Wednesday’s unprecedented overrule of the FDA after its approval of emergency contraception Plan B for over-the-counter sales invited its share of criticism, but President Obama seems to have really set it off with his defense of that decision yesterday.
Author and Salon writer Rebecca Traister asked, “When will Barack Obama learn how to talk thoughtfully about women, women’s health and women’s rights? Apparently, not today.” Pivoting off the President mentioning that he’s the father of two daughters in the course of his defense, Ms. Traister continued:
I think it is important for my president not to turn to paternalistic claptrap and enfeebling references to the imagined ineptitude and irresponsibility of his daughters – and young women around the country – to justify a curtailment of access to medically safe contraceptives. The notion that in aggressively conscribing women’s abilities to protect themselves against unplanned pregnancy Obama is just laying down some Olde Fashioned Dad Sense diminishes an issue of gender equality, sexual health and medical access. Recasting this debate as an episode of “Father Knows Best” reaffirms hoary attitudes about young women and sex that had their repressive heyday in the era whence that program sprang.
How the decision is felt in our cultural commentary, that’s one aspect of the backlash. Amanda Marcotte offered two more, science and socio-economics, in her Reuters column yesterday, detailing how sound the science is — and adding that Canada sells Plan B over the counter without restrictions, and has one-third of the teen births than we do here in America. Colorlines’ Akiba Solomon noted how the Plan B overrule specifically hurts young women of color.
When it comes to the politics, Forbes science and medicine reporter Matthew Herper found some former FDA staffers who are “beyond disappointed” with the administration’s decision. A former FDA assistant commissioner for women’s health believes this goes against an earlier (and somewhat vague) presidential promise:









