From Capuano: Cheap Criticism of Coakley’s Unwavering Support for Women
By WCF Fellow: Trish
Martha Coakley’s opponent, Rep. Mike Capuano, said yesterday that his campaign for Massachusetts Senate had received a miraculous turn of good fortune, a “manna from heaven.” Perhaps he’s done something great for the Commonwealth?
Nope. Far from rising through the merit of his own achievement, Capuano is attempting to get a leg-up not just by stepping on women’s rights, but by trying to take Martha Coakley down for standing up for them.
“To pretend that now the House has passed this [health care] bill is real progress - it’s at the expense of women’s access to reproductive rights.’’
Martha Coakley said in an interview, after making similar comments yesterday morning on Boston radio station WTKK-FM.
Several dozen House Democrats vowed in a letter to vote against the final package if it includes the Stupak amendment, a provision reducing women’s reproductive rights and choices to less than the status quo. Capuano has not only not signed the letter, he’s lying when he says, Coakley “would have stood alone” in her opposition to passing a bill with the amendment.
If his lack of support and attempt to alienate Coakley in standing for women’s rights weren’t disturbing enough, hang on, his attacks continue:
- “If she’s not going to vote for any bill that’s not perfect, she wouldn’t vote for any bill in history.”
- “That is a classic example of the differences between us in this race: I understand how to make real serious improvements in the issues that are important to me, in this case, health care.”
- “She claims she wants to honor Ted Kennedy’s legacy on health care. It’s pretty clear that a major portion of this was his bill.”
Capuano is willing to sacrifice what grandmothers and mothers fought generations to achieve so he can claim victory, for whom?
Just like Ted Kennedy would never send African Americans to the back of the bus for a transportation overhaul, he certainly wouldn’t stand for legislation that mutilates the purpose of health care reform by sacrificing the reproductive choice of those who are most in need of options. If anything, Kennedy would see a lioness in Martha Coakley.
Capuano’s got one thing right: the difference between him and Coakley is their leadership (or lack thereof). It’s apparent that it is going to take a special kind of leadership to ensure that our nation gets the health care reform it deserves without budging an inch on women’s reproductive rights and choices. Coakley is that kind of special leader, Capuano is not.
Sen. Barbara Boxer said today that the Senate has the votes to block the Stupak amendment.
“When we sat down to do health care, I thought there was an understanding that we would be abortion-neutral,” she said. “In other words we wouldn’t change anything on abortion; that federal funds couldn’t be used but of course private funds could as long as this was legal. And Roe v. Wade is the law of the land.”
Coakley spoke out on this issue because it is critical that we stand up and fight against this provision. She is not alone. The greatest women leaders of our generation are with her, and no one can undermine that.
And no one, try as they might, can undermine women’s rights as long as we have leaders like Martha Coakley in office.
It is now up to the Senate to ensure that this fundamental inequity is rectified. You can help defend reproductive choices in long battle ahead by supporting Martha’s campaign for Senate today.
Tags: health care reform, martha coakley, Mike Capuano, Senate Race, Stupak
This entry was posted on Tuesday, November 10th, 2009 at 5:40 pm. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.








November 13th, 2009 at 2:56 am
Speaker Pelosi has opted to endorse Mike Capuano. She says, “…Mike Capuano has a proven record of standing up for progressive values and what he believes is right.” Pelosi also praised him for his “courageous vote” for the health insurance reform bill. (http://thecaucus.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/11/12/pelosi-to-back-capuano-in-mass-senate-race/)
I do not know if Pelosi thinks health insurance reform is more progressive or important than the right of poor women to choose abortion, but I think many Democratic politicians, including the President, do. However, Capuano has decided his position was untenable, saying yesterday he will vote against the bill if the Stupak-Pitts amendment is not stripped out. (http://thecaucus.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/11/11/candidates-in-mass-senate-race-spar-over-stupak-measure/) Perhaps this backtracking influenced Pelosi; otherwise I would have to conclude Democratic women are not immune to the Democratic tendency to sell women out when something deemed a higher priority than women’s rights makes that betrayal politically expedient.