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Presidents have played politics with womenâs lives for long enough.
By Sarah Wildman
Jan. 31, 2021
Activists from the Population Connection Action Fund projected a message onto the Trump International Hotel, to protest the Global Gag Rule in 2019.Credit.Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/Agence France-Presse â Getty Images
Mexico City Policy, known more commonly to critics as the global gag rule, which denies U.S. aid to nongovernmental organizations if they advocate for, suggest or even mention the word abortion.
Mr. Bidenâs move was not a surprise. Since the rule was established under Ronald Reagan in 1984, Republican presidents have sustained the policy, and their Democratic counterparts have repealed it. The gag rule does not simply project Americaâs culture battles onto the lives of women and families in far-flung communities across the world â though it very much does that â but also creates what Simon Cooke, the C.E.O. of the U.K.-based womenâs h
Biden’s planned actions on reproductive health care, explained Vox.com 1/22/2021 Anna North © Alex Wong/Getty Images President Joe Biden signs executive orders as Vice President Kamala Harris looks on during an event at the State Dining Room of the White House January 21, 2021, in Washington, DC.
In his second week in office, President Joe Biden plans to make it easier for providers around the world to offer the full range of reproductive health care.
On January 28, he is reportedly slated to repeal the policy sometimes known as the “global gag rule,” which bans groups abroad that receive US aid from performing or even discussing abortion. Also called the Mexico City policy, it was first enacted by President Ronald Reagan in 1984. It then became something of a political light switch, turned off by every Democratic president and on by every Republican.
Liberties shipped to subscribers this fall, a publicist for the project says, and it’s now available for purchase in bookstores and online. That means anyone interested in Wieseltier’s redemption project, but not ready to subscribe, can pick up his first “book for the coat pocket” six days before the official start of winter for $19. A subscription costs $45.
Wieseltier’s career went kerblooey during #MeToo, when women who worked with him at
The New Republic, where he ruled the “back of the book” for decades, went public with stories about how he “delighted in making young women sexually uncomfortable,” as Michelle Cottle wrote in the
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