states will send African American women to represent them in Washington for the first time, too, including Massachusetts (Ayanna Pressley) and Connecticut (Jahana Hayes).


Ilhan Omar is also the first Somali-American elected to US Congress. EPA-EFE

These elections give further support to research that highlights the importance of party loyalty for women as well as men. In other words, all other things being equal, American voters will cling to their own parties, especially when they feel their party is under threat. So we should not be surprised that the combination of Donald Trump’s victory over Hillary Clinton in 2016 and the numerous allegations of sexual harassment against him have motivated far more Democrat women than Republican women to run for office.

Nearly three-quarters of the women who declared their candidacy in 2018 were Democrats. Even after many contenders were eliminated in the primaries, there were still roughly twice as many Democrat as Republican female candidates on the final ballots.

The mid-terms also demonstrate that women can overcome factors that are typically disadvantages for a candidate, such as being a challenger rather than an incumbent, having little or no experience of elected office, and promoting policy positions that are outside the mainstream.

In one of the most high-profile races in the country, New York’s Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez defeated her Democratic primary opponent – an incumbent who had served ten terms in Congress – and went on to victory on November 6. This was despite her calls for policy changes that many described as radical, including government guarantees for universal health care, employment and housing. At the age of 29, Ocasio-Cortez is now the youngest woman ever to be elected to the US House.

Changing tactics

Many of the women running emphasised education and healthcare (traditionally regarded as “women’s issues”). But they also prominently presented their views on “hard” policy areas such as national securityimmigrationjob creation and taxation. Women candidates have not hesitated to be blunt in criticising the records and policies of their opponents, and have performed well in hard-hitting, one-to-one debates. The 2018 mid-terms demonstrate very clearly that there is no such thing as a one size fits all, women’s style of campaigning.


Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the youngest woman ever elected to Congress. EPA-EFE

These elections have also shown that, like men, women can leverage their military service records to appeal to American voters. Women veterans winning elected office is not completely new to American politics, but previous examples have been few – if high profile. Tammy Duckworth, a helicopter pilot who lost both her legs in Iraq, was elected to the US House in 2012 and the US Senate in 2016, and is famously the first Senator ever to give birth while in office.

The combination of increasing numbers of women serving in the US armed forces, the opening up of new military roles to women, and the continuous deployment of American troops in war zones since 2001 has created a substantial pool of potential female veteran candidates.

Much attention in this election was devoted to a handful of Democrat female veterans running for Congress against incumbent male Republicans. These women – including Amy McGrath (Kentucky), MJ Hegar (Texas), Elaine Luria (Virginia), and Chrissy Houlahan(Pennsylvania) – had lengthy careers in different branches of the military. They were deployed overseas and used their veteran status to bolster their credibility as first-time candidates. Although their fortunes at the polls were mixed (Luria and Houlahan won; McGrath and Hager lost), all waged smart, well-crafted campaigns that pushed their opponents hard and ensured victory was decided by just a few percentage points.

There is still a long way to go before the US approaches both gender and racial equality in elected office, however. As this article is being written, African American Democrat Stacey Abrams continues her fight to become Georgia’s governor amid allegations of voter suppression that disproportionately affects people of colour.

Her opponent, Georgia secretary of state Brian Kemp, refused to relinquish his role of overseeing the elections despite his candidacy. President Trump himself has weighed in on this election, describing Abrams as unqualified to be governor of the traditionally Republican state – despite her years as an elected representative in the state legislature and her PhD from Yale law school. If Abrams is successful, she will become the first African American woman ever to become governor, not just of Georgia, but of any US state.

Although Abrams may turn out to be among the unsuccessful women candidates of 2018, women’s experiences of putting themselves forward for election is a formative one that can provide a foundation for future campaigns. It is unlikely that we have heard the last of these women.

This article was first published on theconversation.com

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