RSVP #USTired2 Event Senator Bob Menendez

We’ve got the attention of Senator Menendez and 13 other Senators. Now it’s time to turn up the volume.

Biden Children at Border

 Tomorrow: join us for a national day of action near you!

Dear {{ user.first_name|default:”Friend” }},

We’ve got Senator Bob Menendez’s attention.

Last week, we scored an important win in the fight for justice for the Ayotzinapa 43 when Senator Menendez and 13 other U.S. Senators sent a letter to U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, calling on him to support the Mexican government with forensic aid in its search efforts.

The Senators’ letter represents the first time that high-ranking U.S. officials have broken the silence on the death of the students. But this is only the first step: we want to make sure that a review of military aid to Mexico happens. 

Nearly 5,000 Presente members signed our petition calling on Senator Menendez — a national Latino leader and Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee — to launch a hearing on U.S. security aid to Mexico. We now know that Senator Menendez and 13 other Senators are really listening. That’s why tomorrow we’re joining our allies and thousands of other U.S. Latinos across the country for a national day of action.

Will you join an event near you tomorrow, December 3rd, demanding a review of U.S. taxpayer military aid to Mexico?

A hearing will help expose the drug war and shine a light on the U.S. government’s role in funding Mexican police and military that are colluding with narco-gangs to kill its own citizens. The same drug war that has racially targeted, incarcerated, and sometimes killed members of our community has turned Mexico into a cemetery.

During the search for the 43 students, government officials have found multiple mass graves, reminding Mexicans, and the world, of the more than one hundred thousand people killed in Mexico since 2006. It gets worse — this hyper-violence in Mexico’s police and military is being funded by the U.S.; to the tune of more than 3 billion dollars since 2006. We can’t sit idly by while our neighbors and family in Mexico are killed and disappeared by their own government.1

Thanks, and ¡Adelante!

Mariana, Luis, Arturo, and the rest of the Presente team

P.S. Can you donate $5 to support our work? We rely on contributions from people like you to see campaigns like this through.

Sources:

1. It’s about much more than missing students: Mexico’s massive protest movement, explained Vox, November 12, 2014