Take Action

Our rights and our democracy are threatened at the state and national levels. You can make a difference by contacting your elected officials!

Find Your Indiana Legislators 

(Click on the icon on the upper right)

Once you find them, get busy writing! All of them have a webpage with contact information.

Follow Indiana Bills

Please write to your elected officials and oppose these bills! A short note will do! It is really important to speak up and register your beliefs. Click on the links to go directly to the bills.

HB 1393 (Immigration):

This law will significantly increase the profiling of Hoosiers based on their race and/or English proficiency.

SB 441 (LGBTQ+ Rights): 

This bill requires the state to identify birth certificates issued with a change in sex classification, and change the sex on the birth certificate back to the originating sex and reissue the birth certificate.

SB 235 (Education):

Establishes prohibitions and requirements on state agencies, recipients of state contracts or grants, state educational institutions, and health profession licensing boards regarding diversity, equity, and inclusion. .

HB 1394 (Immigration):

Authorizes a school corporation to deny an immigrant student enrollment in a school operated by the school corporation if the school corporation determines by a preponderance of the evidence that the immigrant student is present in the United States in violation of law.

On the National Front

Birthright Citizenship

Trump signed an executive order to end birthright citizenship, an unprecedented and unconstitutional move targeting children born in the United States. This act, which directly undermines the 14th Amendment, seeks to deny citizenship to certain newborns, creating a generation of stateless children.

What Is Birthright Citizenship?
The 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, ratified in 1868, was created to ensure that no child born in the United States would be denied citizenship. This provision was a direct repudiation of slavery and its legacy, guaranteeing that freedmen and their descendants would have full rights as Americans. For more than 150 years, birthright citizenship has been a beacon of equality, embodying the American ideal that everyone deserves a fair start in life.