Categories
Health

Rep. Elise Stefanik Launches PAC to Elect More Republican Women to the House of Representatives


What points resonate as you’re making the case for this investment—is it about pure representation, as in, the Republican Party should look like the country? Is it about the fact that suburban women’s support for Trump seems to be dwindling and an emphasis on women could shore up some of that support? How is the conversation playing out?

I think the framing for these men is, “We think Elise is right. We need to focus more on this as a party and we want to support this initiative.” Men in leadership understand the importance of diversity in the party, the importance of winning young voters, winning diverse voters, winning suburban voters. I think they’ve listened. They understand this needs to be a priority.

When Sen. Susan Collins was thinking of running for governor in Maine, then-Sen. Heidi Heitkamp sent a text to her that said, in short, “Please don’t.” Heitkamp wanted a woman on the other side of the aisle to be her partner on some of the issues that they were working on. Have Democratic women reached out and said, “Great job. We would love to have more Republican women to work with us on some of these issues, whether that’s health care or child care or education”?

Yes. I have heard from women across the aisle, and I’ve heard from them publicly. I appreciate it. Cheri Bustos [of Illinois] who is head of the DCCC, which is the campaign arm for the Democratic Party, has said that she believes it is important for there to be more women in Congress and that means more women in both parties. I have felt very encouraged by my colleagues on my side of the aisle, but also women on the Democratic side, and I think that speaks to the broader point of why having women in elected office is so important. We tend to be more bipartisan. We tend to be legislative workhorses who want to get our work done, not run to our separate corners.

Four Democratic women senators are now in the race for president, and these are women who are considered frontrunners, which is a milestone just in terms of representation alone. Do you ever feel lonely as a conservative woman in a time when your ranks are so diminished?

I do not. I think about [former U.N. Ambassador] Nikki Haley and Sen. Martha McSally [of Arizona]. Sen. Susan Collins is on the ballot in the Senate. We have amazing women. Our stories tend not to get told in the media as much as Democratic female candidates. And that’s something I also want to change, but I feel very much at home with my female colleagues on the Republican side. I just want to increase those numbers. I think overall it’s good to have as many female role models as possible, regardless of what your political ideology is.

From the 2016 election until now, have there been flash points, especially around gender and sexism, that have made you question your place in the party?

I have a very independent record from President Trump. I have spoken out against his rhetoric regarding women, and I have disagreed on some of his policy decisions. I think that’s one of the reasons why I was overwhelmingly re-elected this past cycle, which was a really tough cycle in the northeast for Republicans.

As I’ve said, the issue the Republican Party has had with women voters predates President Trump. I think it’s been magnified with this administration and I do think some of the rhetoric has had an impact. We saw that at the polls in 2018. But I am a Republican and I’m hoping to help define the Republican Party as we head towards the future. But I worked on the Romney-Ryan campaign in 2012, and we lost single professional women ages 18 to 30 by over 30 points. That is a problem, and it’s going to continue after this administration. We have to rebuild our coalition.



Source link

Categories
Health

Republican Jennifer Williams On the Trump Administration's Definition of Transgender


In the two years since Donald Trump was elected President of the United States, there have been multiple efforts to roll back protections for transgender people in America. Shortly after his inauguration, language pertaining to LGBTQ communities and their issues were removed from the official White House Page. Last summer, he attempted to ban transgender recruits from the military. (It didn’t work.) In October 2017, Attorney General Jeff Sessions in a memo announcing changes to an Obama-era guidance said civil rights law doesn’t protect transgender workers. And that winter, the Trump administration reportedly directed the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to omit “transgender” from its 2018 budget documents.

Now, in what many analysts are calling a partisan political play right before the midterm elections, the administration will attempt to roll back the recognition and protection of transgender people under federal civil rights laws. According to the New York Times, Trump wants to define sex as an unchangeable condition determined by genitalia at birth. This means total erasure for transgender people, who will not only lose access to rights, but who will likely face violence and trauma in both the physical and mental form in a country that refuses to acknowledge their existence.

But, there are still people willing to fight back. People like Jennifer Williams, the first openly transgender Republican delegate to attend a Republican National Convention. A Republican in many rights—Williams has attended 10 Conservative Political Action Conferences, is a member of the Log Cabin Republicans and the National Rifle Association—she also finds herself at an impasse with her party. A party that, in their hopes ignore the transgender community will also erase and alienate her in the process.

Below, Williams shares her story and what she hopes for her community—and the Republican party—moving forward.


Over the weekend, I watched as a memo from inside the Trump Administration leaked to The New York Times. In it, the Department of Health and Human Services argued for defining a legal definition of sex to be a “biological, immutable condition determined by genitalia at birth.” It’s a move I disagree with. But, I’m still a Republican.

I grew up with two Democrat parents. They grew up in an era between FDR and John F. Kennedy. But I was a kid who grew up in the Reagan and Bush 1980s. At the time, we were in the midst of the Cold War with the Soviet Union. I saw what happened with the hostage crisis in Iran, I witnessed how weak our country was. It really drew me in a different direction than my folks. So, when I walked in to register to vote, I ticked off “Republican.”

Yes, I’ve voted for Democratic candidates locally along the way, but for my entire adult life, I’ve been a proud supporter of my chosen party. And now in my New Jersey community—one dominated by the Democrats—I see the need for both. I see a need for two parties that will vigorously fight and try to win over voters, and two parties that will present new ideas, alternative ideas.

I still like a lot of the core ideals and beliefs that the Republican party holds. But, unfortunately, those are being challenged today, with memos just like this. And ultimately, these ideas are contrary to the original founding of my beloved party.

As a Republican, I’m disappointed. I’m disappointed on how a minor offshoot of the Republican party—one that’s very bent on religious freedom—is really directing our current administration to take away the liberty, freedom, and equality that millions of Americans who just happened to be LGBTQ currently enjoy.

These liberties shouldn’t be limited. Rather, they should be expanded.

Afford us the same opportunity that everyone else in the country has to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. Let us be free of discrimination in the workplace so we can make our own way in the world, so we can provide for ourselves. Ensure we aren’t discriminated against regarding medical care and housing so we may have liberty. Help us all get on an equal playing field rather than trying to limit what we can be. Stop limiting who I can be, and what I can achieve in life.

As a Republican, I am sad. I am sad that my party is being hurt by potential policies like this and what’s happening at large. I don’t believe President Trump has animosity toward transgender people, however, he owes a lot to many people who voted for him who do indeed want to take away our equality.

But, as a Republican, and as a transgender woman I’m still hopeful. I’m hopeful that we will be able to reduce some of the anti-LGBTQ language on the next go-around following the midterms.

And part of that includes me continuing to speak out.

By me being in the room as a transgender American, I’m able to represent my community where otherwise my community would not be represented at all. In that room, I am able to make sure that I challenge viewpoints that would hurt our community, but also being, hopefully, a positive example of our community and that we’re not the stereotype that people think.

No one wants to be a member of a party of discrimination. But, there are still people on the inside who are willing to fight to be on the right side of history. People like Bob Hugin from New Jersey, who is currently running for the United State Senate, who, on Monday said: “Bob Hugin strongly supports equality and opportunity for the LGBTQ community and will be a leader on these issues as Senator. If President Trump wants to roll back equality and opportunity for the LGTBQ community, Bob Hugin won’t hesitate to stand up to the president.”

That statement, to me, is worth staying a Republican.

I don’t know what my future holds. I don’t know what my party’s future holds. But, for now, my first priority is protecting my community.


Jennifer Williams is the Chairwoman of the Trenton Republican Committee, a Master Poll Worker for the Mercer County Board of Elections (NJ) and a member of the Zoning Board of Adjustment in her hometown of Trenton, New Jersey. In 2016, Williams attended the Republican National Convention in Cleveland as the first openly-transgender Delegate from New Jersey.

MORE: Trump Reportedly Banned the Words ‘Transgender’ and ‘Diversity’ in CDC Documents





Source link

Categories
Health

Watch These Sexual Assault Survivors Confront Republican Senators at the Airport


While the FBI continues its investigation into the sexual assault allegations against Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh, more women are coming forward to share their personal stories in hopes of swaying the opinions of senators who will eventually vote on whether or not to confirm the conservative judge.

But one group of women isn’t waiting until the vote for a change of heart. Over the weekend The Center for Popular Democracy (CPD) organized their staff and volunteers to speak candidly with senators returning to Washington, D.C., at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport. And as it turns out, some of those senators were left speechless.

“We were saying, ‘Look us in the eyes, actually have a conversation with us,'” the group’s president and co–executive director Jennifer Epps-Addison told Bustle about confronting the men. She told the outlet that the group spent the weekend studying photos of both Democratic and Republican senators so they could recognize them on sight.

On Monday Senator David Perdue (R–Ga.) was approached by Epps-Addison, Patti Serrano, and Arizona State Representative Isela Blanc as he made his way through the terminal.

After complaining about being touched, he ducks into a men’s bathroom to avoid the women.

[embedded content]

“How can you not talk to women who have been assaulted?” Epps-Adison asks. “How can you ignore our pleas?” Blanc continues, “You represent not just your state’s choice, but every American in this country, and every person that is vulnerable. This is a legacy, and a moment in history that will not be forgotten.”

“He [Perdue] really is demonstrating what women across the country are saying: It’s not only that you are not listening to us, but you are overtly hostile to us when we say that we want the full rights and dignity that everybody in this country deserves,” Epps-Anderson said in her interview with Bustle.

Senate Majority leader Mitch McConnell also found himself on the receiving end of public criticism and questions. “Do you want the Republican party to be the party that is known for supporting rape and sexual assault?” a woman asks.

This isn’t the first time we’ve seen women confront senators in the past week. Many believe that the decision by Senator Jeff Flake (R–Ariz.) to call for the delayed vote and a limited investigation came in part because of a confrontation in an elevator by two brave sexual assault survivors, Ana Maria Archila and Maria Gallagher.

“I was sexually assaulted and nobody believed me,” one said to Flake. “I didn’t tell anyone, and you’re telling all women that they don’t matter, that they should just stay quiet because if they tell you what happened to them, you’re going to ignore them. That’s what happened to me, and that’s what you’re telling all women in America, that they don’t matter, that they just keep it to themselves.”

The vote on whether or not Kavanaugh gets a seat on the Supreme Court bench is scheduled to take place at the end of this week.

MORE: Time’s Up Picks WNBA’s Lisa Borders as Its First-Ever President and CEO





Source link

Categories
Health

This CNN Anchor Perfectly Shut Down a Republican Senate Candidate Who Kept Interrupting Her


“Manterrupting” is real—and it’s backed up by numbers and by situations that we see play out in meetings, in social situations, and on TV with what sometimes seems like daily frequency. In just three minutes, one 2014 study found, men will interrupt a woman about twice. But if we were to go back and look at that data, there’s a high possibility a recent CNN interview would have skewed that number wayyyy to one side: a Republican Senate candidate from Virginia repeatedly interrupted anchor Kate Bolduan during an interview, talking over her multiple times. But a la Rep. Maxine Waters’ fierce and instantly iconic behavior in a similar situation (“Reclaiming my time!”), Bolduan held her ground by reminded him that he was on her show—and not the other way around.

Bolduan, host of CNN’s At This Hour, had Stewart on her August 17 show to discuss last weekend’s white nationalist rallies in Charlottesville, Virginia. What began as Stewart defending Trump’s unhinged press conference statements turned into an even more cringeworthy two-minute exchange.

The conversation turned ugly when Stewart accused Bolduan of exploiting the tragic death of Heather Heyer, the 32-year-old woman killed last Saturday morning during a domestic terrorism attack in Charlottesville.

Bolduan asked Stewart about why Republicans haven’t publicly condemned the alt-left: “Is it possible that it’s because someone died who was counter-protesting?”

“You’re trying to use this poor women’s death to say that Confederate monuments should be taken down,” Stewart replied. “That’s exactly what you’re trying to say, Kate.”

“I’m sorry, is that what I said at all?” Bolduan, who’s been a CNN journalist for over a decade, asked the GOP candidate. “In no way am I conflating the two.”

He interrupted her repeatedly, and after Bolduan attempted to explain herself over Stewart multiple times, she finally put the politician in his place.

“I am the anchor of the show,” she said. “I am asking the questions. Stop talking, stop talking. You’re the guest on my show. I would like to continue the conversation with you—respectfully.”

Her firm shutdown got Stewart to stop talking, and Bolduan was finally able to clarify that there is “a time and a place to have a debate and a conversation about the appropriate place for Confederate statues.”

Watch her full takedown here:

[embedded content]

Related Stories:
Here’s How Frequently Women Supreme Court Justices Are Interrupted by Men
This Australian Senator’s Response to an Interrupting Male Colleague Is Perfect
This Hero Woman Shut Down a Gym Creep for a Total Stranger



Source link