Nuclear weapons are taking billions of dollars and some of our best scientists and engineers away from much more important and urgent priorities, like addressing the climate crisis, preventing future pandemics, fixing our crumbling infrastructure, and building vibrant, fair and equitable communities. Cori Bush cares about all these issues and can help shift our national priorities to where they are needed.
Cori Bush represents the Missouri’s 1st Congressional District in the US House of Representatives. Her District covers this part of St. Louis, MO:
- Ferguson
- Clayton
- Maryland Heights
- Florissant
- Bridgerton
- Old Jamestown
If you live in this District, please write to Rep. Bush TODAY!
You can click here to download and print this letter, add your signature and address and send it to:
Rep. Cori Bush, 563 Cannon HOB, Washington, D.C. 20515
Alternatively, you can click here to edit, copy and paste this letter into the “message” section of
Rep. Cori Bush’s email contact form here.
You can also try emailing her directly at [email protected] but there is no guarantee that will get through.
Urge her to join her colleagues in signing the ICAN Legislative Pledge in support of the Nuclear Ban Treaty, which went into effect on January 22, 2021!
The ICAN Parliamentary/Legislative Pledge is a commitment to work for the total elimination of nuclear weapons by all countries, through the universal adoption of the 2017 UN Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons.
• The United States made a legally-binding commitment to eliminate its nuclear weapons more than 50 years ago, when it signed and ratified the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), along with Britain, France, Russia and China.
• In 2000, the United States, together with those same countries, gave to the rest of the world an “unequivocal undertaking” that they would fulfil this commitment to accomplish the total elimination of their nuclear arsenals.
• Despite these commitments, the US continues to develop and ‘modernize’ its nuclear arsenal, with the clear intention of holding onto these weapons indefinitely. This is setting the stage for a much more dangerous world in which every other nation can also decide to claim the same right to develop its own nuclear weapons.
• Unless we get rid of all nuclear weapons, sooner or later, they are going to be used, whether on purpose or by accident. The Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons provides a clear pathway to the verifiable and irreversible elimination of all nuclear weapons by all nations. We must seize this opportunity before it is too late.