Las Vegas Review-Journal

Walker wins candidate insensitiv­ity award

- Gail Collins Gail Collins is a columnist for The New York Times.

We’ve been wondering when a presidenti­al candidate would say something incredibly insensitiv­e about women and reproducti­on. The moment has arrived. The 2016 Todd (“Legitimate Rape”) Akin Award for Sexual Sensitivit­y goes to Gov. Scott Walker of Wisconsin.

Maybe it was inevitable. Of all the practicing politician­s in the scramble, Walker is possibly the sloppiest public speaker. Compared with him, Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey can be a pinnacle of verbal discipline.

Walker recently was on a radio talk show, praising a law he signed requiring women who want an abortion to undergo an ultrasound. Which they’re supposed to watch while the physician points out the features of the fetus.

An ultrasound, he said, is “just a cool thing.”

OK, that was only a little piece of his comment. And let’s acknowledg­e that presidenti­al candidates often are tortured by reporters and commentato­rs who jump on the least little misstateme­nt. The same thing happens to people who actually are president. This is why the ability to speak carefully is an attribute we look for when we’re trying to decide who we should elect as the most powerful and closely scrutinize­d human being in the world.

But about the ultrasound quote. Walker was complainin­g that, in his words, “the media is a gotcha.” He then bragged about his anti-abortion agenda:

“Wedefunded­PlannedPar­enthood.We signed a law that requires an ultrasound, which, the thing about that, the media tried to make that sound like that was a crazy idea. Most people I talk to, whether they’re pro-life or not, I find people all the time who’ll get out their iPhone and show meapicture­oftheir grandkids’ ultrasound and how excited they are, so that’s a lovely thing. I think about my sons are 19 and 20 and we still have their first ultrasound pictures. It’s just a cool thing out there.”

Now, many people tend to babble when they’re stuck in front of a microphone. Perfectly normal. Except, once again, for the part about being a candidate for the most quote-sensitive job on the planet.

Let’s leap, temporaril­y, past the fact that Walker was conflating the vision of happy parents getting their first glimpse of their baby-to-be with what’s appropriat­e for a woman who has made the stupendous­ly profound and private decision to terminate a pregnancy.

His larger point apparently was that the sight of a fetus in an ultrasound is so moving that a woman undergoing an abortion would almost certainly change her mind. This is wrong. There’s no evidence these ultrasound laws discourage women who have decided they want an abortion. And it’s incredibly insulting because it presumes that they’re making this choice on a kind of whim. If they’d only thought things through.

Women’s motives for terminatin­g a pregnancy are as varied and complex as ... women. A college freshman regretting a careless fling can share the waiting room with a middle-aged waitress with four children and an abusive husband, or a newlywed such as Jeni Putalavage-Ross of Texas, who discovered the little girl she was anticipati­ng so eagerly was not going to survive delivery because the fetus’ developmen­t was, in the doctor’s words, “incompatib­le with life.”

“I just don’t understand why politician­s want to be in the middle of this,” she said in a phone interview.

At one point — during a re-election campaign against a female opponent — Walker seemed to get that resentment against political intrusion. So he claimed the then-pending ultrasound proposal “leaves the final decision to a woman and her doctor.” Although neither the woman nor the doctor gets any say in the ultrasound-plus-commentary.

“Who’s opposed to an ultrasound?” the governor demanded last week. He was back on the same radio show, berating the good old media.

“They tried to claim that there were certaintyp­es,”hecomplain­ed,presumably referring to ultrasound­s. The translatio­n here is that while Walker keeps describing external “jelly-on-the-belly” procedures, representa­tives of the medical community say doctors will sometimes have to use intrusive vaginal probes to meet the law’s requiremen­ts. Not so, Walker contended. “It doesn’t designate which type, so most people would just do the traditiona­l one that people think of all the time. If they haven’t seen it themselves, certainly most people have seen it on TV or in movies.

Would it be unfair to note that one of popular culture’s most recent depictions of a happy couple sharing their ultrasound pictures involved the eldest son on “19 Kids and Counting”? Possibly.

Still, we have here a potential president who justifies a law on how doctors treat their abortion patients by citing what we know from watching TV and movies.

Seventeen months to go. Lord knows what’s next.

 ?? Gerald Herbert / aP ?? Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker talks during an interview with the Associated Press in New Orleans. Walker recently praised legislatio­n he signed that requires an ultrasound before an abortion.
Gerald Herbert / aP Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker talks during an interview with the Associated Press in New Orleans. Walker recently praised legislatio­n he signed that requires an ultrasound before an abortion.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States