Wednesday, August 13, 2008

McBush: Eliminating women's access to health care, one term at a time.

Planned Parenthood PA Advocates reproductive freedom fighters held a visibility outside John McCain’s York town hall meeting yesterday, to let residents in on McCain’s dirty little secret.

During his 25 years in Congress, the Republican presidential candidate has consistently voted against medically accurate sex education, birth control, and even family planning funding to pay for breast and cervical cancer screenings for low-income and uninsured women. He’s earned a 0% rating from Planned Parenthood Action Fund for his long history of votes against women’s health.

You might wonder, “How does one earn a 0% rating without my hearing about it?”

The simple answer is that McCain doesn’t want you to know. Thanks to his reputation as a "maverick," many Americans have come to think of him as a moderate. As many as half of women who support John McCain actually think he's pro-choice. Asked about his views on insurance coverage of birth control in July, McCain flat-out told a reporter, "I certainly do not want to discuss that issue."

But McCain can't hide from his voting record if pro-family planning, pro-choice voters choose to make it an issue, as Planned Parenthood supporters did in York on Tuesday. Holding signs with slogans such as "Stop McCain's War on Women," supporters encouraged passerby to Know McCain. Check out these three media spots featuring Planned Parenthood:

  1. Anne Laird of Planned Parenthood PA Advocates was featured on the local WPMT FOX43 news coverage of John McCain's stop in York, PA on August 12. Click here to see Anne and several PPPA signs, including a great slogan from Sari Stevens: "McBush: Eliminating women's access to health care, one term at a time."
  2. Sara Reed of Planned Parenthood of Northeast and Mid-Penn was featured in a York Dispatch article about the event:

    "As John McCain supporters streamed into the York Expo Center Tuesday, they passed a couple dozen sign-bearing opponents protesting his stance on abortion rights, the Iraq War and the economy.

    'It's important for us to educate women and men about John McCain,' said Sara Reed, who works for Planned Parenthood of Northeast and Mid-Penn. Planned Parenthood staff and volunteers were holding handmade signs to bring attention to McCain's voting record, which has received a zero percent approval rating from the Planned Parenthood Action Fund for his votes on sex education, birth control and abortion rights. The action fund gave Democratic candidate Sen. Barack Obama a 100 percent approval rating for his support of abortion rights and other reproduction-related issues."
  3. Planned Parenthood interns are featured in YouTube coverage of the event by Keystone Progress, a Pennsylvania progressive advocacy organization
I wish I could write about seeing McCain firsthand. I wish I could say that I'd asked a question of the senator, that I'd been able to raise this issue with him directly. Unfortunately, I'm not a registered Republican with a conservative reputation. McCain's campaign pre-screened everyone requesting a ticket to the event, and only people fitting that description (and their children) were admitted. Doesn't this negate the implication of a "town hall" meeting? Only one side of the town is allowed to present their opinion.

Obviously, this meant that McCain faced only his supporters, and wasn't challenged with any tough questions. Given the layout of the York Expo Center, where the meeting was held, McCain didn't even have to see the signs or hear the chants of those who showed up to voice their disagreement. Hardly preperation for leading a diverse nation, where one isn't just the president of people who already agree with you.

America needs a president who respects all constituents, including women. McCain has spent the past 25 years telling us he will not be that president. America needs a president who listens to and considers all points of view. At least in York, the McCain campaign made it clear that only conservatives can have a seat at the table.

- Cassie, Harrisburg.