Wild Horses: Setback in Congress, But the Fight Continues

Wild Horses: Congressional Setback, But the Fight ContinuesWild Horses: Congressional Setback, But the Fight Continues

On Wednesday night, the House Rules Committee defied the overwhelming will of the American people and voted to block an amendment to stop the slaughter of America’s wild horses.

It's a setback but far from a done deal. Our team is tracking every possible legislative path forward. In short -- it's complicated. We could block this in the U.S. Senate, or the entire appropriations process could be abandoned for what's called a "continuing resolution." Trust that we'll be tracking every possibility, and activating our movement to pressure Congress to the right targets and at the right moments.

Will you contact your Senators now and tell them: #NoHorseSlaughter -- protect America's wild horses?

Right now, we need your help to contact your U.S. Senators. Please click here to call and email them now.

The House Rules Committee sided with the BLM and the special interests, defying sound science and the will of 80% of Americans who oppose the slaughter of America's wild horses. But we do want to thank our champions who stood with us in the fight, including Rep. Dina Titus for her leadership in offering this amendment, Reps. Peter King and Carlos Curbelo for adding bipartisan support, Rep. Michelle Lujan Grisham for her steadfast opposition to horse slaughter, and Rep. Jared Polis who persisted as our opponents tried to bury the vote.

While this setback stings, our broader efforts are gaining momentum. We're meeting with swing legislators on the Hill, getting more and more press attention, and launching ad and advocacy campaigns in swing states. We can win this.

Thanks for everything,

- Suzanne Roy, Executive Director, American Wild Horse Conservation (formerly American Wild Horse Campaign)

5
 min read