Rep. Nye, International Experts Discuss Global Poverty and U.S. Security at “ONE Town Hall”
Norfolk, VA-Today at Old Dominion University (ODU), Congressman Glenn Nye (D-VA) joined national security and global health experts, as well as members of the global anti-poverty organization ONE, to discuss America’s strategic role in combating global poverty and preventable diseases like AIDS and malaria.
At the first-ever “ONE Town Hall,” presented by ONE and in partnership with Old Dominion Graduate Society for International Studies, Nye discussed America’s successful development efforts that have saved lives and thwarted instability. Nye also stressed the connection between U.S. development efforts and U.S. security.
Joining Nye on the panel was Brigadier Gen. Ron Sconyers, president of Physicians for Peace; Dr. David Earnest, Old Dominion International Studies professor; Matthew Bartlett, ONE grassroots field organizer and trainer; and John Applebaugh, ONE member and ODU graduate student.
The foreign policy discussion, attended by Old Dominion students and faculty, focused on the need to strengthen and continue U.S. efforts to fight diseases, provide education and create economic opportunity in the developing world, especially as the global economic downturn is hitting the world’s poor the hardest-with another 53 million more people expected to be living in extreme poverty as a result of the crisis.
The panel discussed how America’s global health efforts, thanks largely to the bipartisan support of the U.S. Congress, have delivered historic results over the past several years. More than 2 million people with HIV/AIDS in Africa are receiving basic medicines and beating the disease thanks to America’s commitment. That number is up from just 50,000 in 2003. Millions more are surviving malaria because of cost-effective investments in simple bed nets and medicines. Some 34 million more children living in the world’s poorest and often most dangerous regions have been given the chance to go to school for the first time in recent years, opening the door to productive futures.
ONE, a nonpartisan, grassroots organization whose members work in their local communities to raise awareness of global poverty and treatable, preventable disease and help build the political will to address these challenges. ONE brings together people from all backgrounds and political beliefs to achieve change through advocacy and public mobilization, urging leaders to invest in tested, proven solutions that save lives and combat extreme poverty. Next week, Congressman Rob Wittman (R-VA) will participate in a “ONE Town Hall” at The College of William & Mary.
Before entering Congress in Jan. 2009, Rep. Nye was a Foreign Service officer who spent more than ten years overseas, volunteering to serve in conflict zones around the world including Kosovo, Iraq, and Afghanistan. He sits on the House Armed Services Committee and the House Veterans Affairs Committee.