point, i brought this up with ed gillespie, this idea of turning the clock back on settled issues the republicans bring up. that got to the health care fight. the access to contraception. i think the economic issues matter a lot obviously to everybody. we re going to talk about whether tax cuts affect women more and men more and how women are faring and the facts rachel talked about. let s look at this other place. what did men do with all that power women helped elect them to in 2010? over 1,000 bills were introduced in state legislatures and congress across this country since then to take away women s health reproductive health. there s just no question that whether the republicans want to call it a war and i don t particularly love that word, there s a concerted effort to change settled policy in the area of contraceptive rights, in the area of health care rights. when men have medical issues, they re medical. when women have medical issues, they re political. that is going to b
anti-abortion legislation, still going great guns with anti-contraception legislation. still against the paycheck fairness act, for equal pay for women. those are still their policy positions, but they do not want to talk about it. over a thousand bills were introduced in state legislatures in congress across this country since then to take away women s reproductive health. there s just no question that whether the republicans want to call it a war, and i don t particularly love that war, there is a concerted effort to change settled policy in the area of contraceptive rights, in the area of rights. when men have medical issues, they re medical. when women have medical issues, they re political. that is going to be a huge issue in this campaign. these are all distractions from the real issues. let s look at the policy. let s look at the real issues that face all americans, including women. and it is. it s the economy. but what about all of those