DISREGARD mitt robme romney's and lyin' paul ryan's positions on abortion, birth control, family planning, women's health and all their other lies and deceptions. Ignoring all that, why would any woman vote for them when they are against equal pay for equal work? They are opposed to the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act (lyin' paul ryan voted against it in the House), showing they have absolutely no respect for women at all. From HuffPost.....
WASHINGTON -- Thursday morning brought additional confusion over what
Mitt Romney would have done had the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act come
to his desk while he was president.
The Republican nominee has deftly avoided answering that specific
question, choosing instead to say he wouldn't repeal the law, which
makes it easier for women to sue over wage discrimination. Following
Tuesday night's presidential debate, top adviser Ed Gillespie said
Romney had opposed the bill while it was being debated, only to walk
that statement back hours later.
"I was wrong when I said last night Governor Romney opposed the Lily Ledbetter act," Gillespie's statement read. "He never weighed in on it. As President, he would not seek to repeal it."
By Thursday, however, that position too seemed to have been reversed,
with an anonymous Romney aide telling CBS News that he did, indeed,
oppose the Lilly Ledbetter Act in 2009.
"Gov. Romney fully supports equal pay for equal work for women and
for everyone and he would in no way want to repeal or change the Lilly
Ledbetter Fair Pay Act," the adviser told CBSNews.com.
When asked why Romney had opposed it in 2009, the adviser said that
"every bill has certain aspects to it that people might find concerning
but the equal pay for equal work part was of no concern."
The Huffington Post reached out to the Romney campaign for comment.
An aide said that Gillespie's second statement -- the one saying Romney
had had no position on the Lilly Ledbetter Act at the time -- was the
operative statement.
"This is a blind quote," the aide said of the CBS story. "Ed
addressed this issue on the record yesterday. That explains our
position."
It's a bit baffling that the campaign's message is so muddled on
this topic. Yes, conservatives opposed the Lilly Ledbetter Act when it
was passed under the belief that it was a gift to trial lawyers. Rep.
Paul Ryan (R-Wis.), Romney's running mate, is one of the lawmakers who
voted against it. But Romney has moved away from conservative doctrine
on a number of fronts in the past few weeks. And whereas on several
occasions he had to contradict his previous positions to do so, the fact
that he hadn't taken a stance on the Lilly Ledbetter Act gave him an
opportunity to say he supported it from the get-go without being accused
of flip-flopping.
Instead, he's opened himself to criticism that he's too timid to weigh in on women's issues.
"I don’t know why this is so complicated. Gov. Romney still won't say
whether or not he supported a law to protect that right no matter how
many times he is asked. This is not that hard," President Barack Obama
said at a rally in Manchester, N.H., on Thursday.
"Would you have signed the Lilly Ledbetter equal pay law? No answer,"
former President Bill Clinton said at a Thursday rally in Ohio. "He
can't even say whether he would sign a law that is already on the books
... what he wants to do is convince the moderate voters that he is a new
man without explicitly disavowing a single solitary commitment he made
in the two years he said he was severely conservative Mitt Romney."
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/10/18/mitt-romney-lilly-ledbetter_n_1980527.html?utm_source=Alert-blogger&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Email%2BNotifications
No comments:
Post a Comment