The Commercial Appeal

Congress renews, expands Violence Against Women Act

- By Jim Abrams

WASHINGTON — House Republican­s raised the white flag Thursday on extending domestic violence protection­s to gays, lesbians and transsexua­ls after months of resisting an expansion of the Violence Against Women Act.

GOP leaders, who had tried to limit the bill before last November’s election, gave the go-ahead for the House to accept a more ambitious Senate version written mainly by Democrats.

Democrats, with a minority of Republican­s, were key to the 286-138 House vote that sent to President Barack Obama a renewal of the 1994 law that has set the standard for how to protect women, and some men, from domestic abuse and prosecute abusers.

It was the third time this year that House Speaker John Boehner has allowed Democrats and moderates in his own party to prevail over the GOP’s much larger conservati­ve wing. As with a Jan. 1 vote to avoid the fiscal cliff and legislatio­n to extend Superstorm Sandy aid, a majority of House Republican­s voted against the final anti-violence bill.

Obama said he would sign the bill “as soon as it hits my desk.”

The GOP decision to step aside and let the Senate bill pass came after the party’s poor showing among women in last fall’s election and Democratic success in framing the debate over the Violence Against Women Act as Republican policy hostile to women. Obama won 55 percent of the women’s vote last November. Republican presidenti­al candidates haven’t won the women’s vote since 1984, when Ronald Reagan held a 12-point lead over Walter Mondale among women.

The law has been renewed twice before without controvers­y, but it

lapsed in 2011 as it was caught up in the partisan battles that now divide Congress. Last year, the House refused to go along with a Senate-passed bill that would have made clear that lesbians, gays, immigrants and Native American women should have equal access to Violence Against Women Act programs.

It appeared the scenario would be repeated this year when the House introduced a bill that didn’t mention the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgende­r community and watered down a Senate provision allowing tribal courts to prosecute non-Indians who attack their Indian partners on tribal lands.

House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va., who has spent months working on the issue, defended the Republican plan: “Our goal in strengthen­ing the Violence Against Women Act is simple. We want to help all women who are faced with violent, abusive and dangerous situations. ... We want them to know that those who commit these horrendous crimes will be punished.”

But the House proposal encountere­d quick and strong opposition from women’s groups, the White House, Democrats and some Republican­s, and on Tuesday, the GOP leadership agreed to give the House a vote on the Senate bill. It passed immediatel­y after the House rejected Cantor’s bill, 257166, with 60 Republican­s voting against it.

Vice President Joe Biden, who as a senator was instrument­al in moving the 1994 act through Congress, praised Cantor for not standing in the Senate bill’s way. “He kept his word,” Biden said.

The Senate passed its bill on a 78-22 vote, with every Democrat, every woman senator and 23 of 45 Republican­s supporting it.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States