National Organization of Women call P Diddy allegations ‘heartbreaking’ and urge people to ‘choose sides’

“It’s heartbreaking to listen to the accounts of survivors of Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs’ alleged crimes of sexual violence, rape and abuse. They deserve justice, and Sean Combs must be held fully accountable,” she said, “As new accusations and individuals come forward, we also see how damaged we are as a society by an insidious culture of toxic masculinity that has gone unchallenged too long.”

IAFF Under Fire for Not Endorsing Female Presidential Hopefuls

Christian F. Nunes, the president of the National Organization for Women, told Newsweek that while the group does not know what went into the IAFF’s decision, it was “disappointing” that the union has never endorsed a female presidential nominee.

Meet the Woman of Color Leading America’s Largest Feminist Movement—And She’s Just Getting Started

“Restrictions on reproductive rights disproportionately affect communities of color and low-income individuals, exacerbating existing health disparities,” Christian shared. “Women cannot be free and equal if the government has made it clear that we are not to be trusted with our own medical decisions.”

Head start is a jump start for women’s economic security

…as Head Start approaches its 60th anniversary, it’s a great time to look back on all that the program has achieved — and look forward to what our country could look like if Head Start was strengthened. It’s been said that when it began, Head Start was not simply an “innovation” but also an “invention,” and a radical one at that.

Abortion measures on ballots in record number of states

“This shows overwhelmingly that voters believe in abortion access, and it disputes all the misinformation and disinformation that we’ve been hearing about abortion access and belief that people do not care about it,” Christian F. Nunes, the president of the National Organization for Women, which advocates for women’s rights, told NewsNation. “People do care about abortion access,” she said. “Lawmakers writing these oppressive laws were not taking into consideration what the voters really wanted, and were writing for their own sense of power and control, not thinking or even hearing out their constituents so many of them took matters into their own hands.”