Women's Caucus Played Pivotal Role In Restoring Sanity To Kansas Statehouse

The Kansas Statehouse is one of the most ornate in the country. For a while, wherever my family traveled – New Hampshire, Tennessee, Massachusetts, New Mexico – we made a point of visiting capitol buildings to see how they compared with ours.

Kansas is a parsimonious state, where the legislature is not given to investing in public beauty, and yet legislators okayed the $325 million restoration project. One day recently, 109 schoolchildren from Gardner, Kansas, on a field trip, found places to stand or sit on the ground-floor marble map of Kansas with all 105 counties depicted. The Statehouse truly belongs to all the state’s residents.

I live a mile and a half from the Kansas Capitol in an historic central Topeka neighborhood. In early February, on an uncharacteristically warm Sunday, I was raking leaves out of the gutter when my Democratic state senator and neighbor, Laura Kelly, walked by. I asked her about the legislative session.

She observed that the moderate Republicans who were elected in November 2016 were more progressive than the moderates who lost their seats to conservatives in 2012. She said she was having fun and working harder because legislators were collaborating.

And yet by the time the legislature took their adjournment April 7, that collaboration had collapsed. The House had passed a tax reform bill with a veto-proof margin, but the Senate was three votes short. Similarly, the legislature was unable to override Governor Sam Brownback’s veto of expanded Medicaid coverage.

With this stubborn ideologue still in the governor’s office in our stately capitol, someone more invested in his red-state experiment than in pragmatic politics, even with 55 freshman lawmakers, progress seemed stuck.

Shortly after Memorial weekend, on a visit to the Capitol during the veto session, I met Rep. Cindy Holscher, a freshman Democrat from Overland Park. I asked her why so little had been accomplished. She named roadblocks but said the conversation was lively.

Holscher did not tip her hand that she was one of the leaders of a Women’s Caucus that had been meeting around the clock to move the needle on a comprehensive tax reform bill that finally passed on June 6 with veto-proof majorities.

After the legislature finally adjourned, I called Sen. Kelly to ask about the Women’s Caucus. She said it was “organic” and started with women in the House. She was invited when the group was recruiting support from the Senate side. She said she walked into a room with about 50 people, male and female, Democrats and Republicans. She said the ring-leaders were well-organized, and had flip-charts.

When I interviewed Rep. Holscher later that morning, she said Rep. Monica Murnan, a Democrat from southeast Kansas, was the one with the flip-charts. But she herself has a background in management at Sprint. When she arrived at the legislature she wondered, “Where are the dry erase boards?”

She described the genesis of the Women’s Caucus. There were three rows on the House floor with female representatives who talked frequently across party lines. When legislative business stalled, people retreated and stopped talking.

One day an idea floated within a group of these female legislators. They would leave the building for lunch, and bring back pieces of paper with three things they’d like to accomplish. The group cohered and began meeting, and eventually invited men and committee heads. Rep. Holscher said she likes to say: “We have to draw the circle wide.”

Sen. Kelly said the tax plan the Women’s Caucus crafted was more progressive than the one that passed. Still, the final bill accomplishes significant reforms. It closes the so-called “LLC-loophole” that granted doctors, farmers and business owners income tax exemptions, while their employees continued paying taxes. It also restored the three-tier personal income tax structure, upping rates. The Kansas City Star reported that the inclusion of a child care tax credit won 10 more Democratic votes. The bill was veto-proof, passing the House 88-31, and the Senate, 27-13.

So you could say the Women’s Caucus and their flip-charts flipped the atmosphere, or that the class of freshman lawmakers, one-third new faces, made the difference. Or you could also say that inside and outside the Statehouse, folks were tired of letting an entrenched ideologue call the shots.

Again, and dramatically this session, our Statehouse belongs to all of us.

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Joseph Fiennes Says ‘The Handmaid’s Tale’ Made Him An Even Bigger Feminist

It’s hard to work on a TV show like “The Handmaid’s Tale” and not be “jolted” into a “state of consciousness,” according to Joseph Fiennes. 

Fiennes plays Commander Fred Waterford, the leader of the oppressive dystopian republic called Gilead in Hulu’s hit series “The Handmaid’s Tale,” based on the book of the same name by Margaret Atwood. The book has been heralded as a feminist classic and (after some initial back and forth) the show seems to be following suit. So it comes as no surprise that Fiennes says he’s become an even bigger feminist after playing the Commander on a set full of iconic women like Elisabeth Moss (the show’s protagonist Offred) and Yvonne Strahovski (Serena Joy, the Commander’s brilliantly sadistic wife).

In a June 15 interview with Marie Claire, Fiennes said the series has really awoken him to women’s issues ― especially since the “most important people” in his life are his wife and two daughters. 

“Certainly the show has jolted me into a much more alert state of the inequality amongst the sexes,” he said. “By virtue of that, I feel much more switched on to feminism, and what it means and stands for. I want my daughters to live in a world where there is equality and parity of pay. We’ve got a long way to go. I read a statistic that if you’re a Hispanic woman it’ll be over 200 years until you achieve parity of pay. So yes, the show has jolted me into a state of consciousness.” 

The show has jolted me into a much more alert state of the inequality amongst the sexes. By virtue of that, I feel much more switched on to feminism, and what it means and stands for.
Joseph Fiennes

Fiennes also spoke about the eery way the dystopian future depicted in “The Handmaid’s Tale” has begun to feel closer to real life over the last year. From the U.S. pulling out of the Paris climate deal to the constant war over women’s bodies and reproductive autonomy, Fiennes pointed to the parallels between fictional Gilead and the United States in 2017.

“When you wake up and you see that America has pulled out of the climate deal in Paris, that sends huge messages about putting coal before the planet. Gilead has suffered from a fragile ecology that is now toxic and affecting fertility rates,” Fiennes told Marie Claire. “There is truth to it ― there is connection, themes, and parallels, sadly. It’s getting sharper and sharper, especially for women ― the autonomy of their bodies, and pro-choice vs. pro-life. Look at the administration, the imbalance of the female presence ― there’s a lot to draw on.”

One silver lining? The protests and resistance the U.S. has seen since President Donald Trump took office. 

“It was wonderful seeing the woman’s marches, and seeing numbers bigger than the president’s inauguration,” Fiennes said. “It gives one great heart that there are people present, alert, and awake, and voicing their frustrations. We need more of that.”

Head over to Marie Claire to read the rest of Fiennes’ interview. 

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Georgia Congressional Candidate Receives Threatening Package

Police are investigating after Georgia congressional candidate Karen Handel and her neighbors received packages Thursday containing threatening letters and a suspicious substance.

Handel, a Republican, is facing off against Democrat Jon Ossoff in Tuesday’s special election in Georgia’s 6th Congressional District. A recent poll shows them in a deadlock in the heated race.

“The police were quickly notified and street is now being blocked off,” Handel said in a statement around 4 p.m. local time. “We will continue to coordinate with law enforcement as necessary.”

Osoff told WSB-TV that his family has also received several threats of violence during the campaign, prompting him to hire a security detail.

Thursday’s incident comes one day after House Majority Whip Steve Scalise (R-La.) and others were shot at a Virginia baseball field. Scalise is in critical condition. 

This is a developing story. Check back for updates. 

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Delivery Room Photo Captures The Moment This Mom Got The Shock Of Her Life

The moment Dara Crouch discovered she had just given birth to a baby boy has now been forever preserved, thanks to a photographer. 

As a labor and delivery nurse of seven years, Crouch had come to love seeing parents learn the sex of their babies and decided she and her partner wouldn’t find out about their babies beforehand. After having a girl, Crouch was convinced that, when she was pregnant again, she would have another girl. She was wrong. On April 25 in Columbus, Georgia, she welcomed a son ― the first on her mother’s side in more than 50 years. 

Photographer Neely Ker-Fox captured Crouch giving birth, including the exact moment she realized she had welcomed a boy. 

“In my six years of being a birth photographer and over 100+ births, I’ve never quite caught a reaction like hers,” Ker-Fox told HuffPost. “People sometimes don’t ‘get’ birth photography. But one day, her son will see this photo, and the others that I took that day, and see the love and excitement that welcomed him into this world. It doesn’t get much better than that.”

Crouch told HuffPost that she has “some boy cousins” on her father’s side, but her son was the first boy born on her mother’s side since her mom’s brother. 

Crouch thinks the photos Ker-Fox captured of her reaction are “so funny.”

“It’s raw emotion caught on camera!” she told HuffPost. “Moments like that are why we hired Neely. You can never get those moments back, but through the pictures you can always cherish them.”

The mom explained that she was surprised because she “really thought” the baby was a girl. 

“I was really attached to my daughter’s clothes and knew I could reuse them because their birthdays are only three weeks apart,” she said. “I just always saw us with girls. Having a boy never really crossed my mind. I think that’s why I was so shocked!”

The new addition to the family is doing well, according to Crouch. She added that it’s only been a few months, but her son is already growing quickly. 

“He has fit into our family seamlessly,” Crouch said. “I couldn’t imagine it any other way!”

H/T PopSugar

The HuffPost Parents newsletter, So You Want To Raise A Feminist, offers the latest stories and news in progressive parenting.  

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