Written by Rebecca Sive for RHRealityCheck.org – News, commentary and community for reproductive health and justice.
In the (political) heat of late March, in the first trimester of President Obama’s proposed, and then signed, Executive Order “codifying” The Hyde Amendment (a deal done for Rep. Bart Stupak, he of the Stupak Amendment), in order to get the President’s healthcare reform legislation, “The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act”) passed, I called on the Speaker of the House, the women U.S. Senators, and the leaders of the national pro-choice organizations to call for aborting the Executive Order.
They didn’t, and a few days later, surrounded, (only, and with no press present), by Bart Stupak and his equally rabid, anti-choice ring members, the President signed Mr. Stupak’s evil Order.
Why was I so direct, so inflammatory in my call-to-action? Well, exactly because I wanted to sound a very loud alarm, for fear of what might be coming down the pike, if we failed to “bust the cap” on this disingenuous (keep reading) Executive Order. I feared that unless we busted it, we’d be faced with just the sort of (hatred-of-women) next steps we’ve–surprise, surprise– experienced this week.
You ask: What happened? I thought this was a great week, what with financial reform and capping the BP oil well and all? Well, not so fast, it turns out.
Turns out, earlier this week, in this, the (equally hot, politically), but second trimester of the President’s Hyde-redux-and-more, Stupak-evil, though the President said otherwise, (keep reading) Executive Order, it became clear that the White House had instructed Kathleen Sibelius, Secretary of Health and Human Services, to avoid any dustups about abortion in her regs’-writing for the healthcare reform bill, no matter the cost to America in the loss of American women’s lives.
How to do this?
Well, for starters, deny women, any woman in any state, even a woman proposing to spend her own money (lest there be any doubt about how The White House really feels about abortion), from obtaining an abortion, if she’s (we thought lucky, but how wrong we were), a member of her state’s high-risk insurance pool, part of the President’s Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act).
No matter, the lives of women in ill health (and, therefore, in the high-risk pool), for whom an abortion might be a vitally needed medical procedure. The President’s poll numbers are in the dumpster. Unless you’ve been raped, are a victim of incest, or your life has been endangered, you’re SOL.
Mr. President: A word to the wise: Better not further jeopardize your standing, when we’re not sure whether the BP cap won’t go bust. Mr. President: A word to the wise, even if it becomes clear you’ve gone back on your staff’s statements that your Stupak-evil Order doesn’t do anything more than “codify” existing law. Better to continue to say, albeit falsely, that the Stupak Amendment you once said you wouldn’t abide (either) wouldn’t be a part of anything you do. This abortion matter? Well, it’s just too touchy to do otherwise (even if “otherwise” is the right thing for half of all Americans).
In fact, and as we all know, the Executive Order was nothing but a most willingly made sop to Rep. Stupak. For, after all (after months and months and months of all—all that healthcare wrangling), it was Mr. Stupak’s vote that stood in the way of passage of the healthcare reform law, the one for the history books the President most wanted.
As such, the Executive Order’s creation and signing was a deeply hypocritical and cynical act. “Hypocritical,” because it did not do (only) what the President’s men said it would do—“codify” existing law, i.e., The Hyde Amendment. “Cynical,” because the Order’s utility depended on the willingness of White House women-leader allies to suspend disbelief, and say: Oh, yes, we agree, when you say that this isn’t going beyond The Hyde Amendment (knowing that it did).
Do you think for one minute that Bob Bauer, the President’s campaign and personal, political lawyer, now his White House Counsel, didn’t know all the potential ramifications (read: opportunities) of the Executive Order—both for the law and for the politics—when he directed his staff to draft the Executive Order?
Do you think for one minute that Don Verrilli, an Associate White House Counsel, rumored to be appointed U.S. Solicitor General–once Elena Kagan is confirmed as a Supreme Court Justice–missed this either?
Not, hardly: These guys are really, really smart. These guys don’t miss these things: That’s why they are doing what they are doing. That’s why they are where they are.
Putting the best face on it, Mr. Bauer and Mr. Verrilli saw what the White House women-leader allies also saw, and, again, like the pro-choice leaders, didn’t protest, for fear the whole healthcare reform applecart would be upset.
But, make no mistake: Mr. Bauer and Mr. Verrilli also saw the Executive Order as a useful context for massaging federal healthcare reform regulations that could help diminish dustups over abortion; dustups never good for a President or a President’s men’s futures.
Why was the Executive Order AT ALL NECESSARY if all it did was “codify” existing law? The answer is it wasn’t, because it didn’t. And now we’re in the dumpster: Read here:
So now, in the Executive Order’s second trimester, we have the leaders of our pro-choice movement asking the government to “reconsider” (Marcia Greenberger for the National Women’s Law Center); expressing their “deep disappointment,” and calling on us to protest (Cecile Richards for Planned Parenthood); and remonstrating that these regulations are neither necessary as a legal matter (for they go beyond The Hyde Amendment), nor useful as a policy matter (because the women most likely to be in the state-based high risk pools are among those most likely to have complications from pregnancy and therefore needing an abortion (Laura Murphy for the ACLU)).
Like I said: The Executive Order should have been aborted.
I’ve argued in these pages for many months that the ameliorative approach national pro-choice leaders have pursued with this Presidential administration –pursued both by the leaders representing the big organizations, and by those making the laws in Congress–is fatally flawed. I think we now have proof. [It’s a short distance from the dumpster to the graveyard.]
Further, I believe this acquiescence, and its requisite suspension of disbelief, has led to the abandonment of American women in most need, i.e., to the presence of anti-choice wolves at their doorsteps, in every state.
The strategy is accomodationist. It’s post-facto. It violates the first rule of organizing to win (on the people’s behalf): Know your bottom line, and how to get it, before you walk into any meeting. Otherwise, don’t walk in: Scream, holler, embarrass, and demand, until you’re on equal footing and can negotiate a fair deal.
Sure, I’ll negotiate with you ad nauseum, instead of refusing to participate until my demand for equal treatment is met (Barbara Boxer in the Senate). Sure, I’ll send threatening letters with no force of law or policy (Diana DeGette in the House), in hopes that you’ll do the right thing. Sure, I’ll support you when you tell me it’s a good idea to (only) “codify” in an Executive Order something, (The Hyde Amendment), which, by any measure, has been horrible for women for over two generations (The Speaker and her pro-choice Member leaders). Sure, I’ll believe you when you say that this Executive Order won’t have any additional force of law in any upcoming circumstance that matters to women’s health (again, the Speaker and the women Members). Sure, I’ll believe you, Mr. President–when you sign Mr. Stupak’s evil Order–with no press present and surrounded by the architects of hateful acts against my sisters–when you tell me nothing is amiss.
In no way that I can see is this a strategy for winning the war to protect America’s women and ensure their equal rights. This is appeasement. And history tells us that, until appeasement is set aside, people die. Today, in America, those dead people will be American women.
“Bust the cap (on it);” bust the cap on this well of cowardice.
Earlier this week, I drove across upstate New York on my way home to Chicago. Mid-afternoon, I approached the Thruway exit for Seneca Falls. I thought: Why not stop? Why not pay my respects to our foremothers, to women who wouldn’t know acquiescence or appeasement if it hit them over the head. So, I did. And here’s what I got to read when I got there:
‘We hold these truths to be self-evident: that all men and women are created equal; that they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights; that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness; that to secure these rights governments are instituted, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed…
“….[W]hen a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same object, evinces a design to reduce them [American women] under absolute despotism, it is their duty to throw off such government…Such has been the patient sufferance of the women under this government, and such is now the necessity, which constrains them to demand the equal station to which they are entitled.”



38 Comments




Hey, they need to effectively outlaw abortion and contraception for all but the rich so they can gather up as many poor women as they can to be used as axolotl tanks.
Terrific post!
Thanks for connecting those dots for us… I’ve been wondering how it would all shake out…
Sometimes, I wish Margaret Atwood would just quit writing books, despite how eloquently she writes.
Excellent post, thank you. I keep thinking it’s all a bad dream, that we elected a popular Democratic president and majorities in both houses and yet things have gotten worse by every measure that’s meaningful to me. WTF . . .
Great post. And I didn’t think I could loathe Obama any more:
a coward, a creep and a tragedy for this country.
It’s weird how it’s always the primitive cultures that hold girls to be less valuable than boys. You can almost gauge how advanced a culture is by how they regard women in comparison to men.
If this is Obama’s strong support for choice I would hate to see his opposition. Promise made carry zero meaning for him.
Exactly! I posted something about Iceland a few months ago… where they used feminist principals–as opposed to religious ones–to legislate against strip clubs and other forms of sexual exploitation of women.
Of course, Iceland is one of the most literate countries in the world. The U.S.? Not so much…
uh yep. lots written here on this as you know. along with warnings as to the ramifications of Stupak and Stupak EO.
on a related note, noticed EMILY’s List is not endorsing/supporting Regina Thomas’s challenge to Pro Stupak Blue Dog John Barrow in Georgia today. they declined to endorse/support Connie Saltonstall when she was challenging Stupak – is that piccata or scallopini I smell ?
I had a premonition he didn’t really meant it when he said that decisions about abortion should be between a woman, her pastor, her doctor (and maybe her husband). What is that… 2 or 3 against 1?
How is this any different from letting 45,000 people die each year from lack of health care? That will be 180,000 people that will have died waiting for the non-regulated, mandated health insurance reform bill to kick in. Women who need the high risk insurance have no more control over their bodies than the undeserving 99 percenters do.
Women are the vessels that powerful men fill with their bile. Women are expendable. So are the poor and the middle class.
We are all high risk patients now.
Turn coat republican in democratic clothing, scum rises to the top.
Other than daily spitting in our face, obama looks like he and his family had a great vacation in New England.
Great post.
Of course the EO did more than codify the Hyde Amendment, the friggin’ amendment is the codification, but start throwing around big words and the dumb electorate just freezes like deer in the headlights. Just like when numbers start getting introduced into arguments about Social Security or the looting of our treasury by Wall Street.
It’s amazing that the rights possessed by women in this country are closer to those possessed by African women than Western women. If men weren’t such pigs in this country there’d be a push for female circumcision as an encouragement for abstinence.
Recommended!! It just one more BETRAYAL after another and another…
It just occurred to me that it should have been called “The Patient Protection Comprehensive and Affordable Care Act” so that we could have referred to it as PPCACA.
Please clarify. When you write:
“Well, for starters, deny women, any woman in any state, even a woman proposing to spend her own money (lest there be any doubt about how The White House really feels about abortion), from obtaining an abortion”
you appear to be saying that a woman may be prohibited from using her own money to pay for the cost of an abortion. I assume this isn’t true, right?
If only that acronym were not so close to the truth!
Second verse same as the first. It now appears that everything Obama does is aimed at placating the right wing. Further, that pro choice organizations have been nearly completely co-opted.
Would that we had a version of the NRA leadership in pro choice positions. Looking around it does appear as though we are going to see Obama labled as liberal while enaction neo-con policies both internally and externally.
I wish I knew where we went from here. I have no idea.
I would omit the “almost”.
This country accepts the fact that women remain in much more danger than men; as children, as teens, as young adults, as married women, as older women.
This is an indictment of a culture of the first order.
Women who are in the high risk pool cannot buy other insurance that covers abortions. I think they can pay for abortions in full. If this is so we should start a fund to cover abortions for these women. We should start a fund now to cover abortions for those with health issues that need abortions.
I was offended he even thought it was appropriate
to mention a ‘pastor’.
We still have ‘separation of church and state’, yes?
I see, so they can use their money to pay for abortion, but not abortion insurance. The original language was a little unclear.
The Arizona Health Care Freedom Act
Will PROTECT WOMEN’S RIGHT TO SPEND THEIR OWN MONEY FOR LEGAL HEALTH CARE SERVICES!!!!!
The best thing progressives at FDL and around the country can do is put pressure on AZ progressives to SUPPORT THE ARIZONA HEALTH CARE FREEDOM ACT (PROP 106 THIS NOVEMBER).
We can then use this new basic, human right, protected in a state constitution — to fight back against this disgusting abuse of women’s right to choose.
This sure ain’t the Obama I voted for !
Ps Thanks in part to BO I’ve changed my party affiliation to un-enrolled .
Sorry Dems, but you guy suck ,you’re nothing more than a bunch of hacks and corporate shills !
That whole statement just completely & totally offended me! What separation?!
What happened to the quaint notion of making a “medical” decision?
Abortions are fairly low and predictable in cost, and by their nature can’t crop up all that often for one one woman. Why would anyone buy insurance to cover them? For what the premiums cost, you could more easily set aside a fund for the expense if it occurs. Insurance makes sense only for unpredictable costs that can be big enough to swamp your savings. I don’t see how this executive order has any real impact on the funding or availability of abortions.
Are you a woman, texan99? Have you ever been poor? There are a number of issues that coalesce around abortion rights. Let’s set aside the overarching notion of having control over our own bodies and not ceding that control to our pastors or our mostly white, mostly male , entirely privileged representatives in Congress. On a practical level, rich women will always be able to get an abortion, but for middle-class and poor women it’s another story. There are fewer and fewer providers these days (wonder why that could be?), meaning you may need to travel to another city or even another state, take a day or two or three off work, and so on. That can make abortion unaffordable and unattainable for many, many women. And for the women who qualify for government assistance, $400 or $500 out of pocket for an abortion might as well be a million bucks – they just don’t have it. And I don’t think anybody ever thought about buying special “abortion insurance” until Stupak and his minions started chipping away at women’s rights again.
You don’t think standard medical insurance should cover a legal medical procedure? Go back through your post and substitute “appendectomy” for every time you used the word abortion and tell me if what you’re proposing still makes any sense to you.
First trimester abortions may not be as prohibitively expensive, but the women who are in the most need… i.e., those who need later term abortions, will have to pay significantly more, perhaps thousands of dollars for those procedures, if they can even find someone to perform one, which is far less likely these days.
For a poor woman, with high-risk issues, whose health would be compromised by any pregnancy, the cost would truly be a hardship and probably not within her means.
Frankly, the arrogance of men who never need such procedures making statements about the relative low-cost is truly astounding… when even a first-term abortion may be beyond the means of a poor woman.
And for many women, an “unplanned” pregnancy is an unpredictable medical expense.
Executive orders are the tools of autocracy and dictatorship. Obama has averaged three new EO’s a month, slightly ahead of Bush-43. That’s change?
I agree with the thrust of this article, and i’m outraged over the impact of the executive order, but the overuse of parentheticals makes the article extremely difficult to read.
In god we trust, and god said:
“Unto the woman he said, I will greatly multiply thy sorrow and thy conception; in sorrow thou shalt bring forth children; and thy desire shall be to thy husband, and he shall rule over thee.” –Genesis 3:16
And may god bless America. Particularly the men.
Yes… and that god was a patriarchal male figure, whose words were written by other patriarchal male figures.
You mean god was created in man’s image?
Why should any one procedure regardless of cost be singled out as an unacceptable thing to be covered? I’m a guy and I don’t see the logic behind it except to placate the fucking religious freaks in the country who always seem to get whatever the hell they want. They are a minority, right? Something like 24% of the population identify with the religious right?
How come it’s OK for this minority to get whatever the hell it wants (like the minority party in congress), but the majority, the rest of us, don’t get shit that we voted for? Why is that OK? How come when minority rights deal with equitable treatment for women or blacks or hispanics it’s OK to legislate what they’re entitled to and the real minority thinks they deserve everyfuckingthing they can get their hands on?
Yep! Definitely not in woman’s!
I totally agree with you. Only the poor, and the recently unemployed will be affected by this travesty of a law. I had back alley abortion in 1969, so I am talking of something that was real…My point is:
No uterus…no vote!
Hmmm…do you stone unruly children to death?
Do you avoid shellfish?…no lobster, crab, scallops etc?
Do any women who live in your household sleep outside or in a tent during their menstrual cycle?
Do you go to worship and must buy a sacrifice?
Hypocrite much?…Troll
Unfortunately, there don’t seem to be enough people, especially women, who remember those olden days when safety was the last concern for women.