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Birth Control-Centered Gender War Boosts Democratic Campaigns

Birth Control Hearing

First Posted: 02/20/2012 4:34 pm Updated: 02/21/2012 8:35 am

Where are the women?

The question, posed by Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.) to an all-male panel at Thursday's House Oversight Committee hearing on a new birth control coverage requirement, has rapidly turned into a political rallying cry, sparking a viral online campaign and lighting a fire under Democratic campaigns.

It has also put a coda of sorts on a culture war argument that erupted several weeks ago. A debate that began with the straightforward constitutional question of what the government could instruct religious institutions to do with respect to health care coverage has become the most galvanizing political issue for Democrats since the president introduced his jobs act last fall.

A series of incendiary events has thrust the issue of contraception to the forefront of the national discussion in the past few weeks. There was an outcry after Obama introduced the rule, which requires most religiously affiliated employers to cover birth control for their employees. Soon after, Susan G. Komen for the Cure, the nation's largest breast cancer charity, cut off funds to Planned Parenthood, which provides affordable cancer screenings and contraception to millions of low-income women, because some of its locations also perform abortions. The ensuing controversy sparked a massive national discussion about the politicization of women's health and coaxed GOP politicians, such as former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, into taking sides.

Just as the Komen controversy died down, Sen. Roy Blunt (R-Mo.) introduced an amendment that would have allowed insurers to opt out of covering any form of health care to which they morally objected. This, in itself, was low hanging fruit for the Democrats. But when House Republicans convened an all-male panel to discuss contraception, and when Foster Friess, a top financial backer of former Sen. Rick Santorum’s presidential campaign, said that pregnancies could be prevented by "gals" putting Bayer Asprin "between their knees," campaign consultants had the type of political imagery that they could only dream of. For Democratic lawmakers, it couldn’t have come at a more opportune time, giving them the chance to launch a well-oiled, comprehensive effort to lock in women's votes ahead of the 2012 elections.

EMILY's List, a political action committee dedicated to electing Democratic women to Congress, has launched a multi-pronged effort to rally voters around the birth control issue. The group has sent out multiple fundraising emails and created a new television ad, which features Friess' comment and the image from the all-male Congressional hearing, in order to emphasize the need for more progressive women in leadership roles. Although Jess McIntosh, communications director for EMILY's List, did not reveal the amount of money the group has raised in the past two weeks, she said it's clear that the latest drive for money and supporters has been a huge success.

"We added over 60,000 members in the last couple weeks," McIntosh told The Huffington Post Friday. "We had over 30,000 petition signers just yesterday for a petition about the birth control mandate, which is unusual. We have raised more money for candidates at this point in the cycle than ever before, and we've definite seen an uptick in also how active these folks are."

Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.), who chairs the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, sent a fundraising email and petition drive out to DSCC supporters urging them to oppose both the Blunt amendment and the "aspirin agenda." A petition about the "aspirin agenda" collected over 65,000 signatures in one day. A similar "Where are the women?" petition circulated by the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee has collected over 250,000 signatures since it went out late Thursday night.

State Democratic parties and individual campaigns have also been able to use the federal birth control controversy to drum up local support. The Virginia Democratic Party, for instance, claims to have raised an unusually high amount of money and saw a "spike in interaction" in the two days following Issa's birth control hearing.

"People kind of came to life about this issue. Across the board, we have seen a considerable uptick in the financial response our people have had to what's going on," said Brian Coy, a spokesperson for the Virginia Democrats. "We've raised thousands of dollars over the last 48 hours over this, which is absolutely not normal, and we've seen a huge uptick in Facebook and Twitter activity."

Maggie Hassan, a Democrat running for governor of New Hampshire, said her campaign has also seen a considerable increase in donations and support since birth control rose to the forefront of the national discussion.

"All the men talking about birth control really is, I think, generating this kind of disbelief, and it's really firing people up," she told HuffPost. "We're beginning to see a lot of discussion about it on our Facebook pages, I get asked about it at house parties, and it's definitely motivating people to give money. Most of us, certainly in my generation -- we all thought this was settled."

Republican campaigns have been much more reluctant to discuss their fundraising efforts or success around the birth control issue. The National Republican Senatorial Committee circulated only one petition about the birth control rule, but left the words "birth control," "contraception," and "women's health" entirely out of it, focusing instead on the issue of religious freedom. The petition had only received 15,000 signatures by Monday afternoon -- a fraction of the DCCC's 250,000.

When asked about fundraising efforts, a staffer at the NRSC said only that it's hard to see how the DSCC's "gender war spin" can be taken seriously when two female GOP Senate candidates, Sarah Steelman in Missouri and Heather Wilson in New Mexico, oppose Obama's birth control rule.

Susan B. Anthony List, the anti-abortion alternative to EMILY's List, said it has been too busy educating people about the contraception mandate to fundraise around it. "We have not fundraised off of it yet, but we do plan to use it in races where we think it will make a difference," said SBA List president Marjorie Dannenfelser. "I think it will work in our direction. It is an underestimation of women that they are going see this issue as being about creating barriers to contraception and abortifacients -- that's not what this is. It's about something so much more fundamental: the right of conscience and religious liberty for all people, including women."

The Republican National Committee did not respond to multiple requests for comment for this article.

Whether the Democrats can hold onto their momentum after the uproar over birth control dies down remains to be seen, but it's clear that they see their stance on the issue as crucial for rallying women voters in 2012. Obama relied on the women's vote to win the presidency in 2008, winning ten million more votes from women than men. The unexpected controversy around an issue as fundamental to women's health as birth control is making it easy for Democratic campaigns to fire up those same voters once again.

"The fortunate or unfortunate thing about this attack on women's health is that you don't really need strategies to incense people," said Coy. "The task is just to make sure people know that it's happening."

None of this would have been possible, it seems, had the birth control debate expanded beyond its original focus. At first, it was confined to a very limited question: could the federal government compel religious institutions to include contraception coverage in the health care plans they offered employees?

But questions of religious liberties were soon overshadowed by gender politics on the Hill. First, Blunt (R-Mo.) introduced an amendment to the surface transportation bill that would completely roll back the president’s birth control coverage rule and remove all of the non-discrimination protections from the Affordable Care Act. It was done under the auspices of decreasing regulations and boosting the free market. But many said that because the measure would essentially allow any employer or insurer to refuse to cover contraception, maternity care, or any other health care service by claiming a moral objection to it, it carried with it a true threat to women’s health care.

Friess' comments later that week caused further problems. Hammering the problematic imagery home even further, Bishop William Lori, the first witness on the House Oversight Committee's all-male panel on religious liberty, spent a full ten minutes comparing birth control to a ham sandwich. "The government recognized that it is absurd for someone to come into a kosher deli and demand a ham sandwich," Lori said of Obama's revised birth control rule, "that it is downright surreal to apply this coercive power when the customer can get the same sandwich cheaply, or even free, just a few doors down."

Women's groups say they are not going to let that kind of rhetoric slide.

"It's a shame and it's appalling and it makes everybody really mad, but it's lucky we have a place to put all that energy," said McIntosh. "We have the luxury of saying, 'Yes, this is terrible, but look at all these great alternatives.' The women in office are on the front lines in this fight. Women like [Sen.] Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.) and [Sen.] Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.) are standing up to the right, and everybody wants to send them more reinforcements."

Also on HuffPost:

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Where are the women? The question, posed by Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.) to an all-male panel at Thursday's House Oversight Committee hearing on a new birth control coverage requirement, has rapid...
Where are the women? The question, posed by Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.) to an all-male panel at Thursday's House Oversight Committee hearing on a new birth control coverage requirement, has rapid...
 
 
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This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
11:56 PM on 03/01/2012
I can't believe conservatives realize that women's health (and that includes availability of affordable contraception) is one of the KEY definers of a first world country vs a second or third world country. Or maybe they do realize it and really DO want this country to fail.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
11:57 PM on 03/01/2012
*i can't believe they DON'T (sorry, typo)
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Ryan Mckeon
10:26 PM on 02/22/2012
This is the most important social issue of our time, possibly of all time. It's time for women to come out from the shadows of centuries of programmed oppression and get these old perverted men out of power before they start throwing you in jail for what you choose to do with your own body. Oh, and welcome to the world of pot smokers. A country that enforces Christian law stopped being funny when we started patting ourselves on the back for having the lowest number of women in government out of any progressive, developed nation and have the highest percentage of imprisoned population for non-violent crimes than any culture in the history of the world. There's no reason or logic to those who use religion to enforce fascism on others.
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Barbara DeZan
Knowledge is Power
06:12 PM on 02/22/2012
It also emasculated that harebrained Governor.

He has decided zNOT to sign the bill requiring sexual assault.

However, he is keeping the mandatory sonogram.

Let's see how long it take for him to back off that one too.

People hold ALL the power. All that is needed is for everyone to stand up and say "Enough"...NO.

And, you should never, ever tick off all the women...at the same time.
02:03 PM on 02/22/2012
If bi th contr l is truly a healthcare issue - then how about this as a compromise. If a woman's OB/Gyn can document and verify that the prescription is to help a health related issue like straightening out a woman's possible hormone/estrogen imbalance then fine. However, if the pill is simply just to avoid pregna cy then that should be paid for by the woman. Sounds like a real compromise there...now let's move on to more important topics shall we?
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Molly D
04:20 PM on 02/22/2012
The Repubs are trying to take maternity care out of the ACA. Not gonna be any OB/Gyn. You know how insurance is. If they're permitted to exclude it, all companies will. That's the whole point of codifying what MUST be included. Otherwise you end up with phony plans that exclude almost everything and pay pittances for what they do cover.
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wanagiakicita
Tree huggin Earth kissin Free thinkin Liberal
04:41 PM on 02/22/2012
Not a compromise if you are a woman.....Viagra is covered for a male, so contraceptives should be covered for a female. I have a daughter and I don't want her to have to pay for contraception if some old dude with ED gets his Viagra included in insurance.
01:58 PM on 02/22/2012
That dude.....whoa. No reason for him to worry about bi th control.
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spunkyphd
Grok Karma
01:55 PM on 02/22/2012
As long as those so called religious institutions are required to hire those who have faith that differs from theirs they must allso offer complete health care to women that includes birth control. If they can cover viagra to men they can cover womans protection from those men. I find it telling that their so called religious morals always seems to come out to the front when it is being used against women. The misogynisic language they use hasn't been updated since the dark ages, it's time they joined the 21st century. The reason the GOP has such intense illogical hatred for Oboma that they keep throwing half formed mud pies at him in hopes that anything will stick, even lies, is because they do understand that he is living in the 21st century and they have been left behind. They are scared. So much better to attack the theings they fear, women and progress, why not do both at once. It worked in the past, but they don't get it, the past is past, they need to move on. If this really was the issue Perry would have won, he didn't it's time to move on.
01:59 PM on 02/22/2012
Huh? Viagra helps men with obtaining erecti ns so they can perform. What does that have to do with bi th control?
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giftsthatpurr
zestful life
03:58 PM on 02/22/2012
And she is suggesting that women need "protection" from their "performances" that are drug induced. You can read!
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Barbara DeZan
Knowledge is Power
06:14 PM on 02/22/2012
If you cannot see the relevancy between the two...you might as well go back to comic books.
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CynAnne
Laureates in Fact and Reality
05:26 AM on 02/22/2012
Some statistics on what contraception does for American tax-payers:

"The Department of Health and Human Services says that annually, it “prevents about 1.94 million unintended pregnancies, including almost 400,000 teen pregnancies. Preventing these pregnancies results in 860,000 fewer unintended births, 810,000 fewer abortions and 270,000 fewer miscarriages.” (report here: http://aspe.hhs.gov/health/reports/2012/contraceptives/ib.shtml )
"All in all, since giving birth is expensive (not to mention that unintended pregnancies tend to be associated with greater health risks for both mother and baby) taxpayers save $4 for every $1 spent on family planning." (article here: http://www.salon.com/2012/02/21/debunking_the_rights_contraception_myths/ )
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giftsthatpurr
zestful life
03:58 PM on 02/22/2012
EXCELLENT
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wanagiakicita
Tree huggin Earth kissin Free thinkin Liberal
05:19 PM on 02/22/2012
Great statistics, now let's hope Republicans/TeaBaggers actually READ them.
01:12 AM on 02/22/2012
Laura B: 1st, could you get a worse possible picture of the Rep? I doubt it. 2nd, your headline is GENDER WAR - you acknowledge a few lines down that it's a CULTURE WAR.

What, you can't get enough traffic with accuracy?
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giftsthatpurr
zestful life
04:00 PM on 02/22/2012
It is both. Try harder.
05:02 PM on 02/22/2012
Only if you want it that way, in your world. And you are welcome to it.

If you actually figure out what war is about one of these days, you may change your mind. If you have one.
mm3264
Volunteer Of America, Occupy Wall St
05:49 PM on 02/21/2012
slack027 on Feb 21, 2012 at 16:12:14
“No one is telling women what to do, just telling them to pay for their own needs, just like we pay for everything else we need, as for easy access that's so liberal, open to all places, even "men" hahaha, take it like girls..ncn­cn.poor liberals confused in life, lost sheep,”
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It's a healthcare issue and should be covered by insurance. Your ignorance, I believe is genetic. The only time in the annals of history that it was matched was by your father's ignorance in the proper placement of a prophylatic on the day you were conceived
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Killermolls44
The night is dark and full of terrors.
02:25 AM on 02/22/2012
Yeah like we need to pay so much money for our ridiculous defense budget.
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giftsthatpurr
zestful life
04:01 PM on 02/22/2012
fanned
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blackwednesday
Unrepentantly Aggressive Liberal
05:33 PM on 02/21/2012
If I were a right-winger, I would be FURIOUS at Issa and the rest of the party for bringing up and then losing an argument that will likely give the nation a 1994-style landslide going to the Democrats in the 2012 election.

It's amazing how many Republicans I am seeing pretty much give up on 2012, and starting to bring their focus on 2014/16. Can a whole party "jump a shark"?

And when is the regular Republican party going to force these tea-bagger jokers out to form their own party? That's really the only thing that the national Republicans can do to remain viable in the coming years.
mm3264
Volunteer Of America, Occupy Wall St
05:50 PM on 02/21/2012
McConnell gave up on them.
01:15 AM on 02/22/2012
2 things - 1st the congress is not a foregone conclusion, and 2nd leading Democrats is like herding cats. Far too many of the most active are narrow issue activists with no coherent sense of overall national interest, or any more respect for other views than Teabaggers. Democratic success will likely be its own undoing.
01:47 AM on 02/22/2012
I agree, Jack, they are their own worst enemies (well after Newt anyway). But I do see signs that they are getting better, with leadership being more persuasive and getting a little more cohesion.
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blackwednesday
Unrepentantly Aggressive Liberal
07:38 AM on 02/22/2012
@jack Winn: I can agree with all but your second sentence. Most Democrats are not narrow-issue activists, unless you trip a certain breaker. Reproductive freedom..etc. That's just when the 'activist' side activates, but it misses the bigger problem in that they're so disparate as to have open disagreements. This isn't something that the majority of 'conservatives' do. There's a lock-step thing they run into, and this is the source of so much of the derision that the Tea-baggers face. Herding cats? Absolutely. Success being their own undoing? Historically, you're correct. But this feels different than previous election cycles. Of course...they all do, right?
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panamarine
My opinion is only an opinion
04:26 PM on 02/21/2012
I believe this issue/controversy is the straw that broke/breaks the Republicans back.
It will change the minds of a lot of Independent and fed up Republican women voters over to the Democrats' side come November. The Republicans already lost the Unemployed voters, Gay voters, Latino voters (except Cubans in Fla.), the Black voters, Asian voters, Other minorities, Muslim-Americans, Native American voters, All of Detroit Auto manufacturing workers, Union members, Students, Soccer moms, Veterans, the Military, those making under 1, 000,000. a year,......???? Who else have they alienated that I missed here?
mm3264
Volunteer Of America, Occupy Wall St
05:51 PM on 02/21/2012
They hav'nt alienated the 1% yet
01:54 AM on 02/22/2012
They have alienated the 1%. Jamie Dimon, CEO of JP Morgan Chase, one of the biggest banks in the world, has broken with Republican politicians and is now advocating raising the rate on both high income earners and capital gains income.

Can't wait to hear what Mitch McConnell has to say about that.
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wanagiakicita
Tree huggin Earth kissin Free thinkin Liberal
05:44 PM on 02/22/2012
Even some of those.....Warren Buffet, Bill Gates, Jamie Dimon and others have all said they should be paying more taxes than they have and Republicans even alienated them.
01:16 AM on 02/22/2012
It ain't over till it's over.
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giftsthatpurr
zestful life
04:06 PM on 02/22/2012
LOL American women sa "it's over jack"
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Ystorm
dumb people make me angry.
04:09 PM on 02/21/2012
if they want abortions, ok. the women that go for that are liberals anyway, so there will be less liberals.
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blackwednesday
Unrepentantly Aggressive Liberal
05:11 PM on 02/21/2012
@Ystorm: So, what point are you trying to make here?
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Lord Gaga
don't need no stinkin' badges.
07:51 PM on 02/21/2012
So, you think political views are genetic?
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Joel Mendez
actual atheist reverend
03:52 PM on 02/21/2012
for the record: i have 4 beautiful daughters. i would very much appreciate it if you ladies taught them a lesson about just how powerful women are.
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myakkakat
Compromise is not a 4 Letter Word
08:41 PM on 02/21/2012
We are working on it as we speak :o)
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Joel Mendez
actual atheist reverend
12:53 AM on 02/22/2012
my mum is 74, still works, works out every morning(!), raised 4 boys by herself, and is the toughest woman i know. she taught me to respect all women-not by telling me to, but just by being herself.

all you guys need to know that some of us XY's have actually joined the 21st century.
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movnforward
Not inclined to be defined
03:20 PM on 02/21/2012
Just a reminder for women to get absentee ballots for their college-aged children who won't be home
during the elections.
It's important that all women's votes be counted this election.
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myakkakat
Compromise is not a 4 Letter Word
08:42 PM on 02/21/2012
Excellent reminder!
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Khaos Spence
03:18 PM on 02/21/2012
Well...I'm just gonna sit and watch the fireworks since I'm totally for ladies having access to bc and everything else. I honestly do not care if they feel like its a violation of their "religious liberties" if it applies to one employer it applies to all