Conservative
policymakers have relentlessly curtailed women's freedom, security, and
autonomy for years.
By Marge Baker
He became notorious for using the press and social media to
publicly attack women, calling them “dogs” and “fat pigs.”
He objectified and
degraded women while making his reality show The Apprentice, where
former staffers said he talked openly about women’s breast sizes and was “obsessed with
menstruation.”
So when, as a presidential candidate, Trump famously said there
should be “some form of punishment” for women who get abortions and
insulted his rival Carly Fiorina’s appearance, it came as no
surprise. Trump’s attacks on women have been going strong for decades.
But the GOP’s problem with women began well before Trump became
its presumptive nominee. For years the Republican Party has been relentlessly
pushing policies aimed at curtailing women’s reproductive rights, economic
freedom, access to health care, and autonomy.
For example, GOP-led statehouses have enacted close to 300 abortion restrictions in the past five years alone, representing over 25 percent of all abortion restrictions since Roe v. Wade.
These provisions include controversial Targeted Regulation of Abortion Providers statutes, or TRAP
laws, which aim to force clinics that provide abortions to close when they
can’t meet unnecessary regulations. TRAP laws — like the controversial HB2 law
in Texas, which was rightfully struck down by the Supreme Court this summer — limit
women’s access to safe abortions under the guise of protecting women’s health.
Moreover, Republicans in Congress voted eight times in one year to defund Planned Parenthood, one
of the leading providers of health care in the United States. And across the
country, Republican governors have signed laws cutting state funding to the
organization.
Make no mistake: These are attempts to cut funding for critical
health care services, including the provision of contraceptives, STI testing,
and breast cancer screenings. The cuts show a lack of respect for the autonomy
of women and a lack of understanding about the necessity of women’s access to
healthcare services.
The GOP has also been a massive roadblock to women achieving
greater economic security for themselves and their families. Republicans in
Congress have repeatedly blocked the Paycheck Fairness Act, which would
help to achieve greater pay equity for women, as well as proposals to increase the minimum wage and provide paid
sick leave for employees, both of which are critical to women’s economic
stability.
Even when Congress reauthorized the Violence Against Women
Act in 2013, it was over the protests of 160 Republicans in the House and Senate who voted against
it.
Donald Trump has eagerly taken up this GOP campaign to roll back
women’s rights. He wants to defund Planned Parenthood and ban abortions.
His solution to the gender pay gap is that
women should “do as good a job” as men.
While some Republicans in Congress
have tried to distance themselves from Trump on some of his most
inflammatory rhetoric, their policies show that they’re in lock step with him.
Trump’s verbal attacks are bad enough. But an expansion of his
party’s policies — policies that Trump has enthusiastically embraced — would be
even worse for women and the issues that shape our health and economic
wellbeing.
Marge
Baker is the executive vice president of People For the American Way. Distributed
by OtherWords.org.