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Facebook: U.S. Territories Not Part of “United States”
Facebook Discrimination Results in #GivingTuesday #FundraisingFail
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In Advance of Midterms, Webseries Highlights 4 Million Disenfranchised Americans in U.S. Territories; National Press Silent as 165 MPH Storm Slams Pacific Territories
Untold America, a webseries by AJ+, just released a powerful new episode reminding the country that as the midterms approach, 4 million Americans living in U.S. territories continue to lack any voting representation in Congress and can’t even vote for President – even as these patriotic Americans serve in the military at rates exceeding any state. The episode explains how disenfranchisement in the territories is connected to issues like the response to Hurricane Maria in Puerto Rico and restrictions on federal benefits provided to Americans in these communities, as well as a troubling history of racial discrimination against the residents of overseas territories.
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Supreme Court Denies Review, Feds Defend Disenfranchisement in U.S. Territories Before Human Rights Commission
This morning, the U.S. Supreme Court denied review in Segovia v. United States, a lawsuit seeking to expand voting rights in U.S. territories. The lawsuit was brought by Equally American on behalf of a group of veterans and others living in Guam, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands who would be able to vote for President and have voting representation in Congress if they lived in any other U.S. territory or even a foreign country but cannot based on discriminatory federal and state overseas voting laws.
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Cases Arguing Against Disenfranchisement in U.S. Territories to be Considered by U.S Supreme Court and Inter-American Commission on Human Rights on the Same Day
Supreme Court Confirmation Debate Highlights Impact of Disenfranchisement
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American Samoans Make Case for Birthright Citizenship on 150th Anniversary of the Fourteenth Amendment
Trump Administration Rejects Original Understanding of Citizenship Clause, Relying Instead on Controversial Insular Cases
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U.S. Virgin Islands, ConLaw Scholars Support Supreme Court Voting Rights Appeal
New Crowdfunding Campaign to Support Appeal Also Launched