Daily Press

Violence Against Women Act renewal a must

- By Robin Abcarian Robin Abcarian is an opinion columnist at the Los Angeles Times.

March is supposed to be a good month for women. 0It’s Women’s History Month, after all, a time to celebrate the oft-forgotten achievemen­ts of women and to remind ourselves that we’ve come a long way, baby, but we’ve got a lot further to go.

The March 16 killing in Atlanta of seven women and one man, including six women of Asian descent, painfully reminds us of the vulnerabil­ity of women to misplaced, irrational male anger. A young white man has been charged with their murders.

It is one more horrific reminder of the racist scapegoati­ng of Asian Americans during this pandemic year, and of the relentless objectific­ation of Asian women. It also reminds us, as if we need the help, that easy access to guns, and their glorificat­ion, is an American crisis.

In an unintended stroke of irony, one day after the tragedy in Atlanta, the House voted to reauthoriz­e the Violence Against Women Act, which then-Sen. Joe Biden originally introduced in Congress. When it became law in 1994, the act was a landmark piece of legislatio­n.

It allocated $1.6 billion for investigat­ing and prosecutin­g violent crimes against women and created a rape shield law that prevented prosecutor­s from tarnishing female victims by introducin­g their sexual histories in court. The Office of Violence Against Women was establishe­d in the Department of Justice to implement it.

The act also provided funding for battered women’s shelters and for programs aimed at preventing domestic violence.

The Violence Against Women Act lapsed in 2018, but amid alarming reports about a rise in domestic violence during pandemic lockdowns, lawmakers were persuaded of the urgent need to reinstate it.

The House approved reauthoriz­ation of the act with a bipartisan 244-172 vote. It expands some of the original act’s protection­s and creates some new ones. The language, by the way, is gender neutral, as intimate-partner violence is obviously not limited to heterosexu­al relationsh­ips. According to the National Coalition Against Domestic Violence, 1 in 4 women and 1 in 9 men experience severe intimate partner violence and/or stalking.

The act improves services for victims of domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault and stalking, and provides new protection­s for young victims of violence, including adding funds to improve screening for intimate partner violence. It ensures that violence survivors can remain housed in the event of a breakup with a spouse and creates protection­s for Native American women through tribal registries for sex offenders and those who have been ordered to stay away from victims.

At this point, you might be wondering, why did 172 Republican House members vote against it?

(Twenty-nine Republican­s supported it.) Would it surprise you to know their opposition probably has something to do with limits on gun ownership?

The new version of the Violence Against Women Act contains language that would close a quirk of the law known as “the boyfriend loophole.”

Currently, federal law prohibits those convicted of domestic violence from possessing or buying firearms. But it does not apply to perpetrato­rs who have abused current or former dating partners with whom they do not share a child, or with whom they have never lived, thus the name “boyfriend loophole.”

And yet about half of all intimate partner homicides are committed by current or former dating partners.

Closing this loophole doesn’t just makes sense. It’s imperative. States that prevent abusive dating partners from owning guns have 16% fewer intimate partner gun homicides, according to the American Journal of Epidemiolo­gy.

However, if you are a gun nut — and by nut, I mean you elevate the right to own firearms above all meaningful violence prevention measures — you would, understand­ably, oppose this move.

“If you want to protect women, make sure women are gun owners and know how to defend themselves. That’s the greatest defense for women,” said Georgia Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, the freshman representa­tive who has distinguis­hed herself by her allegiance to both right-wing conspiracy theories and former President Donald Trump, whose professed affection for the Second Amendment may have been eclipsed only by his love for himself.

The bill, which now goes to the Senate, also closes a loophole in federal law that allows those convicted of misdemeano­r stalking offenses to own guns. First-time felony stalking offenders often plead down to misdemeano­r charges, which means they can still own and purchase firearms. But no one convicted of stalking should be allowed to own a weapon. Period.

Despite the spasms of violence that rock us to our core, we can make our country safer from gun violence. Failing to reauthoriz­e the Violence Against Women Act would be a crime.

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