ONTD Political

Madeleine Albright: 'I Can't Understand Why Any Woman Would Want To Vote For Mitt Romney'

5:54 pm - 09/05/2012
[Mods: this post was rejected when I posted it yesterday. The reason given was "no source." The source WAS provided, but evidently a slight typo in my html messed up the link.]

CHARLOTTE, N.C. -- There's been no shortage of musing over Mitt Romney's failure to win over female voters. The gender gap is pronounced, and with the efforts of the president's political team, growing wider. Romney has been criticized for his failure to speak out in support of equal pay for equal work, he's been tied to some of his party's more hardline positions on abortion, and has been caricatured as a relic of a bygone era in which women put career ambitions aside.

But for all the talk of Romney's trouble among women voters, no Democrat has put it in the terms that former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright did in an interview with The Huffington Post on Monday.

"I'm not sure I'm going to state this exactly right," she said, sitting amidst a sea of convention-related activity and daytime wine drinkers in the Westin hotel lobby in downtown Charlotte. "But I think there are some who believe they are actually protecting women, you know, and that it is better for women to be taken care of. I think women want to take care of themselves, and I think having a voice in how that is done is very important. And frankly, I don’t understand -- I mean, I'm obviously a card-carrying Democrat -- but I can't understand why any woman would want to vote for Mitt Romney, except maybe Mrs. Romney."


Albright then revised her pool of rationally thinking female Romney supporters to include his five daughters-in-law, an obvious but hardly generous expansion. Even with the rhetorical flair, however, Albright's comments reflect a genuine disturbance that many Democrats -- women and men -- feel about the tone of the discussion of women's issues during the course of the campaign.

The former secretary of State, who has been an outspoken advocate for women in the workplace, said she found the assertion by Missouri Senate candidate Rep. Todd Akin (R-Mo.) that a rape victim can shut down her body to avoid pregnancy to be "one of the more outrageous" comments she's witnessed in her 75 years.

"It was appalling and disgusting," she said. "But if I may say so, the things that he said in one form or another are in the Republican platform. So [while Republicans are] saying he is a nutcase and they have to move away from him, they did not move away from their platform."

Her reference was to language in the GOP platform that outlaws abortion even in cases of rape or incest. It's a policy that Romney's running mate, Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wis.), has embraced throughout his career, before distancing himself in the wake of Akin's remarks. Romney has always supported such exceptions. Even so, Albright argued, he had "become captive to a party that does in fact think that women should not have voices."

This is about as harsh an indictment as has been leveled by a major Democratic figure at the Republican Party and its nominee. And in conjuring up images of women being pushed into figurative (if not literal) silence, Albright invited some obvious pushback. The current state of the economy hasn't exactly allowed women to warm up their vocal cords.

"I’m guessing the millions of American women unemployed, underemployed or constantly worrying about filling the gas tank or put food on the table can think of a few reasons to make sure Barack Obama isn't our president for another four years," said Kirsten Kukowski, a spokesperson for the Republican National Committee.

Aware of the gender gap, Romney's campaign gave several Republican women primetime speaking roles at his party's recently completed convention, including his wife, Ann, who spoke about the trials that came with their marriage and raising five kids, in addition to declaring in one of the convention's more indelible moments, "I love you, women."

It will, in all likelihood, take a bit more than a few speeches in support of Romney to make up the ground among women voters. A TIME/CNN poll of likely voters found Obama beating Romney by 12 and 10 points among women in Florida and North Carolina, respectively.

SOURCE

All I can say is, "Thank you, Madame Secretary, for so clearly enunciating what so many of us out here feel."

And that last paragraph--YES!!!
layweed In b4 FauxNews calls this another vicious, rabid attack on Mitt Romney......6th-Sep-2012 03:42 am (UTC)
While waiting for the cab this afternoon, I was stuck in the hotel lobby watching FoxNews. Oh my god, you guys. What the fuck are they smoking? The entire segment was just "EVERY SPEECH AT THE DNC HAS BEEN ATTACK AFTER ATTACK AFTER ATTACK!!!!!!! Can you imagine what would have happened if Romney/Ryan went up on stage and did the same?!?!?!?!?!?!"

fuck the what.

And then at the airport I was exposed to this bs again.

Seriously, it's enough to make me question moving to the Tx Panhandle for a job that I really want. I read that one of the congressional elections was like 90+% Republican and the rest Libertarian. Fml.

Edited at 2012-09-06 03:42 am (UTC)
girly123 6th-Sep-2012 04:19 am (UTC)
The Panhandle is kinda...rough. Like, to the point that it's common knowledge amongst my entire family that the Panhandle is just Not A Place You Go. :|

What kind of job is it?

Edited at 2012-09-06 04:19 am (UTC)
layweed 6th-Sep-2012 04:32 am (UTC)
State job with Texas DPS. It's not permanent, I can always transfer to another lab after a few years, but just being in super-red Panhandle is enough to make me puke, tbh.

ETA: It's not permanent as in, it's not permanently in Amarillo, there's always the option of transferring if the opportunity arises.

Edited at 2012-09-06 04:33 am (UTC)
pepsquad Re: In b4 FauxNews calls this another vicious, rabid attack on Mitt Romney......6th-Sep-2012 04:43 am (UTC)
grew up in texas west, it's a rough ass place.
layweed Re: In b4 FauxNews calls this another vicious, rabid attack on Mitt Romney......6th-Sep-2012 04:52 am (UTC)
Yeah, I heard it's awesome if you like outdoorsy stuff and all that, and I'm looking forward to being able to see the night sky again, but I don't want to be the lone liberal in a swarm of conservatives.
rex_dart Re: In b4 FauxNews calls this another vicious, rabid attack on Mitt Romney......6th-Sep-2012 05:46 am (UTC)
I'm gonna be perfectly honest, I'd consider myself pretty outdoorsy (or at least I love being outdoorsy when I get half a chance) but I've driven clear across damn near every state west of the Mississippi in at least one direction, and the Texas panhandle is the flattest, emptiest place I've ever seen. I'm not really sure what one would do there outdoors, aside maybe from rope cattle?
pepsquad Re: In b4 FauxNews calls this another vicious, rabid attack on Mitt Romney......6th-Sep-2012 03:02 pm (UTC)
maybe you can start a meet up to find people to hang out with.
amyura Re: In b4 FauxNews calls this another vicious, rabid attack on Mitt Romney......6th-Sep-2012 11:48 pm (UTC)
Northern Vermont is pretty awesome if you like the outdoors, too. And full of socialists :)
rainbow_fish Re: In b4 FauxNews calls this another vicious, rabid attack on Mitt Romney......6th-Sep-2012 11:58 am (UTC)
I wouldn't move back to Texas, tbh. It's just too bass akwards, gorl.
mollywobbles867 Re: In b4 FauxNews calls this another vicious, rabid attack on Mitt Romney......6th-Sep-2012 12:48 pm (UTC)
They see facts as an attack. When the truth is told about Romney, it's so awful or ridiculous that it comes off as an attack. Yet when the repubs make up lies and attack dems, then it must be the truth.
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