Rep. Jim McGovern Confirmed as EAD Banquet Speaker

March 22, 2013

– March 22, 2013 –

WASHINGTON – Ecumenical Advocacy Days (EAD) is pleased to announce that Congressman Jim McGovern has been confirmed as the keynote speaker for EAD’s annual dinner banquet on Sunday, April 7 during EAD’s 2013 national gathering, “At God’s Table: Food Justice for a Healthy World,” at the DoubleTree Crystal City Hotel, just across The Potomac River from the U.S. Capitol Building. McGovern represents Massachusetts’ Second Congressional District.

McGovern will speak during EAD’s final plenary session after a weekend of advocacy and policy training on global food justice issues for nearly 1,000 Christian advocates, and on the eve of EAD’s Monday Lobby Day when faith advocates will go to Capitol Hill for Congressional meetings concerning the U.S. Farm Bill and its ramifications on global hunger and malnutrition, farmers and healthy communities, and the integrity of God’s creation.

Since his election in 1996, Congressman Jim McGovern has been widely recognized as a tenacious advocate for his district, a tireless crusader for change, and an unrivaled supporter for social justice and fundamental human rights.

Currently serving his ninth term in Congress, McGovern serves as the second ranking Democrat on the powerful House Rules Committee, which sets the terms for debate and amendments on most legislation; and a member of the House Agriculture Committee. McGovern is also co-chair of both the Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission and the House Hunger Caucus. He also serves as Co-Chair of the Northeast Midwest Congressional Coalition. McGovern has authored important legislation to increase Pell Grant funding to allow more students access to higher education; to provide funds to preserve open space in urban and suburban communities; and to give tax credits to employers who pay the salaries of their employees who are called up to active duty in the Guard and Reserves. A strong proponent of healthcare reform, his legislative efforts included reducing the cost of home health care, giving patients the dignity to be cared for in their own homes with the help of medical professionals.

McGovern voted against the initial authorization of force in Iraq in 2002, and has been among the most prominent Congressional voices on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. McGovern introduced a bipartisan, bicameral bill calling for a flexible timetable for withdrawal of troops from Afghanistan as a matter of national security and fiscal responsibility. McGovern has also taken a leadership role in the fight against hunger at home and abroad, successfully expanding the McGovern-Dole International Food for Education and Child Nutrition Program, which helps alleviate child hunger and poverty by providing nutritious meals to children in schools in the world’s poorest countries.
McGovern is one of the leading voices in Congress fighting to overturn Citizens United, and has become one of the main advocates in the fight against corporate personhood.

Before his election to Congress, McGovern spent fourteen years working as a senior aide for the late U.S. Representative John Joseph Moakley (D-South Boston), former dean of the Massachusetts delegation and Chairman of the House Rules Committee. In 1989, McGovern was the lead investigator on the Moakley Commission Congressional Investigation into the murders of 6 Jesuit priests, their housekeeper and her daughter in 1989. The investigation ultimately led to a seminal change in U.S. foreign policy towards El Salvador when determined that the Salvadoran military was implicated in the murders. That landmark determination led to future U.S. military aid being conditioned on an improved human rights record.

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