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Missouri news, views, and issues - Show Me Progress

Claire McCaskill achieves a trifecta; Roy Blunt strikes out

  

by: WillyK

Thu Feb 09, 2012 at 12:43:46 PM CST


It's good to be able to appreciate my Democratic Senator, Claire McCaskill, after feeling compelled to scold her in the past; it's too bad, though, that her good qualities are being thrown into relief so sharply by comparison to the lame behavior of her GOP counterpart, Roy Blunt.

In my last post about McCasikill, I observed that, given her excellent response to the Komen brouhaha and her vote against an FAA authorization bill that contained anti-union provisions, she might be starting to act like a Democrat again after a long period spent wandering around on the right side of Centerville. No sooner said, than she comes through one more time. Here (from the Kansas City Star via the National Journal) is McCaskill's response to the Obama administration's new rule that widens access to contraception:

This is an emotional, difficult subject. It's always one that's difficult. But if you really believe that reducing abortions are important in this country, which I do, then it doesn't work to keep putting up barriers to women getting birth control."

"As someone who believes very much that we should be preventing abortions, I think we should try very hard to give women universal access to birth control without going into their pockets," she also told reporters this week.

To be sure, the National Journal acknowledges the political expediency which is usually a given with most politicians:

Politically, McCaskill's positioning makes sense. If she were to take a stand against the president on the issue, she would risk alienating her Democratic base, whom she needs to turn out in strong numbers come the fall.

And it's absolutely true - Claire has done much to alienate her base and she can't afford to waffle on progressive fundamentals now. But she's also a Catholic and it takes guts to signal one's intellectual independence when the hierarchy is not only up in arms, but is determined to go nuclear. It also, as the writer hints, takes guts to get the President's back when he comes under sustained fire:

It's also consistent with McCaskill's overall strategy, which has been to not run away from the president at every single opportunity.

In Missouri, where Tea Partyesque vilification of Obama began almost as soon as he was elected (although his ratings are now improving), this is not trivial. In fact, the generally fearful strategy that characterizes so many centrist Democrats, would likely have dictated the opposite response.

And in case you think that I'm giving McCaskill too much credit, here's what her GOP opposite number, Roy Blunt, had to say about requiring that legal contraception be included in women's preventive healthcare:

The Obama administration's recent decision is offensive to Americans' religious rights and freedoms.

In an act of major self-indulgence prompted by my fury at this type of dishonest misdirection, I wrote a massive post yesterday outlining why I think it's wrong to talk about "religious rights and freedoms" in this context, so I'll say no more here. But I will note that Blunt's remarks are no more than the insult that is often added to injury:

Blunt and others said they will try to overturn the regulation. Last year, Blunt introduced a measure that would allow any health insurance plan "to decline coverage of specific items and services that are contrary to the religious beliefs of the sponsor, issuer, or other entity offering the plan, or the purchaser or beneficiary, without penalty."

Blunt's bill remains in committee, as does a companion bill in the House. U.S. Reps. Sam Graves and Vicky Hartzler of Missouri, and U.S. Rep Lynn Jenkins of Kansas - all Republicans - are co-sponsors of the bill.

So, when you're thinking about how pure you want to be come election time, just remember there are folks out there, like Blunt, who want to restrict access to birth control, and there are others, like McCaskill, who have shown that they will stand up to them in order to make sure that we all have easy access to the full-range of preventive medicine.

WillyK :: Claire McCaskill achieves a trifecta; Roy Blunt strikes out
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It's a good sign... (0.00 / 0)
...when someone in politics finally demonstrates that they actually understand their political environment:

PPP: Claire McCaskill, not particularly liked (February 1, 2012)

....In other words, people who approve of Claire McCaskill seem to support her, and most of the people who don't approve of Claire McCaskill do not support her. And when over 1/4th of the voters who you should be winning 4/5ths of are not supporting you, then you have a problem where your base does not like you enough and the people you've been focusing on pleasing for 5 years don't like you either....



543,895 votes

Ah, wait a minute... (0.00 / 0)
...Charle Brown, meet Lucy:

McCaskill waffles on contraception (February 9, 2012)

[....]

"I've told the White House that I think they need to find a compromise that allows women to get access to birth control through their employer's health-care coverage, but without pressing this issue of religious freedom to the extent that the current scenario does," said McCaskill, a Missouri Democrat who also is running for re-election this year.

Excuse me! What issue of religious freedom can she possibly mean? The one where the Catholic Church is privileged over every other religion and gets to disadvantage their female employees in federally supported institutions? Where Catholic rights of conscience take precedence over public welfare? When it comes to rights and freedoms, why do women always get the short end of the stick - and how can even a minimally conscious female politician, who demonstrably knows better, roll over like this?

Yank that football.

This the the right wingnut view of that compromise:

Marco Rubio's Plan Could Cut Off Birth Control Coverage for Millions
How the Florida senator-and potential VP pick-aims to use religion to undermine Obama's health care policy.

-By Nick Baumann
| Thu Feb. 9, 2012 3:00 AM PST

A new bill introduced by Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), a rising conservative star and leading contender for the Republican vice-presidential nomination in 2012, could cut off birth control coverage for millions of women who receive it through their health plans.

Rubio has sold his proposal-introduced January 31 as the "Religious Freedom Restoration Act," or S. 2043-as a way to counter President Barack Obama's controversial rule requiring even religiously-affiliated schools and universities to offer copay-free birth control to their employees. But health care experts say that its implications could be far broader.

If passed, the bill would allow any institution or corporation to cut off birth control coverage simply by citing religious grounds....

If it's good for one group, why not everyone, right?

543,895 votes


The Rubio "compromise" simply underlines one of the points I tried to make above ... (4.00 / 1)
Rights of conscience have always been legally and morally subject to evaluation from the point of view of the wider public good. To rule otherwise is to invite institutioalized discrimination.

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