From Ms. Weekly Digest <[email protected]>
Subject This Week's Ms. Must-Reads
Date September 14, 2024 1:00 PM
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[[link removed]] Weekly Digest
Weekly Digest
Letter from an Editor | September 14, 2024
Dear John,
Going into Tuesday night’s presidential debate between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump, our team here at Ms . had a pretty good idea what to expect: anti-abortion disinformation, historical revisionism, inflammatory soundbites, references to the January 6 insurrection and Project 2025. If we’d made a bingo card with all these on it, we would’ve easily won.
We weren’t all that surprised by Trump's repeated refusal to answer the question of whether he’d veto a nationwide abortion ban, and his explanation of how it was now in the hands of the states. In the hands of the states, we know what’s happened: Kamala powerfully illustrated the horrific health crises women and girls have faced in those states with extreme “Trump abortion bans.”
“Harris was particularly commanding on the one issue that polls show is most likely to motivate people, especially women, to vote: abortion,” writes the Fuller Project’s Jodi Enda in Ms . this week. “Although Americans say they are most concerned about the economy—a point underscored by the first question posed by ABC News moderators—a plurality of potential voters have told pollsters that abortion is the singular issue most likely to influence their candidate selection.” On the debate stage Tuesday night, Enda points out, Harris and Trump were able to agree on one thing: Trump’s responsibility for the overturn of Roe v. Wade .
Trump also pushed back on his knowledge about and association with Project 2025—the Heritage Foundation’s detailed plan for the next Republican president—despite the fact that 80 percent of its authors served in the former president’s administration. We call Project 2025 the Right’s “misogynist manifesto,” and in Ms . this week, contributing editor Carrie Baker unpacks the details: from its obsession with promoting the patriarchal family and “biblically based marriage,” to its plans to dismantle women’s rights in the workplace and the classroom, to its agenda for changing democracy as we know it. Despite Trump’s attempts to distance himself from the radical wide-ranging plan, the dangers posed by Project 2025 are all too real—and women’s rights are square in the crosshairs.
Finally, this week we celebrated the 30th anniversary of the passage of the Violence Against Women Act—a crucial step in the hard-fought battle to recognize domestic violence and sexual assault as a societal problem, a fight that still continues today. In Ms . this week, contributor and founder of Futures Without Violence Esta Soler reflects on VAWA’s impact, as well as the forthcoming loss of one of its greatest champions currently in office: President Joe Biden. “We should never forget his leadership and that the work VAWA funded had an incredible impact; in the years after it was enacted, domestic violence against adult women declined by more than 60 percent,” she notes.
To commemorate VAWA’s anniversary, President Biden announced a series of new initiatives, which include the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act, which will close the “boyfriend loophole”; supporting the housing needs of survivors; funding the Image Abuse Helpline and Online Safety Center to combat online abuse; and establishing the first-ever White House Office of Gun Violence Prevention.
Though we celebrate VAWA today, the fight against gender-based violence continues—alongside the fight for the Equal Rights Amendment. The ERA will provide the constitutional basis to strengthen laws to prevent gender-based violence, and reinstate survivors’ right to sue their attacker or institutions responsible for failing to respond to gender violence for damages in civil court—a right that was revoked by the Supreme Court in 2000.
As we celebrate VAWA’s profound impacts on its 30th anniversary, we must recommit to the fight against domestic violence—and recommit to ensuring the ERA is enshrined in the Constitution.
For Equality,
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Kathy Spillar
Executive Editor
P.S. — If you’re not already receiving it, click here [[link removed]] to sign up for our Wednesday Ms. Memo newsletter, which from now through November will be your one-stop-shop for feminist elections updates—from the ballot measure contests that will significantly impact abortion and equality, state Supreme Court races, to the races for state legislatures, Congress, the Senate and, of course, the presidency.
This Week's Must-Reads from Ms.
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In This Debate, a Woman Was the ‘Bigger Man’ [[link removed]] Misogynist Manifesto: Fighting Project 2025’s Plans to Dismantle Democracy as We Know It [[link removed]]
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Thirty Years of the Violence Against Women Act Shows Progress Is Possible [[link removed]] Thirty Years After the Violence Against Women Act, the ERA Is Needed to Halt Gender-Based Violence [[link removed]]
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[link removed] [[link removed]] Tune in for a new episode of Ms. magazine's podcast, On the Issues with Michele Goodwin on
Apple Podcasts [[link removed]] + Spotify [[link removed]] .
In this episode, we’re joined by two co-hosts of the Webby Award-winning #SistersInLaw podcast to discuss where our nation stands as we approach the 2024 elections—from the ongoing trials faced by former president Donald Trump, to Nikki Haley, to the Supreme Court’s recent opinions and so much more.
We hope you'll listen, subscribe, rate and review today!
U.S. democracy is at a dangerous inflection point—from the demise of abortion rights, to a lack of pay equity and parental leave, to skyrocketing maternal mortality, and attacks on trans health. Left unchecked, these crises will lead to wider gaps in political participation and representation. For 50 years, Ms . has been forging feminist journalism—reporting, rebelling and truth-telling from the front-lines, championing the Equal Rights Amendment, and centering the stories of those most impacted. With all that’s at stake for equality, we are redoubling our commitment for the next 50 years. In turn, we need your help, Support Ms. today with a donation—any amount that is meaningful to you [[link removed]] . We are grateful for your loyalty and ferocity .
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