Imagine a Congress that accomplishes something, one that isn’t bogged down by gridlock and political postering. Now imagine, if you will, a lobbying effort that doesn’t involve campaign contributions.
Imagine a Congress that accomplishes something … one that isn’t bogged down by gridlock and political postering. Now imagine, if you will, a lobbying effort that doesn’t involve campaign contributions.
St. Joseph teen goes to DC to lobby for diabetes research funding kjo1055.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from kjo1055.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Imagine a Congress that accomplishes something … one that isn’t bogged down by gridlock and political posturing. Now imagine, if you will, a lobbying effort that doesn’t involve campaign contributions.
That kind of Congress does exist through the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation’s “Children’s Congress.” It started with a 9-year-old boy from Massachusetts named Tommy Solo who one day asked his mother, “Why can’t kids go to Washington and tell their representatives about what it is like to have type 1 diabetes?”
Imagine a Congress that accomplishes something — one that isn’t bogged down by gridlock and political posturing. Now imagine, if you will, a lobbying effort that doesn’t involve campaign contributions.