Could Florida soon become the first U.S. state to end child marriage?
We at Unchained At Last just got back from a three-day trip last week to Tallahassee with an impressive group we assembled called the Florida Coalition to End Child Marriage. We made noise: We met individually with some 40 legislators (in back-to-back meetings and in caught-you-in-the-hallway encounters), testified passionately at a senate judiciary committee hearing, held a lively press conference, and ate awful bagels at a Capitol cafe.
Our Fraidy Reiss leads a press conference in Tallahassee Oct. 25. Photo credit: Human Rights Watch
And we saw immediate results: Some 30 of the legislators we met promised to support the legislation. The senate judiciary committee unanimously approved the senate version of the bill, which now heads to several other legislative committees. No one got sick from the bagels.
Help us to seize on this momentum. If you’re in Florida – or any other U.S. state where we’ve helped to write legislation to end child marriage – take a minute now to email your legislators to show your support. And get everyone you know to do the same.
Also last week, our executive director, Fraidy Reiss, was featured in a BBC segment that aired around the world, titled “Why does the US have so many child brides?” Click on the image to watch the segment, which is less than 5 minutes long.
The marriage age in Florida is 18, but children as young as 16 may marry with parental “consent” (which often is parental “coercion”), and children of any age may marry if they are pregnant or have a child.
Under these dangerous loopholes, more than 16,000 children as young as 13 were married in Florida between 2000 and 2015. More than 80% were girls wed to adult men; in many cases, the marriage covered up what would otherwise be considered statutory rape.
By not specifying a minimum age for marriage, Florida’s current laws are similar to those in Iran, Saudi Arabia and Yemen. By allowing a pregnancy exception, which only 10 states still do, Florida puts rape survivors at risk of being forced to marry their rapist – as happened to Florida native Sherry Johnson when she was 11.
We at Unchained, along with the entire Florida Coalition to End Child Marriage, are pushing to eliminate these archaic loopholes and end child marriage in Florida through pending legislation (SB 140, HB 335 and HB 71). The ever-growing coalition of local, state, national and international groups includes:
Want to join? Contact us here and let us know.
Unchained is the only organization dedicated to helping women and girls in the U.S. to escape forced marriages, and the only organization dedicated to ending forced and child marriage in America. We at Unchained lead a growing national movement to end child marriage across America, not only in Florida.
Right now, marriage before 18 is legal in all 50 states. Most states set 18 as the minimum age, but laws in every state allow exceptions for those younger than 18 to marry. Laws in 25 states do not specify any minimum marriage age.
Our groundbreaking research showed that in just the 38 states that track marriage-age data, more than 167,000 children as young as 12 were married between 2000 and 2010 – mostly girls wed to adult men. Based on this data, we estimate that nearly a quarter-million children were married in the U.S. in that decade.
This is an urgent problem for two main reasons. First, children can easily be forced into marriage or forced to stay in a marriage before they become legal adults, which happens at 18 in most states. Children face overwhelming legal and practical barriers if they try to leave home, access a shelter, retain an attorney or bring a legal action. The girls who reach out to us for help typically end up trying to kill themselves when they learn of their limited options.
Second, the lifelong impacts of marriage before 18 on girls’ health, education and economic opportunities and overall quality of life are devastating enough that the U.S. State Department considers marriage before 18 a “human rights abuse.”
We are working to draft, introduce and pass legislation to eliminate this human-rights abuse, state by state. To build support for the legislation, we write op-eds in the Washington Post and other papers; host Chain-Ins to protest child marriage; give regular media interviews; and present at conferences and other venues.
We’re seeing progress. Bills like the ones in Florida that we’ve helped to write and/or are helping to pass, that would end or reduce child marriage, have been introduced in multiple states. So far, though, no state has passed a bill to end all marriage before 18, without exceptions.
Let’s work together to end child marriage in America:
Our work to end child marriage in America is made possible by generous supporters including: