http://www.alternet.org/election-2012/top-6-lies-romney-has-told-women-elect
ion-season-full-whoppers?akid=9578.78931.-5NQRy
<http://www.alternet.org/election-2012/top-6-lies-romney-has-told-women-elec
tion-season-full-whoppers?akid=9578.78931.-5NQRy&rd=1&src=newsletter732160&t
=2> &rd=1&src=newsletter732160&t=2
 

Top 6 Lies Romney Has Told Women in an Election Season Full of Whoppers

Mitt has assembled a binder full of bs on issues that matter to more than
half the population.
October 24, 2012 | 
 
<http://www.alternet.org/files/styles/story_image/public/story_images/photo_
1349775010355-2-0_0.jpg> 
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Women -- along with a handful of undecided voters -- are pretty much going
to decide this thing come November 6. The gender gap is at historic highs,
and if solely women were voting, there's no question as to who would be
occupying the White House for the next four years. 

In the last weeks before the election, Romney has shown himself ready to get
down on bended knee to woo the female vote. Which would be cute, if he
didn't have a record of denying women their basic human rights. Unbeknownst
to Mitt, women, in addition to making handy office workers, are also fully
capable of seeing through all the manipulations, mansplaining and malarkey
that have been spread around this campaign season. So let's pause a moment
to take a look at Mitt's continual war on women's credibility. 

1. Global Rights for Women 

In the final presidential face-off Monday night, Romney seemed to glow with
the fire of the global struggle for women's rights. Right off the bat, he
hailed the Arab Spring and the "hope that there would be a change towards
more moderation, and opportunity for greater participation on the part of
women in public life.." 

Maybe that glow was really the tell-tale flush of the hypocrite. Because the
funny thing is, women can't participate effectively in public life if they
can't get access to family planning services and find themselves thrown into
abject poverty trying to feed too many children. 

Mitt has vowed that his first order of business as president would be to
reinstate the devastating "global gag rule," also known as the "Mexico City
policy" -- a restriction originally hatched by Reagan that has been used to
block federal money for family-planning work abroad to any organization that
provided information, advice, referrals or services for legal abortion or
supported the legalization of abortion -- even using its own funds. As the
<http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/20/opinion/a-potential-world-of-harm-for-wom
en.html?_r=0> New York Times summarizes, "Merely talking about abortion
could cost groups not only federal money, but also useful technical support
and American-donated supplies of contraceptives, including condoms for
distribution in the communities they serve." 

President Obama lifted the global gag rule after taking office, a move that
was a much-needed step in the fight to end world poverty. Mitt Romney has
taken it as his highest priority to see that the misery factor for women
around the globe increases the moment he takes office. 

2. Reproductive Freedom 

Mitt's plans for women at home are as cruel as those for their sisters
abroad. Make no mistake: Romney will say whatever it takes to get elected,
and then govern exactly as he pleases. In a Republican debate, he boasted of
switching positions on a woman's right to terminate a pregnancy once he
became governor of Massachusetts. He campaigned as pro-choice to secure
votes, and then reversed himself in office to win conservative GOP support.
In his own words
<http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0711/28/se.01.html> :

"I changed my mind as the governor. This didn't just happen the last couple
of weeks or the last year. This happened when I was governor the first time
a bill came to my desk that related to life. I could not sign a bill that
would take away human life. I came down on the side of life every single
instance as governor of Massachusetts. I was awarded by the Massachusetts
Citizens for Life with their leadership award for my record." 

For a mind-bending trip through Romney's lies, switches and obfuscations on
pregnancy termination, check
<http://www.pensitoreview.com/2012/10/11/tracking-romneys-positions-on-abort
ion/> out a video by Slate's William Saletan .

Mitt has pledged
<http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/269984/my-pro-life-pledge-mitt-romney>
to defund Planned Parenthood, appoint only the most anti-women judges, and
reverse Roe v. Wade . He has lately taken to pretending that he cares about
contraception, a necessary part of women's healthcare, and in the second
presidential debate, he said he didn't believe Washington bureaucrats or
employers should tell a woman whether to use contraception. Don't buy it.
Mitt backs the Blunt
<http://thinkprogress.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/Blunt.pdf> Amendment ,
which would allow employers to refuse to cover things like - contraceptives.


3. Equal Pay for Women 

In the second matchup with Barack Obama, Romney ducked a question on pay
equity, neglecting to express support for equal pay for equal work. Hmm.
Could that be because he opposed the Lily Ledbetter Act when it was being
debated, as acknowledged
<http://www.drudge.com/news/162116/romney-flak-mitt-opposed-equal-pay-women>
by a top GOP adviser ?

Instead of addressing this critical question, Romney spewed his now-infamous
"binder full of women" nonsense (see number 6), hoping that the audience
would forget the actual question. 

To get a sense of where he actually stands on this issue, look no further
than Romney's own Web site's discussion of what kind of Supreme Court he
would like to install: "As president, Mitt will nominate judges in the mold
of Chief Justice Roberts and Justices Scalia, Thomas, and Alito." 

As Michael Keegan, president of People for the American Way points out,
these are the very judges who denied Lily Ledbetter the right to sue her
employer for years of unequal pay -- and made the law necessary in the first
place. 

4. Social Security 

Let's be clear: Any attack on Social Security is an attack on women. Despite
a tsunami of lies on the subject, Social Security is solvent, it does not
contribute to the deficit, and it keeps millions of women out of poverty in
old age. Women, in particular, rely on Social Security because they live
longer, they often have lower benefits due to time out of the workforce
having babies, and they make up a greater percentage of beneficiaries. 

To use the excuse of a financial crisis to cut benefits (that's what all the
talk about "tweaking" and "fixing" amounts to) is nothing more than the
cynical robbery of working people, especially women in favor of the 1
percent, who do not want to pay taxes, and the financiers, who would like to
get their hands on accounts to charge fees. The program isn't "broken," and
the politicians know it. But they don't want you to know it. 

Both candidates have been deceptive on this issue, and Obama has shown every
sign of making a grand bargain that sells out the women who need this
program - and are already under strain because of its too-low benefits. If
you are a single woman with a long life ahead of you, you've already got a
very difficult road ahead. 

Unfortunately, Mitt Romney would probably be even worse, if for no other
reason than the fact that dismantling the New Deal has been a prime
objective of the Republican Party ever since it was established. He has
supported privitization in the past, and would likely do so again. In 1983,
Ronald Reagan stole two years of retirement from people born after 1960,
raising the age of full benefits from 65 to 67. Mitt has said clearly
<http://http//www.mittromney.com/issues/social-security> that he would
welcome the opportunity to raise the age again, to 69 or 70. Never mind that
there are not enough jobs even for young people, and life expectancy is
actually going down for those on the lower rungs of the economic ladder. Or
the fact that census
<http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2012/03/28/census-data-reveals-elder-
women-s-poverty-crisis.html> datas shows that older women in America are
already so poor half of them can't even meet their basic needs, like heating
their homes. 

5. Work/Family Balance 

Break out the Twister mat! Mitt likes flexibility. In the second debate, he
professed a great understanding of the need for flexible scheduling for
women as part of his bumbling remarks about binders full of women: 

"I recognized that if you're going to have women in the workforce that
sometimes you need to be more flexible. My chief of staff, for instance, had
two kids that were still in school. She said, 'I can't be here until 7 or 8
o'clock at night. I need to be able to get home at 5 o'clock so I can be
there for making dinner for my kids and being with them when they get home
from school.' So we said fine. Let's have a flexible schedule so you can
have hours that work for you." 

Putting aside the troubling "if" in this statement, which suggests that
working women are some kind of strange new trend, Mitt's musings reveal his
sexist attitudes and general cluelessness about the challenges faced by
normal American families. Women, of course, aren't the only ones who might
need to spend time with their kids. And, newsflash for Mitt, most families
now have two breadwinners - not just a main breadwinner and somebody who has
a supplementary job but also takes care of the children. 

Flex-time is not just an issue about women taking care of kids. Many working
Americans - both men and women - have eldercare responsibilities that demand
their time and attention. They get sick themselves. And frankly, I don't
know how things rolled at Bain, but the emphasis on rigid schedules and
face-time is increasingly considered unproductive and retrograde in today's
workplace. 

And while we're at it, what might Mitt have to say about the fact that the
U.S. is one of only four
<http://www.cwa-union.org/blog/entry/romneys_doesnt_understand_women_or_the_
workplace/#.UIa_lxj1r74> countries in the freaking world (the others are
Liberia, Swaziland and Papua New Guinea) that doesn't offer paid maternity
leave? How's that for workplace flexibility? An economic penalty dumped on
women for procreation! 

Ellen Bravo, executive director of Family Values @ Work, noted to me in an
email that Romney's party "opposes any efforts to bring the workplace into
the 21st century by establishing modest standards like allowing workers to
earn paid sick days and creating family and medical leave insurance funds."
She pointed out that "two out of five workers -- and three out of four
low-wage workers -- don't earn a single paid sick day" and that "half the
workforce isn't covered even by unpaid FMLA." Her message to Mitt: "Don't
tell us how much you love your mother and what a great mother your wife is.
Stop blocking policies that help all mothers -- and fathers -- be the
parents they want to be." 

Romney's remarks clearly show that he is out of touch with women, the
workplace and the needs of modern families. 

6. Binder Full of Bullshit 

No list of Mitt's woman-whoppers would be complete without a nod to his
declaration that as governor of Massachusetts, he had taken the initiative
and gone around to women's groups to ask for help finding qualified female
candidates for his administration. 

Here's what really went down: MassGap, a coalition of women's groups put
together binders filled with information on female candidates for high-level
positions because they were dismayed by the lack of women in government.
They approached Mitt before he took office and put the heat on him to sign a
pledge to appoint more women if elected. Though he initially followed
through on his promise to appoint more women, many of the most important
jobs still went to men. Women got the less important positions. And the
number of women declined after his first two years. 

How does Romney really feel about women in his inner circle?
<http://www.inthesetimes.com/ittlist/entry/14041/a_binder_full_of_women_is_a
_stack_of_lies/> In These Times has reported that there was a curious
absence of women in top positions at Bain. And today, only four out of 49
partners are women. No wonder Mitt didn't know any qualified women to hire
when he was governor. 

Lynn Parramore is an AlterNet senior editor. She is cofounder of
Recessionwire, founding editor of New Deal 2.0, and author of 'Reading the
Sphinx: Ancient Egypt in Nineteenth-Century Literary Culture.' She received
her Ph.d in English and Cultural Theory from NYU, where she has taught essay
writing and semiotics. Parramore is a frequent commenter on political,
economic and cultural topics on television, radio, and web outlets. She is
the Director of AlterNet's New Economic Dialogue Project. Follow her on
Twitter @LynnParramore.

  _____  

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