HomeYour VoiceHerStoryYour MultimediaResource LibraryAbout WVMCode of ConductRegisterLog in

  • Latest Post
  • Post index
  • Archives
  • Categories
  • Latest comments
  • Contact
  • Post Something
  • « Suppressed - The Fight To Vote
  • Gratitude: The Short Film by Louie Schwartzberg »

RNC to feature speaker supporting policies barring women from voting

RNC to feature speaker supporting policies barring women from voting
Posted by admin on Mar 25, 2020 in Intro, Newsworthy
RNC to feature speaker supporting policies barring women from voting
Anti-abortion activist Abby Johnson has advocated for a head-of-household voting system that has historically barred women and people of color from casting ballots.

Anti-abortion activist Abby Johnson, who will speak on Tuesday during the second night of the Republican National Convention, has advocated in recent months for a head-of-household voting system that has historically barred women and people of color from casting ballots. “What is the most controversial thing you believe?” Johnson asked on Twitter in early May. “I would support bringing back household voting,” Johnson replied to her tweet. “How anti-feminist of me.” Johnson’s prime time RNC remarks come on the eve of the 100th anniversary of the adoption of the 19th Amendment, which extended voting rights to women. (In practice, many women of color were excluded for many years thereafter.) Before the adoption of the 19th Amendment, and the 15th Amendment, which prohibits denying U.S. citizens the right to vote based on race, the right to vote was largely extended to White men who owned property and, in some cases, met certain religious criteria. Previously, some states had extended voting rights to Black men and White men who did not own property. Several had laws permitting women to cast ballots. One argument made against women’s suffrage was that their male husbands could vote on behalf of the household. Today, “head of household” is a filing status within the U.S. tax system that provides financial savings to unmarried individuals with children or other dependents. Head-of-household decision making is used in some religious communities, with male spouses and partners nearly universally being the head. Head-of-household voting would permit only the head of a household — and not all household members who are citizens over 18 years of age — to cast a ballot. Johnson believes the male member of the household would be the de facto decision maker. “But what happens when the husband is a Republican and the wife is a Democrat or vice versa?” a Twitter user asked Johnson. “Then they would have to decide on one vote. In a Godly household, the husband would get the final say,” she replied. Johnson’s convention speaking role comes as the presidential campaigns of Trump and Democrat Joe Biden vie for support from women, particularly White suburban women and women without college degrees, who are the most likely to be reconsidering backing the president in November after doing so in 2016. Kyle Morse, the spokesperson for American Bridge 21st Century, a super PAC that supports Democrats, said Johnson’s speaking slot “further underscores just how extreme Donald Trump’s GOP has become.” In a statement to The 19th, Trump campaign spokesperson Tim Murtaugh said, “President Trump strongly supports the sacred principle of one person, one vote.” Johnson worked at Planned Parenthood for eight years before leaving to become an anti-abortion activist and found And Then There Were None, an organization that supports the career transitions of individuals working in facilities that perform abortions. Her story was chronicled in a 2019 film. Similar statements about head-of-household voting have landed other Republicans in hot water. In 2018, a Republican county precinct chair in Utah wrote on Facebook: “The more I study history the more I think giving voting rights to others not head of household has been a grave mistake!” The state party chair denounced the remark, saying: “The Constitution, while divinely inspired, has been improved via amendments that made voter equality a right of America’s citizenry.” This article has been updated with a statement from the Trump campaign. Amanda Becker Washington Correspondent Amanda Becker portrait Published August 25, 2020 Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/

Original post blogged on Women' Voices Media.


Form is loading...

Women's Voices Media

Women's thought, women's opinions, women's facts presented in a feminist point of view. We endorse works that present in an empirical and logical style.

Search

Categories

Women's Voices Media

  • Editor Byline
  • Home Page
  • Intro
  • Newsworthy

Your Voice

  • Background
  • ERA and CEDAW
  • Economic Justice
  • Education
  • Elections
  • Environment
  • Equal Representation
  • Health and Safety
  • Intersectional Issues
  • Intersectional Issues
  • Intro
  • Judicial System
  • My Voice
  • Politics & Elections
  • Reproductive Rights
  • Social Justice
  • Tech
  • Violence

HerStory

  • Background
  • Intersectional Issues
  • Social Justice
  • Women In Education
  • Women In Politics
  • Women In Science, Technology, & Math (STEM)
  • Women In Sports
  • Women In the Arts
  • Women In the Law
  • Women Not Categorized
  • Women in Business
  • Women's Health & Reproductive Rights
  • Womens Rights

Your Multimedia

  • Art
  • Background
  • Events
  • Intersectional Issues
  • Just Interesting
  • News
  • People
  • Welcome

Women's Resource Library

  • Current News
  • Diverse / Uncategorized
  • ERA and CEDAW
    • CEDAW
    • ERA
  • Environment
    • Air / Atmospheric Polution
    • Alternate Power Sources
    • Climate Change
    • Destruction of Forests and Habitats
    • Sustainability
    • Water Resources
      • Fracking
      • Waste Disposal
  • Equal Representation
    • In Business and Corporations
    • In Education (K-20)
    • In Government
    • In Law Enforcement
    • In Sports
    • In the Justice System
    • Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math (STEM)
  • Equality and Justice
    • Ableism
    • Ageism
    • Child Care
    • Economic Equality
    • Homelessness
    • LGBTQA Discrimination
    • Poverty and Hunger
    • Racism
    • Sexism
  • Gender Studies
  • General Science
  • Girls & Young Women
  • Health and Safety
    • HIV / AIDS
    • Health Insurance
    • Maternal and Infant Care
    • Medical Research
    • Paid Sick and Parental Leave
    • Pregnancy Accommodations
    • Sex Transmitted Diseases
    • Substance Addiction and Abuse
      • Opioid Crisis
      • Physician Over-prescription
  • Herstory
  • Independant Media
  • Politics
  • Reproductive Rights
    • Abortion Rights
      • Roe v. Wade
    • Contraception
  • The Arts
  • Violence
    • Ableism
    • Child Abuse
    • Date Rape
    • Domestic Violence
    • Elder Abuse
    • Genital Mutilation
    • Gun Safety and Control
    • Harrassment
    • LGBTQA - Abuse and Assault
    • Racism
    • Rape / Assault
    • Sex Trafficking / Sex Slavery
    • Women In Prison
  • World Issues

XML Feeds

  • RSS 2.0: Posts
  • Atom: Posts
What is RSS?

Women's Voices Media
This collection 2025 by Janice Jochum
Copyright 2019 United Activision Media, LLC
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
• Contact • Help • Bootstrap CMS

b2evolution CCMS
Cookies are required to enable core site functionality.