
Why do Kentucky women hold Mitch McConnell in such contempt? His
favorables with them are a negative 26 percent, and his Democratic
opponent Alison Lundergan Grimes leads him with women by 12 points,
according to a recent independent Bluegrass Poll.
Perhaps it’s in the policy. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) Voted Against Paycheck Fairness Act twice. He voted against the Lilly Ledbetter Act, calling it a “special interest vote.” McConnell and Senate Republicans blocked a Democratic bill calling for equal pay in the workplace.
McConnell voted against raising the minimum wage 15 times, when over
250,000 Kentucky women would benefit from an increase in the minimum
wage to $10.10 an hour, according to a new report from the National Women’s Law Center. They report that 7 in 10 minimum wage workers are women working long hours to provide for their families in Kentucky.
Alison Lundergan Grimes responded to the report by vowing that the
first thing she would do when elected is voting to increase the minimum
wage, “Hardworking women across the Commonwealth rely on the minimum
wage to put gas in the car, food on the table and roofs over their
children’s heads. Unfortunately, the current minimum wage is simply not
enough to make ends meet. Senator McConnell says increasing the
minimum wage is the last thing he’d do, even voting over 15 times
against giving hardworking Kentuckians a raise. When elected as
Kentucky’s first female Senator, it will be the first thing I do.”
Mitch McConnell’s record on women’s issues gets worse. Not only did he vote against the original Violence Against Women Act co-sponsored by now Vice President Joe Biden in 1994, but McConnell voted against reauthorizing the bipartisan Violence Against Women Act as well, calling it a “distraction”. This “distraction” causes 3 deaths a day to women, and 1 in 4 women have experienced severe physical violence by an intimate partner.
The VAWA was ultimately passed in the Senate with a large bipartisan
majority, indicating that Mitch McConnell is far right on women’s
issues. (See a fact sheet on the VAWA improvements here.)
This was a choice that essentially meant a sure increase in violence
aimed against women. For example, the reporting of domestic violence has
increased by 51% since the law’s passage. Forty percent of mass shootings targeted an intimate partner from 2009 to 2012. According to the 2011 National Census of Domestic Violence Services survey,
Kentucky domestic violence programs served 1,185 victims in a single
day. They provide emergency shelter from imminent harm, transitional
housing, transportation, and counseling. It’s morally repugnant to be
against funding these basic services that offer women a chance at “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness”.
So, basically, the Mitch World for women is a world where they are
denied fair pay, they are denied the right to ask about fair pay as they
toil away at a minimum wage that Mitch thinks is just fine as it is. In
Mitch World, women are put into more jeopardy — forced to be sitting
targets for violence. And since the VAWA helps law enforcement prosecute
abusers, refusing to reauthorize it is the equivalent of enabling
violent assaults against women to go unpunished.
Kentucky women are apparently not impressed that Mitch gave abusers a get out of jail free card.
Let’s not forget that Republicans shut down government in a fit of
pique over people getting access to healthcare via Obamacare, which
meant that rape centers around the country closed
due to lack of funding, and rapes investigations were obstructed.
Meanwhile, Republicans continue to lecture American women about turning
rape into lemonade and assuring them that they must bring a rapist’s
baby to term because real rape “shuts that down”.
McConnell made a huge mistake by making women angry. In 2008, he beat
his opponent among women. Even though Republicans seem to hold women in
contempt, they need women come election time and he’s not getting much
love this time around.
“McConnell’s votes against the Lilly Ledbetter Act, the Paycheck
Fairness Act, and the Violence Against Women Act appear to be a serious
drag on his ability to win over Kentucky women,” Grimes spokeswoman
Charly Norton said Wednesday. “Unless McConnell explains why he has
voted against women’s interests time and time again, he will fail to
gain an ounce more of support. This November, the Commonwealth will
elect Alison Lundergan Grimes its first female U.S. Senator and finally
be able to count on a leader who fights for them.”
Apparently the women of Kentucky aren’t fooled by McConnell’s finger
pointing distractions. They are not so worried about the fictional
“evils” of Obamacare, but they are very worried about actual reality
that they deal with every day. Things like a fair minimum wage, fair
pay, and keeping women safe — these are the things that Kentucky women
care about.
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