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New Hampshire Women Are Watching...And They're Concerned

New Hampshire Women Are Watching...And They're Concerned

| Jennifer F. | 1

In New Hampshire, we take pride every four years when the eyes of the nation turn attention to our independent-minded state, as we play host to the first-in-the-nation presidential primary.

In recent weeks, the national media has shone the spotlight on our small state as the Republican presidential candidates sprint toward the first electoral test on the road to achieve their party’s nomination.

And now Primary Election Day has arrived.

But this year some things are different.

While the eyes of Americans across the country watch New Hampshire, the eyes of New Hampshire women (and the men who care about them) are looking at the candidates’ positions on the issues that directly affect us: women’s health. Since Planned Parenthood Northern New England faced its own defunding battle with the locally elected Executive Council earlier this year (over a routine contract renewal for Planned Parenthood health services), New Hampshirites are standing up and taking notice. We are worried about what we have seen and heard.

Our state has had a bipartisan tradition of supporting family planning and other critical primary health care services for half a century, and now many women are staring in disbelief at the Republican candidates on today’s ballot who have pledged to defund Planned Parenthood health services and define “personhood” in a manner that could outlaw many common forms of birth control and in vitro fertilization. That’s why we’re taking action.

Last weekend, our Planned Parenthood of Northern New England (PPNNE) Action Fund launched its Women are Watching campaign for the 2012 election cycle with an event celebrating NH Senator Jeanne Shaheen and featuring Planned Parenthood Action Fund President Cecile Richards.



It was amazing to see the hundreds of Planned Parenthood supporters from across the state who turned out to share their commitment to protecting women’s health. From college students to health care professionals, numerous women and men rely on PPNNE health centers for their everyday primary health care. Many of them are troubled by the divisive rhetoric against Planned Parenthood, and motivated to engage their friends and family to elect pro-women’s health candidates up and down the ballot in 2012. As part of our Women are Watching event they made posters, recorded personal narratives, and signed up to volunteer. They are not only watching, they are engaging. Most importantly, they will be voting.

Here at the PPNNE Action Fund, we are harnessing their energy and preparing for legislative and electoral battles in 2012. We are recruiting and supporting candidates who want to promote and protect access to women’s health care. Our early efforts are focused on unseating the Executive Councilors who voted to take basic health care away from thousands of Planned Parenthood New Hampshire patients, and we are thrilled to be supporting Colin Van Ostern as he challenges the decisive vote in our defund battle, Councilor Dan St. Hilaire.

After today, the eyes of the nation may move on to South Carolina or Florida, but here in New Hampshire, women are committed to staying vigilant as we watch what the candidates say and do on the issue of women’s health. And in case you missed it, make sure to watch the video from our first Women are Watching kickoff event and hear what the women had to say.

- Jennifer Frizzell is the Senior Policy Advisor for Planned Parenthood Affiliates of Northern New England Action Fund
 

Tags: New Hampshire, Cecile Richards, Women are Watching, GOP, 2012, presidential election



Comments (1)

02.16.12 @ 8:07AM | Saut

Jamie,Thank you for wtriing this. You give a good challenge to ministers to care for women who have been abused, and for poor women in general. Thank you for always being vigilant in standing up for women. You always set a meaningful example, both in word and action. I am grateful.I'd like to offer a few thoughts, if I may: 1. Planned Parenthood is not just for poor women; it is for all women, as well as men. It is for anyone who wants quality, affordable, respectful healthcare. I choose to use Planned Parenthood because I love the quality, respectful healthcare I receive there. 2. Pastoral care must be offered to abusers as well. 3. You aptly mention that abuse can occur "physically, sexually, or emotionally"; I'd like to add spiritually and psychologically to that list as well. 4. We must be aware that abuse is not only toward women (even though that is what your post is about); abuse can be toward men and children. It can be toward the trans community (and within the trans community). It can occur in the ways we treat immigrants, people of other religions, people of other sexualities, or people of other races. Thanks again for wtriing this post. And thanks for letting me offer my initial thoughts.Peace,Erin

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