Tuesday’s debate finally answered Rep. Carolyn Maloney’s recent question: “Where are the women?” Evidently, they’re in Mitt Romney’s “binders full of women.”
Unfortunately, Romney’s performance left us asking instead: Where are Romney’s policies to address women’s unique employment concerns? The simple answer is that he has none. On numerous issues, he leaves women at the mercy of their employers’ wishes. Worse, in the female-dominated public sector, his budget would likely eliminate jobs.
During the town hall debate, 24-year old Katherine Fenton asked about plans to “rectify the inequalities in the workplace,” specifically the 23% gender pay gap. President Obama responded by pointing to his administration’s efforts to fight discrimination, including his Equal Pay Taskforce and the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act, the first bill he signed after taking.
Romney told Fenton that he specifically recruited women to work for him as governor. This claim has now been called into question, especially given the very few women in leadership with him at Bain Capital. He also described allowing women to have flexible work schedules to accommodate family responsibilities. It’s certainly commendable for an employer to value diversity and to offer flexible arrangements that both genders frequently need.
Here’s the problem: That would make one a good employer, not a good president. The women of America aren’t voting for whether they’d like to have Romney as a boss. They’re voting for a president based on his plans to protect their interests even if they have an awful boss. For that, Romney has nothing to offer.
Romney has said women should be paid equally, but he doesn’t support any legislation to help enforce that right. He won’t even say whether he supported the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act. After months of obfuscation, an advisor said Tuesday that Romney had opposed it, then retracted the statement, saying he’d taken no position. Romney commends employers who support employees’ work-life balance, but has remained silent on the Healthy Families Act, which President Obama supported, to guarantee paid leave to care for a sick family member.
President Obama raised yet another concern on which Romney leaves women at the mercy of their employers: their healthcare coverage. During the debate, Romney misleadingly brushed this criticism off, but he can’t hide from his record. Romney has promised to repeal Obamacare, which generally guarantees that women will have coverage of key preventive healthcare regardless of where they work. Even more disturbingly, Romney has specifically said that “of course” he supports the
Blunt Amendment, an extreme piece of federal legislation that would allow any employer or insurance provider (a restaurant, bank, you name it) to deny coverage of any legally required healthcare service for any reason. Not only could contraception coverage be refused, but chemotherapy, blood transfusions, vaccines, etc.









