Use Republicans' Tricks Against Them: 14 Pro-Women Laws Dems Should Fight for, Even if They Won't Pass.
By Irin Carmon | Sourced from Salon
We are at a political moment that yields headlines like Politico’s recent “GOP scrambles to assuage
women’s groups.” Such copy must have delighted Democrats on the Hill: It means
they had managed to back Republicans into a corner. Said scramble was over the Violence Against Women Act, which
contains expanded protections that Republicans have accused Democrats of adding
to make them look anti-woman. Senate Republicans reluctantly allowed VAWA to
pass, but on Wednesday the House passed a version stripped of those expanded
protections. Since women’s groups have not been “assuaged” by that Republican
answer to VAWA and the White House has threatened to veto a bill without the
protections for Native American, immigrant and LGBT victims, Republicans can
pick between falling in line and looking like, well, misogynistic jerks.
Democrats, it seems, have taken a page from
the GOP playbook. For a long time, Republicans have introduced what looks like
dead-end legislation and then used it to demagogue their opponents, like the
Susan B. Anthony and Frederick Douglass Prenatal Nondiscrimination Act of 2011,
which sought to fight the non-problem, at least in the U.S., of abortions
motivated by race and gender. Then there are the more successful abortion
restrictions and Planned Parenthood defundings that have trickled down from the
federal level to sympathetic state legislatures, where they’ve found greater
success.
If Democrats want to keep the GOP on the
defensive on women’s issues — and not only maintain that gender gap that shows
up in most polls, but mobilize women in the base — they should seize the moment
and get ambitious. After all, the political conversation around women’s rights
is still overwhelmingly reactive to the conservative agenda, and what victories
there have been are partial — the potential for a moderately expanded version of
VAWA and eliminating the co-pay on a range of women’s healthcare services
aside.
I asked advocates and activists to think big
and offer up a proactive policy wish-list. “I am inclined to suggest that we
introduce a bill entitled, ‘Politicians Should Leave Women the Hell Alone Act,’”
says Jon O’Brien, president of Catholics for Choice. Short of that, there are
four main areas of focus here: reproductive health, employment issues, sexual
assault and domestic violence protections, and foreign policy. Most of these
bills wouldn’t have a chance of passing with the current composition of
Congress, especially the House. But why leave the realignment to the right?
Reproductive health:
Comprehensive sex education.
One provision of the Affordable Care Act includes state grant money for more
comprehensive sex ed, but another brings back funding for abstinence-only
education. “Too often people are blaming young people for not making the right
decision but denying them information about it,” says Sarah Audelo, senior
manager of public policy at Advocates for Youth. That’s where the Real Education
for Healthy Youth Act would come in. (It was introduced in both the House and
Senate in November 2011, but wouldn’t get far in today’s House.) It would
establish a minimum standard for programs receiving federal funding, including
factually accurate information about contraception and STIs, as well as an
LGBT-friendly curriculum. Speaking of which, Audelo says, it’s time to do away
with the so-called “no promo homo” provision in the Public Health Service Act,
which prohibits the alleged promotion of homosexuality.
Public insurance coverage for
abortion care. The National Abortion Federation notes that in 2003,
11.5 percent of women of reproductive age were covered by Medicaid, but they’re
still denied abortion coverage except in certain states or in cases of rape,
incest and life endangerment. Similar restrictions apply to federal insurance
coverage for servicewomen, Peace Corps volunteers and Native Americans. The
Military Access to Reproductive Care and Health for Military Women Act – or
MARCH for Military Women Act — would undo part of the damage. It was introduced in the
House and Senate last year. More broadly, repealing
the Hyde Amendment would go a long way in improving access.
Allowing nurse practitioners or
physician’s assistants to provide first trimester abortions. A bill
along those lines was introduced, unsuccessfully, in California. “We’ve known
for years that appropriately trained NPs, CNMs and PAs have the skills and
expertise to provide safe first trimester abortion care and increase women’s
access to care,” says a spokeswoman for the National Abortion Federation. That
access is threatened as the number of providers dwindles, which can result in
later and more expensive abortions.
Making the pill and emergency
contraception over-the-counter. The Center for Reproductive Rights is
currently
suing the FDA over its politicized handling of the morning after pill, forcing
women under 17 to get a prescription. Meanwhile, some reproductive health
advocates would like to see the pill itself go over the counter,
currently in place in several other countries without incident.
Codifying Roe. The Freedom
of Choice Act ensures the right to bear a child or the right not to, and
prohibits state interference in exercising those rights.
Undoing the damage done by
so-called conscience clauses. O’Brien would like to see a Protect
Individual Conscience Act – “to protect the consciences of patients/employees
and providers, rather than current moves to protect the ‘consciences’ of big
businesses like hospitals and schools run by the bishops and other religious
conservatives who suggest that corporations have consciences that trump the
consciences of patients and healthcare providers.”
Work:
Equal pay. The Fair Pay
Act, which would require employers to “study the internal alignment of their
jobs and pay rates and fix it if women’s jobs are being undervalued,” gets
introduced regularly but has never gone far, says Institute for Women’s Policy
Research president Heidi Hartmann. That said, then-Sen. Obama supported it. “We
need to resurrect the idea of comparable worth, of paying women’s jobs more
relative to men’s jobs, because they have been historically undervalued,”
Hartmann says. She adds that while pay discrimination for exactly the same job
still happens, the more common phenomenon is women’s jobs being automatically
paid less. Former Planned Parenthood president Gloria Feldt, author of “No
Excuses: 9 Ways Women Can Change How We Think About Power,” notes that the
Paycheck Fairness Act “strengthens laws prohibiting pay discrimination on
account of gender.”
Paid family leave.
Motherhood is the most important job! Unless there’s an actual
workplace policy at stake, for mothers or for fathers. “Half of U.S. private
sector workers don’t even have any paid sick days, so we are way behind other
countries in income replacement for being sick, having kids, taking care of
kids,” says Hartmann. She’d also like to see more workplace flexibility policies
in place for subsidized childcare. Since pipe dreams are allowed too. This is
another place where the U.S. lags behind other industrialized nations.
Caregiver credits.
Retirement benefits are based on the highest 35 years of earnings, but women
tend to be penalized for working fewer years in order to care either for
children or elders. Hartmann proposes creating credits in the Social Security
System to allow for earnings credits to caregivers. Lynn Paltrow of the National
Advocates for Pregnant Women has a related, narrower suggestion: “Colleges and
Universities that receive federal money must include in their economic courses
discussion of the essential and overwhelmingly unacknowledged economic
contribution women make to the GDP through their unpaid labor as childcare
providers and homemakers.”
Fixing the leadership gap.
Feldt would love to see a “a multi-billion-dollar public-private initiative to
stimulate the burgeoning women’s leadership programs throughout high school and
college years and beyond, to inspire a flood of young women to take this country
to leadership parity in the next decade.”
Sexual assault and domestic
violence protections:
Ending the rape kit backlog.
Despite serial outrage, an enormous backlog of DNA evidence from rape
kits remains untested. The SAFER Act would create the Sexual Assault Forensic
Evidence Registry, which would create the Sexual Assault Forensic Evidence
Registry, which will provide aggregate data to the public on the state of the
backlog on a local, state, and national level. Katherine Hull of the Rape,
Abuse, and Incest National Network says it would help “take thousands of rapists
off the street, achieving justice for survivors.” This one, perhaps because it
involves law enforcement accountability and would reallocate existing funding,
actually has a decent chance of passing — it’s about to be introduced in
bipartisan fashion by Sens. John Cornyn of Texas and Michael Bennet of
Colorado.
Anti-discrimination provisions for
survivors. “Just yesterday a colleague of mine got a call from Indiana
about a woman who was fired because she has a protection order, and we have
litigated these cases on behalf of survivors,” says Lisalyn Jacobs of Legal
Momentum. She adds, “Unemployment insurance should be available to survivors of
domestic and sexual violence and stalking if they need to leave their jobs
because of violence against themselves or their immediate families.” Forty
states already provide unemployment insurance to domestic violence survivors,
but only seven provide it to both domestic violence and sexual assault
survivors.
Foreign policy:
Ratifying CEDAW. The U.S.
is among only seven countries plus the Vatican that haven’t ratified the
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women
(CEDAW). Says Feldt, “It may seem largely symbolic, but symbols drive thinking
and thinking drives acting.”
Repealing the global gag
rule. The Center for Reproductive Rights’ Nancy Northup called for a
permanent lifting of the so-called global gag rule, which prohibits
international organizations receiving U.S. funding from providing or even
referring for abortions. It’s habitually implemented and rescinded depending on
whether a Democrat or a Republican is in the White House.
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