By Meaghan Whalen | Director of Individual Giving
Excitingly, 2025 has been the most successful year in the national movement to end child marriage's decade-long efforts, with four new laws passed that completely ban child marriage. There are now 16 states where child marriage is completely banned, including Missouri, Maine, Oregon, and DC. Likewise, in 2024, we also saw Washington, Virginia, and New Hampshire set laws that limited marriage to adults without exception. That brings the total up to 36 states that have passed a law to limit or end child marriage since 2016, when Tahirih launched the movement to ban child marriage in the U.S.
Tahirih was especially active in the campaigns in Virginia and DC. For the Virginia campaign, our Director of Public Policy Casey Carter Swegman created educational materials; wrote and circulated a joint statement from advocates; drafted talking points for key players, helped identify and educate potential co-sponsors, prepared, edited, and advised on others’ testimony; and testified herself before both chambers. Casey also supported survivors’ media appearances and helped organize on-camera interviews. She also offered feedback and emotional support before and after media interviews and testimony. Tahirih also provided technical support to survivors who could only attend hearings virtually to ensure their voices were heard.
We continue to lead the national campaign to End Child Marriage, and this year we monitored and advocated on over two dozen bills that would limit or ban child marriage across the United States. We celebrated the defeat of a New Hampshire bill that would have rolled back that state's existing child marriage ban, and new energy behind a Texas bill that made new progress in the movement to ban child marriage there.
At the same time, we are leading the efforts to support the Child Marriage Prevention Act, the first federal legislation aiming to end child marriage within the United States. Tahirih policy staff recently met with Senate Judiciary leadership staff to continue refining the 119th leg text and plan for introduction in Q4 of this year. The legislation is informed by survivors and experts from the forced marriage working group—a national coalition of more than 40 organizations that Tahirih founded and continues to lead.
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By Meaghan Whalen | Director of Individual Giving
By Meaghan Whalen | Director of Individual Giving
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