It’s four days before the midterm elections, but President Barack Obama steered clear of politics in his speech on women and the economy in Rhode Island on Friday.
Obama made the case that encouraging policies and business practices that support women are good for the country as a whole. “When women succeed, America succeeds, and we need leaders who understand that,” he said at Rhode Island College.
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The policy proposals that he laid out are all at the heart of the Democratic agenda: paid family leave, equal pay for women, more support for childcare and pre-K programs, and increasing the minimum wage to $10.10 an hour. He also alluded to reproductive rights, advocating for women’s ability “to make their own healthcare choices.”
But Obama avoided casting such policies in a partisan light or in terms of the upcoming election. Instead, he stressed that the issues “shouldn’t be partisan” and that “Republicans and Democrats should be supporters of all these issues.”
Instead, he took a more moderate approach to the issue, emphasizing that such policies would actually help businesses. Rhode Island is one of the few states to require all businesses to offer paid family leave, which Obama said has helped local companies “do a better job recruiting and retaining outstanding employees,” he said. He also mentioned a recent trip Labor Secretary Tom Perez took to Europe, where Perez met with conservatives and business leaders who all supported paid family leave.









