The presidential race is nearing its final stage. The GOP’s smorgasbord of candidates for the presidency has finally been reduced to three contenders, with Donald Trump as the clear frontrunner within reach of the party nomination.
I know that Iowa is technically the first state to decide which presidential candidates will represent their political parties in November, but New Hampshire has the nickname of the “first-in-the-nation” primary for a reason.
Over the past several months, we’ve gotten a sense of how the 2016 presidential elections are shaping up. Well, at least for the primary.
Senator asserts anyone who does not pray is not qualified to be U.S. President.
The Center for Freethought Equality, the only secular organization in America with an active political action committee dedicated to supporting secular political candidates, decries U.S. Senator Ted Cruz (TX) for his assertion that anyone who does not pray is not qualified to be U.S. President.
Candidate for U.S. Congress embodies humanist values.
Today the Freethought Equality Fund PAC announced its endorsement of State Senator Jamie Raskin for election in Maryland’s 8th Congressional District.
Capitalizing upon last year’s successful congressional briefing on the need for humanist chaplains in the military, the American Humanist Association and the Center for Freethought Equality continued its briefing series yesterday by holding events in both the U.S. House and Senate focusing on the current state of international religious freedom and how the human rights of religious minorities and the nonreligious are being threatened.
Today United States Representative Jim Himes (CT-4) introduced U.S. House Resolution 67, also known as the Darwin Day Resolution, which would recognize Charles Darwin’s birthday, February 12, as a national day to celebrate science, education and humanity.
Announcing the PAC’s second slate of endorsements.