Eight
million more women than men voted for Obama for president. And
one of the reasons we did was because of his purported position
on reproductive justice issues like abortion and emergency contraception
(EC).
For example,
in 2008 he pledged to Planned Parenthood: “I will not yield”
to pro-life concerns. But with the stroke of 20 pens that is
just what President Obama did, signing into law, on March 23, the
long awaited “Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (H.R. 3590)”
by pandering to pro-life Democrats.
“President
Obama made an eleventh-hour agreement to issue an executive order
lending the weight of his office to the anti-abortion measures included
in the bill. This move was designed to appease a handful of anti-choice
Democrats who have held up health care reform in an effort to restrict
women's access to abortion,” Terry O’Neill, president
of the National Organization for Women (NOW) wrote on its web site.
“This
executive order helps to cement the misconception that the Hyde
Amendment is settled law rather than what it really is -- an illegitimate
tack-on to an annual must-pass appropriations bill. It also sends
the outrageous message that it is acceptable to negotiate health
care reform on the backs of women.”
When Congress
passed the Hyde Amendment in 1976, excluding abortion from health
care services provided to low-income women through Medicaid the
hope was that ObamaCare would correct this injustice.
But with the
signing into law Obama’s Health Care Reform bill many women
are dismayed that the bill’s anti-abortion provision not only
keeps the Hyde Amendment in place but it also upholds the Stupak–Pitts
Amendment, an amendment that prohibits the use of federal funds
"to pay for any abortion or to cover any part of the costs
of any health plan that includes coverage of abortion."
Using women’s
health care as a bargaining chip in order to pass H.R. 3590 has
diminished if not eliminated for poor women and women of color who
cannot pay for reproductive health care out-of-pocket not only a
safe abortion accessible to them but also emergency contraception.
On the same
day Obama signed H.R. 3590, the Center for Reproductive Rights reignited
its challenge to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) (that was
won on March 23, 2009 in the U. S. District Court for the Eastern
District of New York court) to make the morning-after-pill
accessible to all women and girls without a prescription and age
restriction.
“This
past weekend, the White House turned its back on women, sanctioning
a cruel and unjust federal policy that denies poor women across
the country access to medically necessary abortions. Given
the ground that women lost in the healthcare debate over
access to abortion, it is now even more important that
the administration step up its efforts to increase access to contraception to
prevent unwanted pregnancies,” said Nancy Northup,
president of the Center for Reproductive Rights.
With Obamacare’s
limitation on women’s access to an abortion, the FDA’s
approval for over-the counter sales of emergency contraception (EC)
would be a small victory for women in this country in terms of reproductive
justice. Why? Because when the fault lines of race, class, and geographical
location contribute to some of the existing discriminations and
disparities marginalized populations of women confront, the politics
of “choice” is never as simple as a matter of public
versus private domain. And a woman’s “choice”
is predicated on accessibility. But her “choice” is
gravely diminished when EC is as difficult as obtaining a safe abortion.
In African-American
women’s communities I work with – urban and rural
– across the country, information about EC and its accessibility
is negligible. Those women and communities that do know about EC
face an uphill battle either finding pharmacies in their communities
that carry EC, or finding informed and culturally competent pharmacists
and staff that dispense the drug without making women feel embarrassed,
ashamed or filthy.
African-American
women, who are besieged by a cultural iconography of black female
sexuality that is wild and wanton, face a distorted reality. As
a consequence, they have high rates of sexual abuse and assaults
(but low rates of reporting them), have the highest percentage of
unintended pregnancies, unsafe abortions, and have the highest number
of uninsured and underinsured population of women in the country.
EC would greatly
reduce the number of unintended pregnancies in the African-American
community by affording women- in this anti-abortion era- reproductive
autonomy to invest in their health intervention and prevention care.
Reproductive
justice is not only about access to information but it’s also
about the availability of safe choices afforded to women provided
by our government. But how will we know with the passing of this
bill.
BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member, the
Rev. Irene Monroe, is a religion columnist, theologian, and public
speaker. She is the Coordinator of the African�American Roundtable of the Center for Lesbian and
Gay Studies in Religion and Ministry (CLGS) at the Pacific School
of Religion. A native of Brooklyn, Rev.
Monroe is a graduate from Wellesley College and Union Theological
Seminary at Columbia University, and served as a pastor at an African�American
church before coming to Harvard Divinity School for her doctorate
as a Ford Fellow. She was recently named to MSNBC�s list of 10 Black Women You Should Know. Reverend Monroe is the author of Let Your Light Shine Like a Rainbow Always: Meditations on Bible Prayers
for Not�So�Everyday Moments. As
an African�American feminist theologian, she speaks for a sector
of society that is frequently invisible. Her website is irenemonroe.com.
Click here to contact the Rev. Monroe. |