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New Mexico Gov. Requires Women Seeking Childcare Assistance To Prove They Were Forcibly Raped
– Reported, September 20, 2012
After Rep. Todd Akin (R-MO) asserted his belief that legitimate rape doesnt often lead to pregnancy, Republican lawmakers were quick to attempt to configure his radical stance on womens health as an outlier in their party. However, increasing numbers of GOP politicians language about the nature of sexual assault actually echoes Akins including New Mexico Gov. Susana Martinez (R), whose states policies use language that effectively narrows the definition of rape.
Not only did Martinez refer to forcible rape in an announcement instating April as New Mexicos Sexual Assault Awareness Month as if some kinds of sexual assault need to be qualified as more or less legitimate than others but, as RH Reality Check reports, the term also appears in the states proposed changes to its official applications for childcare assistance. If the proposed changes take effect, women in New Mexico will be required to prove that their sexual assault qualified as forcible rape if they are seeking childcare assistance for a child that resulted from rape:
If adopted, this policy will have numerous implications. It establishes in state law a narrow definition of rape that can and will be applied in other areas of law and policy. It puts a heavy burden on women who have been raped and are now struggling economically to support a child or children to prove the manner in which they were raped and to meet a test set up by the state to exclude many women in need of childcare assistance who would otherwise qualify.
It would force women who have left violent domestic partnerships, who were date-raped, who were impregnated as a result of incest, or through other non-forcible but nonetheless equally violent and denigrating means of sexual violation to first re-engage with their abusers to seek child support, putting control of their lives back into the hands of someone by whom they were violated in the most profound sense of the term.
Martinezs problematic move to narrow the definition of sexual assault is not unique to her state. Last year, vice presidential candidate Paul Ryan partnered with Akin to co-sponsor a bill that introduced the concept of forcible rape in one of its earlier drafts. The forcible rape language was eventually removed from that bill after widespread public outcry, but that hasnt stopped the concept from permeating the Republican Party.
Womens health advocates in New Mexico are fighting back against the proposed changes to the childcare assistance applications. Strong Families, a coalition that works to advance the rights of women and immigrants, released a statement expressing their disappointment in Martinezs attempt to qualify differing levels of rape, calling the move especially egregious in light of the fact that Martinez was a prominent speaker at last months Republican National Convention. A hearing on the issue is scheduled for October 1st.
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