Home Civic Power Keeping Score: Democrats Fight Republican Redistricting; Periods Make College Students Miss Class; Costco Refuses to Sell (Safe, Legal) Abortion Pills to Appease Antiabortion Politics

Keeping Score: Democrats Fight Republican Redistricting; Periods Make College Students Miss Class; Costco Refuses to Sell (Safe, Legal) Abortion Pills to Appease Antiabortion Politics

0
Keeping Score: Democrats Fight Republican Redistricting; Periods Make College Students Miss Class; Costco Refuses to Sell (Safe, Legal) Abortion Pills to Appease Antiabortion Politics

In every issue of Ms., we track research on our progress in the fight for equality, catalogue can’t-miss quotes from feminist voices and keep tabs on the feminist movement’s many milestones. We’re Keeping Score online, too—in this biweekly roundup.


Lest We Forget

“What is happening in the state of Texas is not just a test for the rights of Texans, but one for the rights of everyone who wishes to live in a democracy in this nation. Thousands of Texans have testified against and spoken out to oppose the hastily drawn redistricting maps, which seek to make invisible—and take the voices away from—millions. 

“While you have some powers as Governor, you do not have the power to remove elected Texans from office to accomplish a vendetta that you and the President appear to have against the ability of people to vote, against lawmakers who are seeking to protect the people who elected them, and against our democracy as a whole.”

Skye L. Perryman, president and CEO of Democracy Forward, responded to Texas Gov. Greg Abbott’s attempt to remove Democratic lawmakers from office, after dozens of Democrats left the state to delay a special redistricting session aiming to create five new Republican U.S. House seats.

“Texas Republican state leaders … would rather choose to cheat and manipulate the system to seize political power, instead of addressing the pressing issues impacting families, like passing critical flood relief. … Rewriting maps mid-decade to forcibly dilute the voices of voters of color is a federal violation.”

—Voto Latino president and co-founder María Teresa Kumar.

EL PASO, TEXAS - AUGUST 02: The words 'El Paso Strong' are written on a memento at a temporary memorial
A memorial honoring the 23 victims of the Walmart shooting targeting Latinos on Aug. 3, 2020, in El Paso, Texas. (Mario Tama / Getty Images)

“[Aug. 3] marked six years since 23 lives were taken in a horrific act of anti-Latino hate in El Paso. We continue to stand with the victims’ families and the entire El Paso community as they grieve and heal. This act of violence was not random. It was fueled by years of dangerous, dehumanizing rhetoric, including from those in positions of power. Words matter, and when leaders traffic in hate, it has deadly consequences.”

—Congressional Hispanic Caucus (CHC) leadership on commemorated the anniversary of the El Paso shooting in 2019.

“I am deeply alarmed by news reports that Costco is refusing to sell safe, effective and legal medication for no other reason than to appease the politics of antiabortion fanatics. Mifepristone is safe and effective. We cannot live in a world where the availability of women’s healthcare whipsaws back and forth based on the whims of extremists who want to deny women access to basic healthcare. I am demanding that Costco immediately reverse course—follow the science and the facts, not the demands of far-right antiabortion extremists.”

—Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.) urged Costco to reverse course and dispense mifepristone where legal. Anti-abortion groups led a pressure campaign against the medication, and now plan to target Walgreens and CVS.

“A troubling shift is underway: Women are leaving the U.S. workforce in unprecedented numbers. But this isn’t a choice; it’s a consequence. As companies roll back flexible work policies, women are forced to choose between career advancement and caregiving responsibilities—a choice that disproportionately impacts them. What is at stake is the reversal of hard-fought progress for women and women of color, and the disparities will only continue to deepen. Flexible work isn’t a luxury—it’s a critical piece of how women can stay in the workplace and advance their careers.”

—Catalyst president and CEO Jennifer McCollum emphasized that 212,000 women have left the workforce since January, compared to a net gain for men of 44,000.

 “Attorney General Pam Bondi is practically glued to convicted Commander in Chief Donald Trump’s hip, ready to lick his boots or orchestrate a government cover-up at his command. Here’s the bottom line: If Bondi is capable of throwing out ethics rules to be on Trump’s good side, who’s to say how far she’ll go to hide the truth from the American people—all to appease her puppetmaster in the Oval Office and his circle of rich and powerful elites.”

DNC rapid response director Kendall Witmer in response to reporting that Bondi ignored Department of Justice ethics advice.

Milestones

+ Aug. 6 was the 60th anniversary of the Voting Rights Act, which outlawed racial discrimination in voting. The John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act (VRAA), recently reintroduced in the Senate, would restore and modernize the Voting Rights Act of 1965.  

+ Trump announced a federal takeover of D.C.’s police force, and deployed more than 2,200 armed National Guard troops in the city. He declared a “crime emergency” to justify the power grab, even though the violent crime rate is at a 30-year low.