1 of 1 SENATE DOCKET, NO. 669 FILED ON: 1/14/2025 SENATE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . No. 1649 The Commonwealth of Massachusetts _________________ PRESENTED BY: Joanne M. Comerford _________________ To the Honorable Senate and House of Representatives of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts in General Court assembled: The undersigned legislators and/or citizens respectfully petition for the adoption of the accompanying resolution: Resolutions to embrace the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons and move the US back from the brink of nuclear war. _______________ PETITION OF: NAME:DISTRICT/ADDRESS :Joanne M. ComerfordHampshire, Franklin and WorcesterPatrick M. O'ConnorFirst Plymouth and Norfolk1/24/2025Samantha Montaño15th Suffolk2/4/2025Patrick Joseph Kearney4th Plymouth2/25/2025Mary S. Keefe15th Worcester3/5/2025 1 of 3 SENATE DOCKET, NO. 669 FILED ON: 1/14/2025 SENATE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . No. 1649 By Ms. Comerford, a petition (accompanied by resolutions, Senate, No. 1649) of Joanne M. Comerford, Patrick M. O'Connor, Samantha Montaño, Patrick Joseph Kearney and others for the adoption of resolutions to embrace the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons and move the US back from the brink of nuclear war. Public Safety and Homeland Security. [SIMILAR MATTER FILED IN PREVIOUS SESSION SEE SENATE, NO. 1487 OF 2023-2024.] The Commonwealth of Massachusetts _______________ In the One Hundred and Ninety-Fourth General Court (2025-2026) _______________ Resolutions to embrace the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons and move the US back from the brink of nuclear war. 1 WHEREAS, the continued existence of more than 12,000 nuclear weapons worldwide 2poses a grave and existential threat to the citizens of the Commonwealth; and 3 WHEREAS, the Russian invasion of Ukraine and repeated threats to use nuclear weapons 4have dramatically increased the danger of nuclear war; and 5 WHEREAS, the citizens of the Commonwealth have expressed their deep concern about 6this continuing threat over many decades and continue to do so; and 7 WHEREAS, this concern has been expressed through numerous Town Meetings and City 8Council resolutions throughout the Commonwealth; and 2 of 3 9 WHEREAS, this concern has also been expressed through numerous resolutions and bills 10brought before this General Court, including at least 5 such bills introduced in the last legislative 11session on this topic; and 12 WHEREAS, in general it is the federal government and not the state which has 13jurisdiction over matters relating to nuclear weapons, this does not mean there is no role for the 14Commonwealth to play in this regard; and 15 WHEREAS, in fact, it has been shown that the policies and actions of states can lead the 16way to important and necessary changes at the federal level and even internationally; and 17 WHEREAS, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts played a leading role in ending the 18nuclear arms race with the Soviet Union in the 1980s, by adopting a Nuclear Freeze resolution 19and encouraging other states to follow our example; and 20 WHEREAS, over 40 years later it is not a “freeze” of nuclear weapons that is needed to 21save the Commonwealth, and the world, from the unthinkable catastrophe of a nuclear war or a 22nuclear accident, but the complete elimination of these weapons, in line with the Treaty on the 23Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons, which entered into force as international law on January 22, 242021; 25 THEREFORE, be it resolved that the General Court of the Commonwealth of 26Massachusetts congratulates the 70 countries that have signed and ratified the Treaty on the 27Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons, and joins the legislatures of California and Oregon, the Maine 28State Senate, the New Jersey Assembly, Rhode Island Assembly and Senate and the 21 cities and 29towns in Massachusetts which have taken action to protect their citizens from the existential 30threat of nuclear war by embracing this Treaty and endorsing the national Back from the Brink 3 of 3 31platform, which calls on our federal leaders to embrace the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear 32Weapons and to take immediate steps to prevent nuclear war by actively pursuing a verifiable 33agreement among nuclear-armed states to eliminate their nuclear arsenals, renouncing the option 34of using nuclear weapons first, ending the President’s sole, unchecked authority to launch a 35nuclear attack, taking U.S. nuclear weapons off hair-trigger alert, and canceling the plan to 36replace its entire arsenal with enhanced weapons; and be it further 37 RESOLVED, that the General Court urges all members of the Massachusetts 38Congressional delegation to co-sponsor House Resolution 77, which calls for the US to adopt the 39policy provisions of the Back from the Brink platform, and urges the two Senators from 40Massachusetts to introduce a companion resolution in the United States Senate; and be it further 41 RESOLVED, that it shall henceforth be the policy of the General Court of the 42Commonwealth of Massachusetts to pursue whatever measures may be found necessary and 43appropriate to protect the citizens of the Commonwealth from the existential threat posed by 44nuclear weapons and to contribute in whatever ways it can, as a Commonwealth, towards the 45total elimination of these weapons from all countries, in line with the Treaty on the Prohibition 46of Nuclear Weapons; and be it further 47 RESOLVED, that copies of this resolution be transmitted forthwith by the clerk of the 48Senate to the President and Vice President of the United States, the Speaker and Minority Leader 49of the United States House of Representatives, the Majority and Minority Leaders of the United 50States Senate, and to each Senator and Representative from the Commonwealth in the Congress 51of the United States, and to the Governor of the Commonwealth.