Ahead of World AIDS Day, Save HIV Funding Campaign Releases Updated Funding Fast Facts, Announces National Week of Action, Urges Congress to Reject Devastating Cuts to HIV Prevention and Treatment Programs

WASHINGTON, D.C, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 2025 - In advance of World AIDS Day, taking place on December 1, the #SaveHIVFunding campaign has released a newly updated Action Alert, and announced a coordinated national week of actionwith partner organizations to call on Congress to reject proposed federal cuts that would jeopardize vital HIV prevention, care, and treatment programs. Save HIV Funding encourages journalists, creators and advocates reporting on World AIDS Day this year to include the story and narrative around the current state of HIV funding and has provided a refreshed list of HIV Funding Fast Facts at the end of this release.

Since its launch, Save HIV Funding has operated as a convener, bringing together HIV advocates, providers, researchers, public health leaders, and grassroots organizers across regions and political lines. The campaign mobilizes rapid-response advocacy, community education efforts, storytelling initiatives - including the #CutsKill Quilt - and direct engagement with lawmakers in Washington, D.C.

This year, the campaign emphasizes the stark contrast between scientific progress and political regression. As HIV prevention and treatment tools improve, Congress is considering cuts that would undermine decades of bipartisan investment in HIV care.

As part of the National Week of Action, the Save HIV Funding campaign will uplift and coordinate with local advocates in at least 12 states - Alabama, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, North Carolina, New York, Ohio, and Texas - to amplify frontline programs, local health providers, and community organizations that would be directly impacted by proposed federal cuts to FY26 funding for HIV programs.

Advocacy efforts will include:

#CUTSKILL QUILT RETURNS TO CAPITOL HILL

As part of the day's observance on December 1, part of the #CutsKill Quilt - a community-developed installation underscoring the real-life risks of federal funding cuts - will be displayed in the Rayburn House Office Building Foyer. The installation highlights messages from across the country that illustrate how critical ? HIV funding is to families, communities, and public health nationwide.

Following December 1, panels from the quilt will be displayed by both Democratic and Republican congressional offices to underscore support for people living with and vulnerable to HIV and the need to protect and maintain federal funding for HIV programs.

HIV FUNDING FAST FACTS

To support reporters covering the urgent policy landscape, the campaign is releasing the following Fact Sheet outlining the impact, scale, and human stakes of ongoing funding threats. Save HIV Funding reminds journalists and storytellers reporting on World AIDS Day to include the state of HIV Funding in their storytelling this year:

HIV funding protects vulnerable communities: Black and Latine communities account for more than 65% of new HIV diagnoses. Protecting these funds is about protecting racial and health equity.

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