Rep. Maurice Hinchey
Democrat • 22nd District, New York • 9th Term • Sworn In 1993
Current Term
2009 - 2010
View All
- 13 Sponsored Bills (Ranks 122 of 440) 0 Made Into Law (Ranks 37 of 440)
- 451 Co-Sponsored Bills (Ranks 6 of 440) 10 Made Into Law (Ranks 3 of 440)
- Most often votes with:
- Rep. André Carson
- Rep. Frank LoBiondo
- Least often votes with:
- Rep. Walter Minnick
- Rep. John Shadegg
- Votes with party 98%
- Abstains: 4%
Official website: http://www.house.gov/hinchey/
Address:
2431 Rayburn House Office Building
Washington, DC 20515
2431 Rayburn House Office Building
Washington, DC 20515
Phone: 202-225-6335
Fax: 202-226-0774
Fax: 202-226-0774
Person's Views
- Today: 19
- Past Seven Days: 86
- All-Time: 7,453
21.1%
Average Rating
41%
Avg. from State
Write This
Representative
You are writing Rep. Maurice Hinchey [D, NY-22].

U.S. Congress - Rep. Maurice Hinchey, New York (D)

Sort By
Comments Feed ?
What's this?
OpenCongress comment boards are an open forum for discussion. Let's build public knowledge about Congress together, so please keep the discussion civil -- no harsh language, subject to our community Comment Policy. Do not post any information here (for example, your name or email) that you do not wish to be public.
Filter Comments to a Rating of at least
What's this?
The Ratings Filter allows you to determine how many user comments to view on pages here on OpenCongress. Setting the filter higher (towards 10) allows you to see only the comments rated "most helpful" by users, while setting the filter lower (towards 0) allows you to see more comments on a page.
Re: H.R. 5056
It is important to have diplomatic relations with Iran but the persecution of the Bahá’ís needs to addressed up front and resolved. Iran is practicing segregation or apartheid but unlike most forms of segregation or apartheid the Bahá’ís don’t just have unequal rights they don’t have any rights at all.
Here is a quote from the attached linked article.
“While the Baha'i faith, founded on notions of equality and humanitarianism, originated in what would become the Islamic Republic of Iran, members of the religious community have faced persecution since the republic's establishment under the Islamic constitution of 1979.
According to the Iranian government, the Baha'i population represents a political sect, not a religious community, and is consequently regarded as apostate. Although the rights of certain minority groups, such as Christians and Zoroastrians, are explicitly protected under the constitution of the Islamic republic, the Baha'i population, estimated by the U.S. Department of State to be approximately 300,000-350,000 of the majority Muslim population, enjoys no rights.
The unprotected status of the Bahá’ís facilitates discrimination without justification within the Iranian legal system. Courts in Iran have denied Bahá’ís the right of redress or protection against assault, killings, or other forms of persecution. These courts have established that Iranian citizens who kill or injure Bahá’ís are not liable for damages because their victims are "unprotected infidels"
http://www.metimes.com/International/2008/02/11/dire_situation_for_irans_bahais/2651/