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Health

Now That He’s Running For Senate, Georgia Republican Finally Admits Rape Is Rape

Rep. Phil Gingrey (R-GA)

Georgia Rep. Phil Gingrey (R) landed in hot water earlier this year after he defended former Rep. Todd Akin’s (R-MO) scientifically inaccurate claim that women can’t become pregnant from “legitimate rape.” Gingrey — a medical professional who is actually a co-chair of the GOP Doctor Caucus — said he thought Akin was “partially right” when he suggested “the female body has ways to try to shut that whole thing down.”

But now that Gingrey is considering a Senate run, he’s finally conceding that rape is rape, and women’s ability to conceive isn’t dependent on the different definitions invented by elected officials to classify sexual assault. According to the Atlanta-Journal Constitution, the GOP candidate has retracted his support for Akin:

In an attempt to clear the air before a possible Senate run, U.S. Rep. Phil Gingrey on Monday said he no longer considers a ban on high-capacity magazines a useful method of curbing gun violence — and retracted his controversial defense of Todd Akin and statements about a woman’s inability to become pregnant as a result of rape.

The congressman called his initial statements on guns an emotional response to the Sandy Hook Elementary School massacre. As for his comments on rape and abortion, Gingrey referred to them as “stupid.”

“I made a very awkward attempt to explain the unexplainable,” he said, admitting the resulting political damage has been self-inflicted.

Gingrey is likely simply hoping to preserve his political solvency. In the 2012 elections, insensitive comments about rape cost anti-choice candidates their seats — and Republican politicians have so persistently belittled the serious crime of sexual assault that they have since enrolled in training programs to learn how to talk about rape. At a retreat for House Republicans at the beginning of this year, the GOP caucus was told to simply avoid any mentions of rape altogether.

Election

Meet Senate Candidate Phil Gingrey, Georgia’s Todd Akin

Rep. Phil Gingrey (R-GA)

Rep. Phil Gingrey (R-GA) has decided to run for the open seat of retiring Sen. Saxby Chambliss (R), the Washington Post reported Friday. Over a decade-plus in Washington, the self-described “pro-life OB-GYN” has become famous for amassing on of the most extreme voting records in Congress and a long series of gaffes.

Over six terms in Congress, Gingrey has:

1. Defended former Rep. Todd Akin (R-MO)’s infamous rape comments. Though Akin’s 2012 suggestion that victims of “legitimate rape” were unlikely to become pregnant drew virtually universal criticism, Gingrey boldly took the opposite position. Contradicting medical science, Gingrey said last month that Akin was “partially right,” as “all that adrenaline can cause you not to ovulate.”

2. Opposed President Obama’s stimulus — then claimed credit for it. Gingrey voted against the 2009 American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, calling it a “non-stimulus stimulus plan” for spending “money that we do not have.” Despite his objection to the “trillion dollar debt” bill, he boasted of obtaining a $625,000 stimulus grant for Cedartown, Georgia’s Streetscape project. Gingrey’s hypocrisy was on full display when he personally presented a giant over-sized check to city officials for the “shovel-ready” project.

3. Denounced minority outreach — by Democratic campaigns. Though political candidates of both parties have long organized “Minority Group for Candidate” outreach efforts, Gingrey denounced the practice as “worse than sad.” Asked on a right-wing radio show about the African-Americans for Obama, he complained: “To use that and to go out and try to create divisiveness or one race against the other, it’s not just that, it’s one gender against the other, male versus female. I’m sick of all that and I think the American people are too.” He and his office said nothing when Mitt Romney launched Latino (Juntos Con Romney), women (Women for Mitt), and even African Americans (Black Leadership Council). More amazingly, his own 2008 campaign had a “Women for Gingrey” outreach group.

4. Pushed for wasteful military spending the Department of Defense doesn’t even want. Despite claims that he is “committed to finding ways to reduce” government programs that are “bloated” and “riddled with waste,” Gingrey demanded additional funding for the Marietta, Georgia-built F-22 stealth fighter. His claims that his effort wasn’t “just for the sake of home-cooking, but also for the sake of the country,” were contradicted by then-Secretary of Defense Robert Gates and bipartisan Congressional leaders, who agreed there was “no military requirement” for more F-22s. Gingrey’s financial disclosures indicated that he owned stock in the company that makes the planes.

5. Compared Democratic clean energy legislation to the North Korean and Iranian governments. When the House Democratic leadership proposed a rule for a clean energy bill that did not allow minority amendments, Gingrey ranted: “Americans are watching as from Iran to North Korea, the forces of darkness are attempting to silence the forces of democracy and freedom. The irony is on this day, the Democratic process and the nation’s economic freedom are under threat not by some rogue state, but in this very chamber in which we stand.”

6. Dismissed pre-existing medical conditions as nothing more than hang-nails. When a 2011 report by the Department of Health and Human Services estimated that up to 129 million Americans have some sort of pre-existing medical condition that could subject them to discrimination by insurance companies, Gingrey was incredulous. Though the report included people with a history of heart disease, cancer, asthma, high blood pressure, arthritis, and the like, he opined: “One hundred and twenty nine million people with pre-existing conditions! They would all have to have hang nails and fever blisters to have pre-existing conditions and if you believe those statistics, I’ve got a beach to sell you in Pennsylvania.”

7. After criticizing sexist radio host Rush Limbaugh for irresponsibly ginning up controversy, quickly begged for forgiveness.. In 2009, Gingrey accurately noted that Limbaugh and other conservative media personalities can “stand back and throw bricks” instead of offering “real leadership.” A day later, Gingrey went on Limbaugh’s show to offer a “very sincere” apology for his criticisms. “I clearly ended up putting my foot in my mouth on some of those comments,” he explained, “I regret those stupid comments.”

8. Blamed wounded Walter Reed veterans for the deplorable conditions at the hospital. After a 2007 Washington Post investigation revealed that many soldiers were recuperating from war wounds in moldy rooms infested by rats and cockroaches, Gingrey laregly dismissed the problem. He said at a House Armed Service Committee hearing: “It’s not a five-star hotel, make no mistake about it, but it’s not a flophouse. It’s not a dump. It’s not a dive. It needs some work, no question about it. I’m not making excuses, of course. And when I read the Washington Post report I was glad to know that those cockroaches were belly up. It suggested to me that at least someone was spraying for them, Mr. Chairman. And, of course, if you leave food around in a motel room or a dorm room at a college, you’re going to get some mice show up at some point in time.”

9. Demagogued Obamacare. Gingrey didn’t just oppose the Affordable Care Act — attacked it and spread misinformation about it. Though it was clearly constitutional, Gingrey called the Supreme Court’s ruling upholding it’s constitutionality “one of the worst decisions in Supreme Court history.” He called the law’s long-term care provisions “Dracula,” in need of “a stake through its heart.” Worst, he spread the false claim that the Independent Payment Advisory Board created by the health care law would drive a “wedge between physicians and their patients,” would be able to “operate in secret,” and could “accept unlimited donations of services or even property from lobbyists,” including “cash, meals, cars, vacations and even homes.”

10. Flipped on increasing tax revenues in 67 seconds. When asked by ThinkProgress in December about a possible deal that let tax cuts for the wealthy expire, Gingrey was initially open to the idea: “I hate to make a commitment on anything.” He didn’t want to rule anything out before consulting with constituents in his district. But when reminded that he had signed Grover Norquist’s ironclad oath never raise taxes, Gingrey abruptly shifted his position and agreed to abide by it, confessing: “I don’t take that pledge lightly, so I won’t say that I don’t feel bound by it.” In 2010, he liked his commitment to low taxes for the rich to “God’s covenant with Moses.”

In 2010, Gingrey acknowledged that he did not think the Republican Party would “ever be as big a tent organization as the Democratic Party.” Now, he will have to hope the Georgia GOP primary will be a small enough tent to embrace his right-of-right views and record.

Justice

Anti-Choice Group Hosts Training Program To Teach Republicans How To Talk About Rape

Rep. Phil Gingrey (R-GA)

Last year, Republicans likely lost two U.S. Senate seats because their candidates claimed “legitimate rape” is a form of contraception and that pregnancies resulting from rape are a “gift from God.” Last week, Rep. Phil Gingrey (R-GA) again demonstrated the GOP’s frequent willingness to belittle rape by claiming that former Rep. Todd Akin’s (R-MO) legitimate rape comments were “partly right.”

In the wake of these toxic statements about a horrific crime, a leading anti-abortion group is now leaping to the Republican Party’s rescue with a training program to teach GOP lawmakers how to speak about this subject:

Gingrey’s lengthy explanation of what Akin meant was quickly circulated by Democrats, repudiated by medical groups, and had some Republicans smacking their heads in frustration.

And it may have added new urgency to a training program that’s already being launched by an anti-abortion group — the Susan B. Anthony list — to keep candidates and lawmakers from continually making the same kind of comments that may have helped ruin Republicans’ chances of winning the Senate.

It’s amazing that anyone would need a training program to figure out how to talk about rape. In the words of former Romney adviser Kevin Madden, “[t]his is actually pretty simple. If you’re about to talk about rape as anything other than a brutal and horrible crime, stop.”

Justice

NRA-Backed Republican Congressman Indicates Support For Ammunition Regulation, Background Checks

Rep. Phil Gingrey (R-GA)

GOP Congressman Phil Gingrey (R-GA) on Friday came out in favor of stronger gun laws, particularly a limit on high-capacity magazines and background check requirements.

Gingrey is backed by the National Rifle Association and received their coveted “A+” rating. Despite the fact that it might cause backlash with the financially powerful organization, Gingrey endorsed such stronger gun laws in an interview with the Marietta Daily Journal:

“There are some problems, and maybe these huge magazines even for someone who says, ‘look, I just use an AR-15 for target practice,’ but do you really need to be standing there shooting at a silhouette a shot a second or even quicker with that kind of weapon? For what purpose?” Gingrey asked. “I would be willing to listen to the possibility of the capacity of a magazine.”

Gingrey, who took the time to praise Adventure Outdoors owner Jay Wallace as the gold standard for running a responsible gun retail business, said he is also open to revisions of the so-called gun show loophole.

“What it is basically, if you go to a gun show and there’s somebody out there in the parking lot, and they’re getting out of their car, and they’ve got an A-15 on their shoulder or …. John Q. Public wants to sell a handgun or whatever, then there’s no background check,” Gingrey said. “You know, you’re buying a used weapon from somebody and then basically no background check.

Gingrey’s position indicates that the stronger gun laws Vice President Biden might suggest on Tuesday will enjoy some level of bipartisans support. It also demonstrates that such measures are sensible, and not specifically “Democratic” proposals.

But while Gingrey might be lauded for his approach to sensible gun laws, he might be damned on other issues. In the same interview, the Congressman floated the idea that Todd “legitimate rape” Akin was “partly right” when he said that a woman cannot get pregnant from rape.

(HT: PCCC)

Justice

Republican Congressman Backs Akin’s ‘Legitimate Rape’ Comments: ‘He’s Partly Right’

Rep. Phil Gingrey (R-GA) defended former Rep. Todd Akin (R-MO)’s claim that women who are victims of a “legitimate rape” can’t get pregnant. Speaking to the Marrietta Daily Journal, Gingrey, a doctor who is co-chair of the GOP’s Doctor Caucus, stuck by Akin’s distinction between “legitimate” and “illegitimate rapes”:

And in Missouri, Todd Akin … was asked by a local news source about rape and he said, ‘Look, in a legitimate rape situation’ — and what he meant by legitimate rape was just look, someone can say I was raped: a scared-to-death 15-year-old that becomes impregnated by her boyfriend and then has to tell her parents, that’s pretty tough and might on some occasion say, ‘Hey, I was raped.’ That’s what he meant when he said legitimate rape versus non-legitimate rape. I don’t find anything so horrible about that. But then he went on and said that in a situation of rape, of a legitimate rape, a woman’s body has a way of shutting down so the pregnancy would not occur. He’s partly right on that…

I’ve delivered lots of babies, and I know about these things. It is true. We tell infertile couples all the time that are having trouble conceiving because of the woman not ovulating, ‘Just relax. Drink a glass of wine. And don’t be so tense and uptight because all that adrenaline can cause you not to ovulate.’ So he was partially right wasn’t he?

Gingrey manages to repeat two pernicious falsehoods in short order. First, falsely reported rapes are extremely rare — much rarer than unreported rapes, which often happen because victims are afraid of being called liars by people like Gingrey. Second, rape simply does not lower the risk of pregnancy.

During the 2012 election, several candidates (including Akin, then running for the Senate) made false and insensitive comments about rape. All of them lost.

Not surprisingly, Gingrey has maintained a staunchly anti-choice voting record in the House.

(HT: National Journal.)

Election

Campaign Surrogate Admits Romney Is Changing Positions Just To Win Votes

Mitt Romney campaign surrogate Rep. Phil Gingrey (R-GA) admitted that the GOP presidential candidates was changing his positions and moving towards the middle in order to win over voters, during an appearance on CNN’s Starting Point on Friday morning. Gingrey’s comments, reminiscent of Romney advisor Eric Fehrnstrom’s claim that Romney would “Etch-A-Sketch” his positions after the GOP primary, came in response to the candidate’s recent claim that his 47% remarks were “completely wrong.”

“[T]he Republican, the conservative candidate in the primary, is always going to lean right and come back to the center for the general, the opposite for the Democrat,” Gingrey explained. “That’s all you are seeing here. It is very typical. We strong conservatives understand that. There are a lot of undecideds in this country…we want those votes too. So, this is campaign strategy.” Watch it:

Romney began moving towards the center during Wednesday night’s debate, distancing himself from his $5 trillion tax cut plan, embracing portions of his Massachusetts health care law as a model for the states, faulting Wall Street reform for providing “the biggest kiss that’s been given to New York banks,” and considering eliminating tax deductions for oil companies.

He continued to change his rhetoric on Fox News’ Hannity on Thursday night. Romney described his remarks about the 47% as completely wrong, despite telling Hannity’s colleague Neil Cavuto last month that he stood by the comments.

“This is a message I’m carrying day in and day out and will carry over the coming months,” Romney said after his secretly taped comments calling half of Americans “dependent upon government” surfaced. “I’m talking about a perspective of individuals who I’m not likely to get to support me…. And those that are dependent upon government and those that think government`s job is redistribute, I — I’m not going to get them.”

LGBT

Pro-LGBT Businesses’ PACs Help Bankroll Anti-LGBT U.S. Representatives

Boeing at the 2005 Seattle Pride Parade

Boeing at the Seattle Pride Parade (credit: Michael Hanscom)

Last month, ThinkProgress identified seven U.S. Representatives — all Republicans — who have sponsored or co-sponsored the most anti-LGBT measures in the current Congress.

Reps. Todd Akin (R-MO), Dan Burton (R-IN), Phil Gingrey (R-GA), Vicky Hartzler (R-MO), Tim Huelskamp (R-KS), Doug Lamborn (R-CO), and Donald Manzullo (R-IL) have received a combined $664,894 from ten business PACs — five from otherwise strongly pro-LGBT companies and five from trade associations — since the start of the 2009-2010 campaign cycle.

Business PAC donors to the Anti-Gay 7

The Human Rights Campaign (HRC) publishes an annual Corporate Equality Index, examining how businesses treat gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender employees. The companies connected to the five business PACs all earned high marks in the 2012 report: Northrop Grumman Corporation earned a 75 score (out of 100), Honeywell International and The Boeing Company each earned 85 scores, and AT&T Inc. and Lockheed Martin Corporation garnered perfect 100 ratings.

While HRC does not evaluate trade associations, the American Bankers Association, American Society of Anesthesiologists, and National Association of Realtors all have non-discrimination policies for LGBT employees. Read more

Justice

Republican Congressman Calls Obamacare Ruling ‘One Of The Worst Decisions In Supreme Court History’

Rep. Phil Gingrey (R-GA)

WASHINGTON, D.C. — Minutes after the Supreme Court announced its 5-4 decision upholding the landmark Obamacare law, Rep. Phil Gingrey (R-GA) told ThinkProgress that “this is one of the worst decisions in Supreme Court history.”

KEYES: Do you think this is one of the worst decisions ever?

GINGREY: I think this is one of the worst decisions in Supreme Court history. I still respect the Supreme Court justices, I’m just disappointed bitterly and vehemently disagree with the decision, just like I was in 1973 when Chief Justice Warren Burger sided with the majority on that bone-headed ruling to destroy human life.

Watch it:

There have been a number of awful decisions in Supreme Court history, including the Dred Scott ruling that protected slavery and the Plessy case legalizing racial discrimination. To Gingrey, today’s decision ensuring tens of millions of Americans have access to health care is apparently on par with these rulings.

Earlier this month, Gingrey — an obstetrician-gynecologist who serves as the co-chair of the GOP Doctors Caucus — supported the continuation of the young-adult provision of Obamacare should the bill be struck down, calling it “a good policy.” He also promised to pass individual bills geared towards reducing health costs and preserving coverage for people with pre-existing medical conditions.

In theory, Gingrey should be glad that a law that helps young adults get health insurance, reduces health costs and protects people with pre-existing conditions was upheld today. In reality, he and his Republican colleagues are so vehemently opposed to anything President Obama does that he genuinely believes the ruling could be one of the “worst” ever.

Steven Perlberg contributed to this report.

LGBT

The 7 Most Anti-Gay U.S. Representatives

Rep. Tim Huelskamp (R-KS)

Rep. Tim Huelskamp (R-KS) - The Most Anti-Gay U.S. Representative

So far this Congress, anti-LGBT Republicans have introduced at least ten major anti-gay bills, resolutions, and amendments in the U.S. House of Representatives. While 144 Members of Congress have sponsored or co-sponsored at least one of the proposals, seven signed on to five or more of the pro-discrimination measures, a ThinkProgress analysis reveals.

The most anti-gay member of Congress has been freshman Rep. Tim Huelskamp (R-KS). As the author of his state’s constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriages and civil unions, during his previous tenure as a state senator, his anti-gay fervor in Washington is not unexpected. In his first 18 months, he has authored an amendment to ban a directive that allows military chaplains to voluntarily solemnize same-sex unions, an amendment to “prohibit the use of funds to be used in contravention of the Defense of Marriage Act,” and a bill to ban the use of military facilities for any same-sex unions. He also co-sponsored three measures to criticize the Obama administration for not defending the Defense of Marriage Act, to direct the Speaker of the House to defend the law instead, and to delay implementation of the Don’t Ask Don’t Tell repeal.

Six other House Republicans have each put their name on at least five anti-gay proposals, putting them just behind Huelskamp:

  • Rep. W. Todd Akin (R-MO), a sixth-term Congressman who warned in 2006 that “anybody who knows something about the history of the human race knows that there is no civilization which has condoned homosexual marriage widely and openly that has long survived.”
  • Rep. Dan Burton (R-IN), a fifteenth-term Congressman who is retiring at the end of 2012 and who has previously opined that “Marriage between a man and a woman has been the foundation of human civilization for thousands of years all around the world.”
  • Rep. Phil Gingrey (R-GA), a fifth-term Congressman who has cited God as his reason for supporting an anti-gay constitutional amendment and who said in May “I don’t like the secularism that’s occurring in this country one bit and I think it is incumbent upon those of us [that] stand strong, to stand very strong, in regard to that and say ‘look, [my wife] and I believe that marriage is a sacrament.’”
  • Rep. Vicky Hartzler (R-MO), a first-term Congresswoman who was spokeswoman for the anti-gay constitutional amendment effort in Missouri and has compared same-sex marriage to pedophilia and letting three-year-olds drive cars.
  • Rep. Doug Lamborn (R-CO), a third-term Republican who came under fire for racially insensitive comments that associating with President Obama was like “touching a tar-baby.”
  • Rep. Donald A. Manzullo (R-IL), a tenth-term Congressman who recently lost renomination after reportedly telling House Republican Leader Eric Cantor (VA) that the devout Jew was not “saved.”

Fourteen more House Republicans sponsored or co-sponsored at least four of the proposals. Just one Democrat co-sponsored any of the anti-gay measures — Rep. Mike McIntyre (NC), who co-sponsored a proposed constitutional amendment to anti-gay marriage. The other 143 anti-gay activists were all Republicans.

The House Republican leadership has also committed $1.5 million in taxpayer funds to defend the Defense of Marriage Act in court. While Speaker of the House John Boehner (R-OH) has downplayed his party’s focus on social issues, preferring to talk about jobs, it’s clear where he and his caucus are really focused.

Read more

NEWS FLASH

Republican Rep. Who Denounced ‘African Americans For Obama’ Group Silent On ‘Juntos Con Romney’ | Rep. Phil Gingrey (R-GA) turned heads in April when he attacked the “African Americans for Obama” group as “worse than sad.” He accused Obama of using “that and to go out and try to create divisiveness or one race against the other.” Today, Mitt Romney announced his Latino outreach group in 15 states, “Juntos con Romney” (“Together with Romney”). ThinkProgress contacted Gingrey’s office to see if he was similarly outraged, but he has yet to respond.

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