Hillary Clinton’s First Speech puts:
‘Women’s Issues’ front and centre
In her first speech since she became the first female major party
presumptive nominee, Hillary Clinton put several traditionally sidelined
“women’s issues” front and center.
 |
Democratic presidential
candidate and former U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
speaks at Rancho High School.
- Getty Images |
Speaking to the Planned Parenthood Action Fund Friday, Clinton made
clear that issues that affect women and families would be central to the
messaging of her general election campaign against presumptive
Republican nominee Donald Trump.
“For too long, issues like these have been dismissed by many as
‘women’s issues’ – as though that somehow makes them less worthy,
secondary,” she said. “Well, yes, these are women’s issues. They’re also
family issues. They’re economic issues. They’re justice issues. They’re
fundamental to our country and our future.”
She also made clear that she will contrast that message with Trump’s
record of comments about women.
“Donald assures us that, as President, he’ll be–and I quote
again–’the best for women,’” she said, noting that he called women
“pigs,” “dogs,” and “disgusting animals.” “Kind of hard to imagine
counting on him to respect our fundamental rights,” she added.
Read More: Read Hillary Clinton’s Speech Hitting Donald Trump on
Women’s Issues
The remarks recalled one of Clinton’s most famous speeches, her
declaration at the United Nation’s Fourth World Congress on Women in
Beijing in 1995 that “human rights are women’s rights, and women’s
rights are human rights.”
Clinton linked access to reproductive health care to economic
progress for the entire country, noting that the percentage of women who
finish college is six times higher than it was before the legalization
of birth control and that the movement of women into the labor force is
responsible for $3.5 trillion of economic growth.
The speech was a departure for a major presidential candidate. Even
Barack Obama, the only sitting president ever to address Planned
Parenthood, did not say the word “abortion” when he gave an address on
reproductive care access in 2013. In her speech Friday, Clinton said it
16 times.
“It is worth saying again: defending women’s health means defending
access to abortion – not just in theory, but in reality,” Clinton said,
as she called for the repeal of the Hyde Amendment, which prevents
federal funding from being used to provide abortions.
Experts say that even pro-choice male candidates tend not to
prioritize issues like abortion and paid family leave the way female
candidates do.
“It’s not to say men don’t support those things, but it is women who
make them a priority, who put them front and center, who make sure they
don’t fall off the agenda,” says Debbie Walsh, director of the Center
for Women and Politics at Rutgers University. “Women bring different
lived experiences to government and public policy, and it affects the
agenda they have when they’re in office.”
Clinton’s emphasis on women’s health and economic issues was also a
way to swing at Trump, who has called for punishing women who get
abortions (a comment he later reversed) and said the solution to unfair
pay for women is for women to “do as good a job” as men.
She accused Trump of trying to “turn back the clock,” especially on
issues affecting women’s lives. “When Donald Trump says, ‘Let’s make
America great again,’ that is code for ‘let’s take America backward,’
she said. “Back to the days when abortion was illegal, women had far
fewer options, and life for too many women and girls was limited.”
Trump voiced support for Planned Parenthood during the Republican
primary, an unusual move at a time when many Republicans have been
critical of the organization. He repeatedly said that Planned Parenthood
does “very good work for millions of women,” including pap smears and
breast cancer screenings, and said he’s received “thousands of letters
from women that have been helped.” But he still supports removing
federal funding as long as the organization performs abortions (by law,
no federal funds are ever used to provide abortions.)
Clinton’s speech comes as she is bulking up her campaign staff for a
general election run, including a staff shakeup to mobilize women voters
in the general election. Mini Timmaraju, who ran women’s outreach during
the primary, will become Women’s Vote Director. Neisha Blandin, who
worked in grassroots engagement and African-American outreach during the
primary, and Tori Taylor, formerly of Emily’s List and the Center for
American Progress, will both become deputy women’s vote directors. The
campaign says the women’s vote program will be focused on grassroots
organizing and mobilizing a growing network of women surrogates.
Planned Parenthood endorsed Clinton in her primary fight against
Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, in its first-ever primary endorsement. In
her speech, Clinton drew parallels between her own historic candidacy
and the 100-year old women’s health organization, which has faced
near-constant attacks from conservatives who want to shut it down,
especially in the last year.
“Together, we are taking on the attacks and together we’ll come out
stronger,” she said. “Just like Planned Parenthood has, time and again.”
- TIME
|