Todd Akin to Receive 40,000 Petitions from Planned Parenthood Advocates
Members of Advocates of Planned Parenthood of the St. Louis Region are scheduled to deliver a firm and "legitimate message" to Todd Akin’s Congressional Office in Ballwin at mid-day Wednesday.
Members of Advocates of Planned Parenthood of the St. Louis Region want Rep. Todd Akin, R-Wildwood, to know they do not plan to vote for him in the upcoming Senate election, due to what they believe to be a medically and factually erroneous statement he made during a television interview on Aug. 19 about pregnancy not resulting from rape.
Akin alleged that women’s bodies somehow naturally prevent pregnancy in cases of “legitimate rape.”
Planned Parenthood representatives called Akin's remarks "ignorant, appalling and insensitive."
Stating that their "anger is legitimate and so are our votes,” Planned Parenthood Advocates created a petition to let Akin know they believe his perspective—which they call a "dangerous ideology"—has no place in Missouri politics.
The Advocates' members indicated in a news statement that Akin is not alone in his fundamental disregard for women and women’s health. "Candidates for office, including Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan, are amongst the list of legislators who underscore the danger of politicians deciding what health care women can and cannot get," the statement read.
As Planned Parenthood pointed out the day after Akin’s controversial remarks, his position echoes those of Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan including:
- Overturning Roe v. Wade and banning abortion services
- Defunding Planned Parenthood’s preventive services
- Support of extreme “personhood” measures that would give full rights to fertilized eggs and could ban some forms of birth control and fertility treatments
- Shutting down the nation’s family planning program, which more than five million low-income people a year rely on for cancer screenings, birth control, and other services
- Empower bossed to decide whether their employees can have birth control covered like any other preventative care.
On Wednesday, Planned Parenthood Advocates and supporters said they vow to let Akin and other politicians with similar views know that “millions of women and men will be working day and night this election season to keep them out of power.”
One in five women in the United States turn to Planned Parenthood to get high-quality, affordable health care and medically accurate information, sources indicate.
Read more about Todd Akin:
- Rep. Todd Akin On Hot Seat Over 'Legitimate Rape' Comment in FOX2 Interview
- Todd Akin Staying In The Senate Race Despite Rape Remark: 'I'm Not a Quitter'
- Todd Akin Releases Apology, Asks Forgiveness
- Post-Primary: Todd Akin The Biggest Surprise & Jay Nixon Would Win In November
- Akin's "Legitimate Rape" Idea Spurs Online Reactions Nationwide
Jason Wescoat
11:51 pm on Wednesday, August 29, 2012
Not that I agree with Congressman Akin's comments because he was just off the mark so far, but I'm sure all 40,000 of those workers had intended to vote for Akin until he said that. I'm stunned they're not going to now...
As a side note, I'm pretty okay with "extreme personhood measures" as I'd really rather be safe than sorry. Argue with me that they're not human, fine. Not sure what else they could be, but fine. If I'm wrong, I've merely allowed the potential life to become alive, very potentially at some distress to the mother I admit. If you're wrong, you've killed another human being.
Oh, and I"m sure glad that my tax dollars pay for low income people to get birth control, since apparently they are unable to practice self control. Cancer screenings and health check ups are one thing, birth control is a totally different matter.
Joyce Boswell
8:33 am on Thursday, August 30, 2012
Forbidding birth control is putting women out of work in the workplace because they would always be pregnant and having to stay home with the kids. Are you willing to not have marital relations for years just to make sure conception does not occur?