Tag Archive for: Congress

When the Wrong Messenger Delivers the Right Message

[A LinkedIn post Carolyn Kitto OAM, Freedom Rights Activist and Modern Slavery Abolitionist]

When the wrong messenger delivers the right message

There are moments in advocacy when you have to sit with serious discomfort.

This is one of them.

The Trump administration is proposing a 12.5% tariff on Australia for failing to ban imports of goods made with forced labour. The motivation is protectionism, not compassion. The White House is not losing sleep over the 50 million people trapped in forced labour, child labour and bonded servitude.

And yet. The underlying finding is correct.

Australia has no laws preventing forced labour goods from entering our market. A solar panel, a tin of tuna, a cheap T-shirt – if made by someone who couldn’t leave or refuse – can sit on an Australian shelf with no questions asked. The same goods are banned in the US, Canada, and increasingly across Europe and Asia. We are becoming the destination of last resort for goods other countries won’t touch.

When Australia’s Trade Minister claimed we have “robust, comprehensive and world-leading legislation,” I understand the diplomatic impulse – but after nearly 30 years in this movement, I can’t let it stand. Three years ago, an independent review found our Modern Slavery Act had not caused meaningful change. The government accepted the easy recommendations and stalling on the one that would actually work: mandatory due diligence. The review didn’t even consider banning forced labour goods at the border – it was ruled out of scope entirely.

This matters beyond morality. If one café must meet strict hygiene rules and another doesn’t, the second undercuts on price – not through efficiency, but by cutting corners that harm people. Businesses doing the right thing are competing against companies that face no such requirement. That’s a race to the bottom.

Australians expect better. Our research at Be Slavery Free, with Baptist World Aid, found 70% of Australians believe it’s the government’s responsibility to keep forced labour goods off our shelves. They’re asking for basic assurance that what they buy wasn’t made at someone else’s expense.

More than 100 investors, businesses, unions, academics and civil society organisations have called on the Federal Government to strengthen the Modern Slavery Act – to require companies to act, not just report.

The Australian Government should not need a Trump tariff to do the right thing. But here we are.

It’s time to act.

Read the joint letter here.

119th Congressional Bills endorsed by the Child Labor Coalition:

[Most updated information can be found here.]

The Child Labor Coalition, comprised of 38 organizational members, endorses the following child labor bills in the 119th Congress:

Protecting child farmworkers:

  • R. 3335 – “Children Don’t Belong on Tobacco Farms Act by Rep. DeLauro” (D-CT)
    62 cosponsors as of 3/30/2026
    This bill bans direct contact with toxic tobacco on U.S. farms for minors.
  • 1742 – “Children Don’t Belong on Tobacco Farms Act” by Senator Durbin (D-IL)
    4 cosponsors as of 3/30/2026
    This bill bans direct contact with toxic tobacco on U.S. farms for minors.
  • R. 6066 –“Children’s Act for Responsible Employment and Farm Safety — CARE Act” by Rep. Ruiz (D-CA)
    6 cosponsors in the 119th as of 3/30/2026
    [A Senate introduction by Lujan expected soon in the 119th]
    The bill raises the base age of farmwork from 12 to 14 and minimum age of hazardous farm work from 16 to 18 – the same as all other sectors. The bill does not apply to farm kids working on their family farm.

 

Bills to increase fines:

  • “Justice for Exploited Children Act of 2023” by Rep. Scholten (D-MI)
    8 cosponsors in the 119th as of 3/30/2026
    Raise child labor fines and criminal penalties substantially.

 

Bills that seek increased fines AND multiple other improvements:

  • R. 3997“Protecting Children Act” by Rep. Scott (D-VA)
    Has 8 cosponsors as of 3/30/2026.
    Raises child labor fines by a factor of 10, sets minimum fines, and enhances criminal penalties. It would establish a National Advisory Committee on child labor and foster interagency collaboration to combat child labor. It would call for the periodic review of hazardous work rules for children.
  • R. 6597 “Let’s Protect Workers Act” by Rep. Scott (D-VA)
    79 cosponsors in the 119th on 3/30/2026.
    Would raise child labor fines by a factor of 10. Would improve record keeping requirements for employer to help labor law enforcement.
  • R. 7002 “Justice for Exploited Children Act” by Rep. Scholten (D- MI)
    Has 8 cosponsors on 3/19.2026. The bill is bipartisan (Rep. Ryan Mackenzie (D-PA).
    Increases child labor fines and criminal penalties substantially.

 

Federal Procurement Bills regarding child labor:

  • 920 – “Preventing Child Labor Exploitation Act” by Senator Josh Hawley R-MO.
    1 cosponsor as of 3/19/2026.
    [This bill is bipartisan – Sen. Booker is the other lead]
    The bill bars companies that have repeat child labor violations from selling goods to the U.S. government.

 

We urge congressional members to join the Congressional Child Labor Prevention Task Force, which is led by Rep. Scholten (D-MI) and Rep. McGarvey (D-KY).

Staffers, please let us know when your office introduces a child-labor related bill. Email info to childlaborcoalition@nclnet.org.