4/8/2012 8:44:55 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time, [email protected]_ 
(mailto:[email protected])  
 
 
 
I  kinda think it will  take more than the wives of registered Republicans 
to do
what needs to be done. This is a perennial  problem for the GOP.
The party would win every election if women  didn't vote.
But they do, and they trend Democratic,  typically,
by 10 points or more.
 
Can't someone in the RNC employ a  sociologist who makes
women's issue his or her # 1 priority to  consult on political positions
and women's feelings ?  Its like the  GOP has almost no interest
in women's views of issues. 
 
You can't win elections with only the votes  of men.
By now the Republicans should have gotten  the message.
Except that they still are mostly  clueless.
 
Billy
 
------------------------------

 
 
 
 
My wife is more for Mitt Romney  than I am. 

David




  _   
 
"Free  speech is meant to protect unpopular speech. Popular speech, by 
definition,  needs no protection."—Neal  Boortz 




On 4/8/2012 8:56 AM,  [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])  wrote:  


Salon
 
 
Republicans just don’t get it 
 
As the GOP continues to repel women voters, can  you blame President Obama 
for opening his arms to greet them?
Joan  Walsh


 
 
Just as Mitt Romney was making _the case to Newsmax_ 
(http://thinkprogress.org/special/2012/04/05/459182/mitt-romney-addresses-women-problem/?tw_p=twt&m
obile=nc) ,  that paragon of journalistic integrity, that the so-called 
Republican war on  women is entirely concocted by Democrats, Republican Scott 
Walker was  quietly _signing a law_ 
(http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/04/06/scott-walker-wisconsin-equal-pay-law_n_1407329.html?1333728572)
  that  
repealed Wisconsin’s Equal Pay Enforcement law, which made it easier  for women 
to seek damages in discrimination cases. Driven by state business  lobbies, 
the repeal passed the GOP-dominated Legislature on a strict party  line 
vote, and Walker signed it, with no comment, Thursday afternoon. 
President Obama, meanwhile, was hosting a White House  summit on women and 
the economy Thursday. Predictably, Republicans howled  that the president is 
merely courting another “interest group” and playing  politics. There was 
no doubt some politics at play during the summit; at one  point participants 
chanted, “Four more years!” 
But really, when Republicans are repealing equal pay laws  and proposing 
federal budgets that disproportionately hurt women, as well as  restricting 
funding for contraception, who’s playing politics with women’s  issues? 
When GOP poster boy Scott Walker is repealing equal-pay  protections for 
women, why shouldn’t Obama remind us that he signed the Lily  Ledbetter Equal 
Pay Act? Since the Ryan budget repeals “Obamacare”  and  slashes Medicaid 
and Medicare – both of which disproportionately serve women  — is it unfair 
to talk about how the Affordable Care Act provides cost-free  contraception, 
preventive care like mammograms and Pap smears, and outlaws  charging women 
more for insurance? 
Yes, it’s an election year, so everything the president  does will be 
scrutinized for its political agenda. That’s fine. But I  continue to find it 
hilarious that Republicans insist that their troubles  with women are the fault 
of nasty Democrats. Contraception aside, they’re  the ones cutting programs 
for women and repealing equal pay protection. To  Newsmax, Mitt Romney 
again complained that Democrats are distorting the GOP  position on 
contraception. And again I say: Democrats didn’t crusade to  defund Planned 
Parenthood. 
Democrats didn’t introduce personhood legislation  that would outlaw certain 
types of contraception. They didn’t propose the  Blunt amendment that would 
have allowed employers to deny insurance coverage  for contraception as 
well as any health care treatment they don’t approve  of. 
I wrote the other day that concern about  contraception isn’t the only 
issue driving the _GOP’s widening gender  gap_ 
(http://www.salon.com/2012/04/04/mitt_romneys_fooling_himself_about_women/singleton/)
 . 
But a recent USA Today poll found that women  in swing states say their 
_number one issue_ (http://www.theatla
ntic.com/politics/archive/2012/04/this-election-will-be-all-about-women/255355/)
  is  women’s health care (men say 
deficits and the economy), and that makes an  interesting point: Women see 
contraception as an integral part of their  overall health care – as it is. We 
know that most women who use the pill,  for instance, use it for a health 
reason other than contraception only.  Republicans are the ones fetishizing 
birth control and putting it outside  the boundaries of women’s health care. 
Mitt Romney and the GOP just don’t get it. Everything about  the way they’
re approaching these issues is backfiring.
--  


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