Since 1994, when she became communications director and spokesperson for Enough Is Enough, an American secular nonpartisan nonprofit organization whose mission is to make the Internet safer for families and children, Hughes has been an advocate and speaker on the issue of protecting children online. She became president and CEO of the organization in 2002. The organization has produced an Internet Safety 101SM program with the
Department of Justice and other partners. She is the executive producer, host and instructor of the
Internet Safety 101 DVD series, which ran as a TV series on
PBS, garnering Hughes an Emmy nomination in 2012 and the series an Emmy Award in 2013. Hughes has testified before multiple congressional hearings on protecting children online. She and Enough Is Enough supported the
Communications Decency Act (CDA) of 1996, the
Children's Internet Protection Act (CIPA), and the
Child Online Protection Act (COPA). Senator
Trent Lott appointed Hughes to serve on the COPA Commission, and she co-chaired the COPA Hearings on filtering/ratings/labeling technologies. She also serves on various Internet safety advisory boards and task forces, including the 2006 Virginia Attorney General's Youth Internet Safety Task Force and the 2008 Internet Safety Technical Task Force, formed with
MySpace and the U.S. Attorneys General. Beyond addressing the dangers of Internet pornography, Hughes has also spoken into the issue of privacy online, teen suicide and the impact of
cyberbullying. She has received numerous awards, including the National Law Center for Children and Families Annual Appreciation Award, and the "Protector of Children Award" and Media Impact Award from the National Abstinence Clearinghouse. In 2014, Enough is Enough's "National Porn Free Wi-Fi" campaign" encouraged
McDonald's and
Starbucks to add filters to block pornography on their Wi-Fi networks. In 2016, McDonald's implemented a filtered Wi-Fi policy in most of its 14,000 stores. Starbucks followed suit and announced it would implement a global policy as well. That same year, Hughes won the 2014 Professional Women in Advocacy Excellence In Advocacy Award for "Veteran Practitioner". Enough Is Enough sponsored a "Children's Internet Safety Presidential Pledge" in 2016, asking presidential candidates to pledge to combat both Internet pornography—including both illegal child pornography and legal adult pornography—if elected president. The Pledge states that if elected president, the pledging person will "uphold the rule of law by aggressively enforcing existing federal laws to prevent the sexual exploitation of children online, including the federal obscenity laws, child pornography laws, sexual predation laws and the sex trafficking laws." Republican U.S. presidential candidate
Donald Trump signed the pledge, and Democratic U.S. presidential candidate
Hillary Clinton sent a letter of support. Hughes has publicly spoken against articles appearing in
Teen Vogue magazine that promote sexual activity of any kind to teens, sparking an
online petition her organization initiated called "Say No To
Teen Vogue" after it published
Anal Sex: What You Need to Know/How to Do it the Right Way. The petition received more than 29,000 signatures calling to "boycott
Teen Vogue until this article is retracted and these types of articles cease to be published." In October 2017, Hughes was one of 120 world leaders to participate in the "Child Dignity In the Digital World" World Congress in Rome to set the global agenda in the fight against
child sexual abuse and exploitation in the digital age. The Congress concluded with a papal audience at the
Vatican in which
Pope Francis applauded the Congress in his address for concentrating with great foresight "on what is probably the most crucial challenge for the future of the human family, the protection of young people's dignity, their healthy development, their joy and their hope." In November 2017, Hughes joined
Candy Carson and others at the invitation of Homemakers for America for the grand opening of the Museum of the Bible in Washington D.C. to ring the replica of the
Liberty Bell, launching a nationwide ringing of bells by churches to calling Americans to come together to "Let Freedom Ring!"
Writing Hughes co-wrote the story for the May 2000 season finale episode of
Touched by an Angel that dealt with online safety. As a platform issue of Enough Is Enough, she has written and spoken regularly on the harms of online bullying, the relational brokenness of young people, and the need for a safer, kinder and ethical community on and offline. Hughes was an outspoken supporter of Republican presidential candidate
Donald Trump during his 2016 presidential campaign. She has also written numerous commentaries that have been published in the
Los Angeles Times,
USA Today, Politico, CNN, FOX News and other media outlets. Hughes has called upon
The Walt Disney Company to crack down on unauthorized "Disney porn" on the Internet. ==Personal life==