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Urgent: Call Congress
To Oppose DISCLOSE Act
Part One of Three
The U.S. House of
Representatives may vote within days on the so-called "DISCLOSE
Act," legislation that would place sweeping new restrictions on
the ability of incorporated groups, including NRLC and NRLC
affiliates, to communicate with the public about the actions of
federal lawmakers.
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Sen. Charles Schumer
(D-NY), prime sponsor of "DISCLOSE Act" in the Senate |
According to press
reports, the House Democratic leadership has agreed to add a
narrow "carve out" that will effectively exempt the National
Rifle Association (NRA) from some of the key restrictions in the
bill, in return for which the NRA has agreed that it "will not
be involved in final consideration of the House bill."
In a June 15 letter to
House members, posted at
http://www.nrlc.org/FreeSpeech/NRLCLetterDISCLOSEActJune152010.html,
NRLC reiterated its strong opposition to the bill, which it
called "pernicious, unprincipled, and unconstitutional
legislation." Regarding the proposed carve out, "With respect to
the National Right to Life Committee, this amendment is not only
worthless, but adds insult to injury," the letter said, adding
that NRLC's congressional scorecard will describe a vote for the
bill as a vote for "a blatant political attack on the First
Amendment rights of NRLC, our state affiliates, and our members
and donors."
For more details on the
danger posed by the "DISCLOSE Act," see the alert published on
page 1 of the June edition of National Right to Life News,
posted at
http://www.nrlc.org/freespeech/NRLNewsDISCLOSEAct.pdf
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Rep. Chris Van Hollen
(D-Md.), prime sponsor of "DISCLOSE Act" in the House. |
Press reports indicate
that the House Democratic leadership now plans to force a House
floor vote on the bill as early as Thursday, June 17. Please act
immediately.
Go to
www.capwiz.com/nrlc/callalert/index.tt?alertid=15147096 and
enter your zip code into the "Call Now" box. Then telephone the
office of the lawmaker who represents you in the House, using
the number you will be shown. Use the suggested talking points
to deliver the message that you are strongly opposed to this
bill. (You don't have to use all of the suggestions -- the
important thing is to get the main point across.) Ask how your
representative intends to vote on the bill. Then, take a moment
to employ the easy-to-use "Your Feedback" form to send NRLC a
short e-mail message regarding what you learned.
Part Two
Part Three |