The Sentinel-Record

Senate OKS renewing Violence Against Women Act

- LAURIE KELLMAN

WASHINGTON — The Senate overcame election- year gender politics Thursday to pass a bill renewing the government’s main domestic violence program.

The 68- 31 vote marked the first time since the Violence Against Women Act first passed in 1994 that its renewal has drawn opposition in the Senate, reflecting the increasing polarizati­on of the chamber and hair- trigger political sensitivit­ies over women’s issues in this presidenti­al and congressio­nal election year.

“In 2012, we should be beyond questionin­g the need for the Violence Against Women Act,” Vice President Joe Biden said in a statement. He urged the House to act quickly so President Barack Obama can sign the renewal into law.

But the path there could be equally tricky. Majority Republican­s are writing their own version, which is likely to resemble a GOP alternativ­e widely rejected by the Senate.

Twice renewed without opposition in the Senate, the bill of programs to prevent domestic violence and sexual abuse ran headlong into the partisan warfare that has shut or slowed legislativ­e business since the 2010 elections. Not helping smooth the way: the broader political fight for pivotal female voters and the Democrats’ election- year narrative that accuses Republican­s of waging a “war on women.”

The bill would reauthoriz­e the Violence Against Women Act for five years with funding of $ 659.3 million a year, down $ 136.5 million annually from the last act, which has expired. The money pays for such programs as legal assistance for victims, enforcemen­t of protection orders, transition­al housing and youth prevention programs.

Democrats sought to expand the law by adding protection­s certain to draw conservati­ve opposition. One would explicitly name gays, lesbians and transgende­r people to the group of those protected under the law. Another would raise the cap on visas granted to abused legal and illegal immigrants from 10,000 to 15,000. A third would expand the authority of Native American officials to handle cases of abuse of Indian women by non- Indians.

The bill drew 61 co- sponsors, more than enough to block filibuster­s and set up a political dare to Republican­s: Vote no, and you’re waging a “war against women.”

The strategy raised hackles among Republican­s, who insisted they had women’s interests at heart, too. Sen. John Mccain, RAriz., said the narrative was a distractio­n from issues Democrats would rather not discuss, such as the economy and gas prices.

“We face an abundance of hard choices,” said Mccain, the GOP’S 2008 presidenti­al nominee and a leading supporter of Republican hopeful Mitt Romney this year. “Divisive slogans and declaring of phony wars are intended to avoid those hard choices and to escape paying a political price for doing so.”

To prove it, Republican­s offered alterna- tives that would delete the references to gays, lesbians and transgende­r people, keep the cap on visas at its current level and allow tribal authoritie­s to go to federal court for protective orders on behalf of abused Native American women.

But the Senate rejected the options overwhelmi­ngly. And in the end, even its sponsor, Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison of Texas— and McCain— were among the 15 Republican­s who voted for the final Democratic bill.

The 31 Republican­s who voted no said they support the spirit of the act but had problems with the Democratic rewrite up for considerat­ion.

Sen. Jim Demint, R- S. C., for example, said he opposed the bill in part because he believes abused women are best served by state and local government­s.

 ??  ?? RENEWAL: In this Nov. 18, 2010 photo, then- Rep.- elect Kristi Noem, R- S. D. speaks during a Republican news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington. House Republican­s determined to show women voters that they have their interests at heart on...
RENEWAL: In this Nov. 18, 2010 photo, then- Rep.- elect Kristi Noem, R- S. D. speaks during a Republican news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington. House Republican­s determined to show women voters that they have their interests at heart on...

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