This monument has been missing from the Mall far too long - Blackburn, Hyde-Smith, Lummis, Britt - WaPo
In our nations capital, there is one place that more than any other showcases our history: the National Mall. For more than 100 years, this two-mile stretch of land flanked by the Capitol, the Lincoln Memorial, the White House and our national cultural institutions has embodied our countrys ideals and honored our national memory.
Among the 40 monuments, memorials, statues and historic sites on the Mall including 22 dedicated to individual men, 10 to military history and veterans, three to foreign relations, two to private organizations, one to U.S. postal history, one to the history of the United States canals, and another to the history of horses on the Mall there is not a single one dedicated to American women.
Thats why we are working with our colleagues on both sides of the aisle to spearhead an effort to create a memorial honoring American womens history in the Malls monumental core. With the passage of the Womens Suffrage National Monument Location Act, a monument commemorating womens long fight for the right to vote will take its rightful place in our nations capital. As the first women to represent our states in the Senate, we know that womens fight for the vote is the story of a great American movement for change. It is a story written by women, led by women about democracy at work and the power and courage of the American spirit.
In November, a unanimous House passed legislation permitting the Womens Suffrage National Monument to be placed in Constitution Gardens, a 50-acre space dedicated during the nations bicentennial celebrations as a living memorial to the founding of the republic. It is only fitting that the monument to honor our foremothers role in expanding our democracy through the 19th Amendment be placed there, alongside the memorial that honors our Founding Fathers.
This project has bipartisan and bicameral support in Congress, as well as the support of every living first lady, and is the only monument supported by the National Park Service for inclusion on the Mall. We are one Senate vote away from bringing it to fruition, and we urge our colleagues to seize the day.
As the suffragists would say, failure is impossible.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2024/03/28/monument-american-women-national-mall/
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(R senators? Who would have though?)