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McCollum Resolution Highlights Millennium Development Goals

On May 26, 2005, Representative Betty McCollum (D-MN) introduced a non-binding resolution (H.Con.Res 172) articulating Congress’ support of the United Nations Millennium Development Goals. The resolution calls for increased US leadership in aiding the international community to help achieve these important goals.

The Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) are a set of eight goals, each targeting specific issues, such as extreme poverty, hunger, disease, environmental degradation, and illiteracy, worldwide, to be achieved by 2015. In 2000, all UN member states pledged to support the achievement of these objectives at the United Nations Millennium Summit.

The House resolution, which is now awaiting action by the Committee on International Relations, would, on behalf of Congress, reaffirm President Bush’s support for the Millennium Declaration, as well as express support for “a sustained United States commitment to work with reforms, leadership, and resources necessary for the attainment of the…Millennium Development Goals.” McCollum’s resolution urges the Bush administration to continue to provide the leadership and resources necessary to achieve the MDGs. It also highlights the importance of the forthcoming G-8 Summit in Scotland and the United Nations Summit on the Millennium Declaration in New York as a forum for demonstrating America’s continued support for the program.

The MDG, a truly global initiative, is a hopeful commitment made by nations across the world that recognize the collective threat posed by extreme poverty, hunger, disease, and the need for education all over the globe. On March 14, 2002, President Bush spoke about the need to confront these global threats, “[The] growing divide between wealthy and poverty, between opportunity and misery, is both a challenge to our compassion and a source of instability. We must confront it. We must include every African, every Asian, every Latin American, every Muslim, in an expanding circle of development.” This same call to action is embodied in the mission of the MDG project and it is vital that Congress and the administration continue their support unabated.
 

Updated June 7, 2005

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