Take Note by Molly Ivins
TAKE NOTE
By Molly Ivins in Mother
Jones - September/October 2004 Issue
"W. Is for Women," said the Bush
campaign buttons in 2000. True, he didn't seem
to have much to offer women, but the affable,
moderate-seeming candidate didn't seem hostile
either. He spent no time railing against
feminists, and though known to oppose abortion,
he didn't appear interested in doing anything
about it. In fact, he got through the entire
campaign without bringing up abortion.
Even after four years in office, George W.
Bush's record on women doesn't leap out at
you. It's composed almost entirely of little
things, small enough to fly well under the
media's radar screen, so few of us have any
sense of their cumulative impact. But when you
step back, the pattern emerges, and it is
large, ugly, and unmistakable. Behind a smoke
screen of high-profile female appointees and
soothing slogans, George W. Bush is waging war
on women.
One reason you may not
have noticed is that W's record on women is
getting harder and harder to find. Who knows
whether women are doing better or worse? You
can't find the information anymore -- the Bush
administration has simply stopped counting,
stopped keeping track, dropped the records.
When you go to the places where the government
used to keep the information, you find the
damnedest things -- fake sociology, phony
science, erroneous health information, and
pathetically bad economics.
Try a
different route to the record -- who has Bush
placed in important posts involving women's
health, education, and employment? Well,
darling, according to Bush appointees, when you
get PMS, pray. If your husband beats the crap
out of you, just agree that wives should be
submissive to their husbands; and besides, as
everybody in the Bush administration knows,
women beat up men just as often as men beat up
women. Oh, and if you get breast cancer, it's
your fault because you had an abortion, a
conclusion that particularly startled people
who study the disease.
Okay, but it
can't be all bad. I mean, look at the man, he's
surrounded by women. Elaine Chao, secretary of
labor; Ann Veneman, secretary of agriculture;
Gale Norton, secretary of interior -- why,
that's almost as many women as Bill Clinton
appointed to the Cabinet. Except the women in
Bush's administration have two important traits
in common: They've sworn their allegiance to
the corporate world, and they have connections
to right-wing foundations that espouse
anti-female policies.
Well, okay,
but his momma and his wife are in favor of
abortion rights, give him a break. Unfortunate
pattern there. Laura Bush, it seems, is used
to cast a softer light on her husband, who then
proceeds to reverse whatever she's just
promised. Right before the Bush inauguration,
many women were greatly reassured when Laura
said of Roe vs. Wade on the Today show,
"No, I don't think it should be
overturned." Three days later, her
husband reimposed the "global gag
rule" on groups abroad that receive U.S.
funding for family planning. They may no
longer so much as mention abortion, even when
it is medically necessary.
In April
2001, Laura, the librarian, kicked off the
Campaign for America's Libraries. A week
later, her husband cut funding for the Library
Services and Technology Act, the Reading Is
Fundamental program, and the National
Commission on Libraries and Information
Science. Oops.
Laura Bush was most
famously used to put a female-friendly face on
policy before the war in Afghanistan, when she
ubstituted for her husband in his weekly radio
address and spoke eloquently about the
Taliban's oppression of women. Unfortunately,
the much-heralded Afghan Women and Children's
Relief Act, signed by Bush, had no dollar
figures attached to it, and only a tiny amount
of money was ever committed. Meanwhile, Afghan
women's groups consistently report that women
are almost as badly off under the renewed rule
of the warlords as they were before. At least
the Taliban did not commit rape as a matter of
policy.
Maybe it's better Laura not
stand up for anything.
Let's look at
a few lesser-known Bushies. In August 2002,
Attorney General John Ashcroft named two women
from the Independent Women's Forum (IWF) to the
National Advisory Committee on Violence Against
Women. An imaginative move. IWF twice opposed
the Violence Against Women Act and continues to
lobby against its enforcement. An
anti-feminist group funded by the usual
consortium of right-wing foundations -- Olin,
Bradley, Scaife, Coors -- IWF also vehemently
opposes affirmative action; Title IX, which
provides for equal educational opportunity;
Take Our Daughters to Work Day; and women in
combat. Bush appointed Nancy Pfotenhauer,
president and CEO of IWF, to be a delegate to
the United Nations Commission on the Status of
Women. Writing in the Chicago Tribune, Chris
Black notes that IWF "debunk[s] feminist
myths’ and say[s] reports of rape, wage
discrimination, domestic violence, and gender
bias in schools are either flat-out wrong or
wildly exaggerated." With alert watchdogs
like these looking out for women's interests,
how can we go wrong?
Anyone who
watched George W. and Karl Rove while the
former was governor of Texas will recognize a
familiar pattern. Like much of Bush's social
policy -- from faith-based social services to
railing against gay marriage -- women's issues
are one of the bones they've decided they can
throw to the Christian right. (The
"serious stuff," such as taxes, the
environment, and economic and labor policy are
a different matter: Those are reserved for
nonreligious ideologues.)
On the
health front, take the appointment of Dr. W.
David Hager to the Reproductive Health Drugs
Advisory Committee. Hager coauthored a book
that prescribes scripture and prayers as a cure
for headaches and PMS. (For more on Hager, see
"Christian Science?" page 20.) He
opposes prescribing contraceptives to unmarried
women, and voted to prohibit emergency
contraception being sold over the counter, as
it would be used by "individuals who did
not want to take responsibility for their
actions and wanted a medication to relieve
those consequences." Right. Let the
irresponsible sluts suffer.
Another
example of morality trumping science came when
a fact sheet on condoms suddenly disappeared
from the Centers for Disease Control's
website. The fact sheet, based on a large pool
of scientific study, encouraged condom use
since they are 98 to 100 percent effective in
preventing pregnancy and sexually transmitted
infections, including HIV. "The primary
reason condoms sometimes fail is incorrect or
inconsistent use, not failure of the condom
itself," said the fact sheet. Eighteen
months later, a new fact sheet appeared,
stating that abstinence is the surest way to
avoid STDs and that evidence on condoms is
inconclusive. The CDC also removed a summary
of studies showing no increase in sexual
activity among teenagers taught about condoms.
James Wagoner, head of Advocates for Youth,
which works for comprehensive sex education,
has called it "a deeply unsettling trend
where public-health science is being supplanted
by politics and ideology." Since Wagoner's
group began criticizing Bush's policies, it has
been audited three times. Advocates for Youth
also had its CDC funding for AIDS prevention
yanked because "young people [in the
project's video] used the correct terminology
for male and female anatomy." "It's
absurd," said Wagoner. "What is the
president going to do? Issue an executive
order that every man, woman, and child
should
refer to the penis as a
dingaling?"
In Texas, thanks to
W's stint as governor, we are well ahead in the
abstinence-only sex education field. The happy
result is that Texas is now tied with
Mississippi for having the highest teen
birthrate in the nation. Four percent of all
15- to 17-year-old girls in Texas give birth.
We're so proud.
On the economic
front, the case of disappearing information
recurs. The Women's Bureau of the Department
of Labor used to post 25 fact sheets on topics
including "Women's Earnings as Percent of
Men's," "Domestic Violence: A
Workplace Issue," "Women in
Management," "Care Around the Clock:
Developing Child Care Resources," and so
on. These have been replaced by peppy new
Cosmo-like titles such as "Hot Jobs for
the 21st Century" and "20 Leading
Occupations for Women." In a recent
report, the National Council for Research on
Women further notes that a required study by
the Justice Department on discrimination in the
insurance industry against domestic violence
victims has vanished. A congressionally
mandated report on how employers should handle
such abused women has also been held up by the
Justice Department for more than two years.
Without explanation, the Department of
Education archived its guidelines on sexual
harassment in the schools.
The Bush
administration is notorious for secrecy, but
this is not some exercise in executive
privilege. This information is being
disappeared. As was the President's
Interagency Council on Women and the White
House Office of Women's Initiatives and
Outreach. No more. The Pentagon attempted to
disband its Advisory Committee on Women in the
Services. Congresswoman Heather Wilson
(R-N.M.), herself a veteran, managed to save
it. However, the committee's work was
redirected from issues of employment equity and
job access to the effects of deployment on
family life.
In April, the National
Women's Law Center released a report called
"Slip-Sliding Away," on the erosion
of women's rights. Among its findings: The
Department of Labor -- under the steady hand of
Elaine Chao -- has refused to use tools at its
disposal to identify violations of equal pay
laws. The Department of Labor has also
repealed regulations that allowed paid family
leave to be provided through state unemployment
compensation funds, proposed new regulations
that deprive millions of women of the right to
overtime pay, and even provided tips to
employers on how to avoid paying overtime when
he law still requires it.
Should
some poor fool nonetheless seek pay equity --
say an employee of Wal-Mart or Merrill Lynch or
Morgan Stanley -- corporations need not worry:
The Justice Department has weakened the
enforcement of laws against job discrimination
and abandoned pending sex discrimination
cases.
The cumulative effects of
broader Bush policies on women are also
stunning. Since women are disproportionately
poorer than men, the constant erosion of
programs that help poor people hurt women more
than men. Child-care, early-learning, and
after-school programs are particularly critical
for women trying to get off welfare. But at
least 300,000 children will be knocked off
child-care assistance under the
administration's new budget, which also freezes
funding for Head Start and cuts funding for
after- school programs. Meanwhile, the Bushies
want to impose new work requirements on
families who receive welfare.
Add in
cuts to housing subsidies, to prenatal and
early childhood nutrition programs, to college
grants, to career education, to domestic
violence programs, and lower federal grants
that result in cuts to public schools, and it
all adds up to a mountain of new trouble for
low- and moderate-income women and their
families. According to Frank Luntz, Republican
pollster and spinmeister, these younger working
women with small children are critical swing
voters. By dint of focus groups and shrewd
professional questioning, Luntz has determined
what these women need most -- more time in
their lives. He seemed to regard this finding
as a considerable coup.
When asked
on PBS's Now how the Republicans propose to
court this demographic, Luntz conjured up an
imaginary focus group. "You actually ask
the question," said Luntz. "So, I
want to talk to the ladies in the room’ -- the
women in the room is how I would put it -- I
want you to tell me what really matters to you.
What's your greatest challenge? Because I
think I know what it is. Ladies here, I'd say
that your lack of free time is one of the
greatest challenges.’ And they'll all sit
there and they'll raise their hands and they'll
nod yes. At that moment you have bonded with
those women. At that moment, when they hear
that you understand the challenges that face
them, they are ready to listen to your
solution."
That's the Bush
solution for overstressed working moms. No
overtime pay, no child-care, no Head Start, no
after-school programs, etcetera, etcetera,
etcetera. But hey, at least he's willing to
bond.
What do you think?
[Molly Ivins is a contributing writer for
Mother Jones and a syndicated columnist whose
best-selling books on the Bush administration
include "Bushwhacked" and
"Shrub".]
