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Take the Maine Challenge
Get YOUR congressional delegation to ban cluster bombs
In
July Maine became the first state to hit a cluster-bomb-ban grand
slam!
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Peace activist and
potter Mary Trotochaud |
Following months of creative and persistent effort by individuals and groups
across the state of Maine, Senator Susan Collins became the fourth and final
member of the Maine congressional delegation to cosponsor the Cluster Munitions
Civilian Protection Act (S.594/H.R.1755). Representatives Michael Michaud
and Tom Allen (who is currently running for the Senate against Sen. Collins)
and Senator Olympia Snowe all signed on to the bill earlier this year.
The campaign, initiated by peace activist and potter Mary Trotochaud (pictured),
in Belmont, ME, provides a blueprint for success at the state level. Mary galvanized
organizations around the state to support the effort, including the Maine Council
of Churches, Maine Peace Action, Pax Christi, Amnesty International and others.
Campaigners spoke at churches and community events, generated letters-to-the-editor
of local papers, appeared on local radio, organized call-in days
to congressional offices, sent letters and visited their representatives’ offices
in Maine and Washington, DC.
You know the saying, “As goes Maine, so goes the nation”? That’s
where YOU come in. Will you take the “Maine Challenge” to
get as many members of your congressional delegation as possible
to cosponsor the Cluster Munitions Civilian Protection Act (S.594/H.R.1755)
this year? Increased
co-sponsorship is vital to show the next President that the public
and congress want him to bring the United States into the global
efforts to ban cluster munitions.
Click
here, for more on the Maine Campaign.
Click
here to find out where your state’s congressional delegation stands.
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