Karl Rove’s super PAC recently presented a poll to top Republican aides telling them that their party is viewed by women as “intolerant,” “lacking in compassion,” and “stuck in the past.” They didn’t need a poll to tell them that. They should have gotten this message from the 2012 election — not to mention their own widely publicized rebranding efforts last year. But instead of changing the policies that repel women voters across the political spectrum, many Senate candidates have gone into “stealth mode” to avoid talking publicly about their positions on crucial women’s health issues. It’s a tactic that women see right through — and it won’t fix the GOP’s fundamental problems with women.
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After witnessing the Senate campaigns of Todd Akin and Richard Mourdock burst into flames after they blurted out their true beliefs in 2012, today’s Senate candidates were instructed to follow a new strategy: Keep your mouths shut.
Everywhere you look on the Senate battleground map, there are stealth candidates fudging answers to the questions they can’t dodge outright, even if it makes them look as ridiculous as Scott Brown did when he hid in a diner restroom to avoid talking about the Hobby Lobby birth control decision. It’s not like he was unfamiliar with this topic. As a senator, Brown previously voted for the Blunt amendment to allow employers to deny women birth control coverage in their health insurance. But it’s dangerous ground as a candidate these days, and Scott Brown knows it.
Then there is former Alaska attorney general and Senate candidate Dan Sullivan, who seems happy enough to have anti-women’s health positions as long as he doesn’t have to talk about them. His website states that “life begins at conception” and as attorney general he approved a ballot measure to put anti-science views in the Alaska state constitution. There was a time when he seemed loud and proud about these policies, but now he needs women’s votes, and suddenly he can’t find his voice. When asked whether he supports the federal Life at Conception Act, he gave the lawyerly dodge that he hadn’t read the bill — a crafty attempt to create doubt about what had once been his very clearly stated position.
Another egregious example comes from Colorado, where Rep. Cory Gardner has never previously hesitated to impose his own political beliefs on the women of Colorado. Gardner has long supported “personhood” measures that are intended to outlaw abortion, and which could interfere with decisions about birth control as well.
Many consider the “personhood” movement radical, which is why it should surprise no one that Rep. Gardner, now a Senate candidate, has shifted his position — even though he’s still a co-sponsor of the federal version of this bill, the Life at Conception Act.









