The National Partnership for Women & Families is a nonprofit, nonpartisan 5013 organization based in Washington, D.C. Founded in 1971, the National Partnership works on public policies, education and outreach that focuses on women and families.
History
The National Partnership for Women & Families was known as the Women's Legal Defense Fund until 1998. Judith L. Lichtman was hired as the National Partnership's first paid staff member in 1974. Lichtman became president in 1988 and served in the role for 16 years. Lichtman is currently the organization's senior advisor. The current president, Debra L. Ness, joined the National Partnership as executive vice president in 1991 and assumed the role of president in 2004. The organization is best known for its work to build support for, pass, protect and expand the Family and Medical Leave Act – the first and only national law guaranteeing eligible workers job-protected, unpaid leave to care for a newborn or newly adopted child, seriously ill family member, or to recover from their own serious health conditions.
Issues & Campaigns
The National Partnership works on four main issues:
Health care – increasing access, improving quality and ensuring the affordability of health care
Reproductive rights – ensuring women have access to the full range of reproductive health services
Workplace fairness – expanding and restoring civil rights protections that promote equal opportunity and justice in the workplace and society
Family friendly workplace policies – expanding workers' access to job-protected paid sick days, paid family and medical leave, flex-time, and more
Current projects include a national paid sick days campaign, the Campaign for Better Care, and the Americans for Quality Health Care initiative. The National Partnership provides technical support to Aligning Forces for Quality, a project of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.
Mission statement
"We believe that actions speak louder than words, and for more than four decades we have fought for every major policy advance that has helped women and families. Today, we promote fairness in the workplace, reproductive health and rights, access to quality affordable health care, and policies that help women and men meet the dual demands of work and family."
First Lady Michelle Obama is a two-time speaker at National Partnership events. In 2011, she said that the National Partnership is "one of the most influential organizations for women and families in our country," and has had an "amazing imprint on nearly every single one of this nation's major policy achievements for women and families." Secretary of State and former First Lady Hillary Clinton has been twice honored by the National Partnership, in 1994 and 2012. In 2012 she said of the National Partnership, "For more than 40 years, you've been protecting the most vulnerable among us and holding us all to account when we are not living up to our own American values. And in the process, you improve the lives of countless women and help make that future a better place for them and their children." Previous speakers at National Partnership events include: former President Bill Clinton, former Vice President Al Gore, former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, journalists Christiane Amanpour and Ellen Goodman, historian and author Doris Kearns Goodwin, media artists Allison Janney, Anna Deavere Smith, Rob Reiner, and Rosie O'Donnell, activist Marian Wright Edelman, and UNICEF Director Carol Bellamy.