From Ms. Weekly Digest <[email protected]>
Subject This Week's Ms. Must-Reads
Date October 30, 2021 1:00 PM
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Letter from an Editor | October 30, 2021


Dear John,

This week, we’ve kept our eyes on negotiations around President Biden’s Build Back Better proposal and the negotiations and debates. Although we are disappointed that the final framework announced yesterday will not provide paid family leave, the proposal nevertheless is historic and extraordinary in what it will accomplish.

The Build Back Better Act will provide a transformative investment in universal early child education with free preschool for every 3- and 4-year old, and will expand access to affordable, quality childcare. The legislation extends the expanded child tax credit that was instituted through the American Rescue Plan earlier this year, cutting child poverty in half.

And it provides rental assistance to hundreds of thousands of households, makes investments in maternal health and provides health coverage for up to 4 million uninsured people left behind when their states refused to expand Medicaid coverage, free school meals for an additional 9 million children as well as summer nutrition assistance for 29 million children, and programs to reduce community violence.

Finally, the act makes major investments to address the climate crisis and—depending on the Senate’s reconciliation rules—will provide a measure of reform to the immigration system.

Women’s equality depends on many of these proposed investments. And these investments in human infrastructure—unlike investments in physical infrastructure like roads and bridges—create jobs and raise wages in sectors of the economy dominated by women.

On the abortion rights front, we are, like you, anxiously awaiting the Monday, Nov. 1 hearing at the Supreme Court on S.B. 8, the Texas law banning abortion after six weeks. Clinics in Texas and the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) sued the state of Texas, challenging the ban as an unconstitutional violation of the right to abortion established by the Supreme Court in both the Roe v. Wade and the Casey v. Planned Parenthood decisions. The federal district court’s decision in the DOJ’s case to block enforcement of the law was overturned by the Fifth Circuit Appeals Court, permitting the law to again take effect, and prompting the DOJ’s appeal to the Supreme Court.

The question before the Court: Does the federal government have a right to sue Texas to block the ban? And will the Court grant the DOJ’s request that the law be blocked from enforcement, pending a final appellate court ruling? Until the Supreme Court issues a ruling in this case, abortion in Texas remains largely illegal.

What’s at stake? The outcome of Monday’s hearing as well as the Court’s decision in the Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization case that will be heard on December 1 involving the constitutionality of yet another pre-viability abortion ban in Mississippi, will determine whether abortion will be legal and accessible in many states. Between states that already have bans on the books, states that are hostile towards abortion, and states with “trigger” bans that would go into effect if Roe is overturned, just 13 states — California, Colorado, Illinois, Kansas, Minnesota, Nevada, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Washington and Virginia — would end up taking on most of the country’s abortions.

We will be issuing special reports on both of these cases, and you can count on Ms . to keep you informed and ready to fight back.

For equality,

Kathy Spillar
Executive Editor

This Week's Must-Reads from Ms .

Supreme Court Refuses to Block Texas Abortion Ban, Agrees to Hear Two Cases Challenging the Law [[link removed]]

Trickle-Up Economics: The Macroeconomic Impact of Investing in Care Work [[link removed]]

Front and Center: Guaranteed Income Helped Me Survive the Pandemic and Find “Moments of Joy,” Says Magnolia Mother’s Trust Mom [[link removed]]

How Whitewashing Villainized Black Women’s Magic in Louisiana [[link removed]]


Britney Spears and the Right to Reproductive Justice: Regulation and Conservatorship in the Child Welfare System [[link removed]]

Crisis Pregnancy Centers Endanger Women’s Health—With Taxpayer Dollars and Without Oversight [[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]] .
It's been a year since Ruth Bader Ginsburg died. Dr. Goodwin is joined by journalist and author Irin Carmon to discuss: How did RBG's death shape the current fight around abortion rights and other issues? Should she have retired? And what comes next at the Supreme Court?
We hope you'll listen, subscribe, rate and review today!



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