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Rep. Gwen Moore (D-Wis.) is the lead VAWA sponsor in the House.
After decades of bipartisan support, the Violence Against Women Act expired a few weeks ago, after House Republicans blocked a bipartisan Senate bill that would have kept the law alive. For supporters of the 1994 law, which assists victims of domestic and sexual violence, the GOP's indifference to VAWA was outrageous.
But the fight isn't over. This week, Sens. Pat Leahy (D-Vt.) and Mike Crapo (R-Idaho), the lead sponsors of VAWA reauthorization in the last Congress, introduced their bill again, and yesterday, Rep. Gwen Moore (D-Wis.), herself a victim of domestic assault, introduced an identical measure in the House.
So, is there reason to hope this effort will fare better than last year's bill? Yes. For one thing, as Adam Serwer reported, the new VAWA proposal resolves some procedural concerns House Republicans used as an excuse to ignore the Senate version.
Many Republicans opposed over the bill's increased number of visas for undocumented victims of domestic violence, its extension of tribal authority over nontribe members who abuse their American Indian partners, or its establishment of employment protections for gay and lesbian domestic-violence workers. But the GOP's main talking point against the bill was procedural: Pointing to an application fee for visas for undocumented immigrants of domestic violence, Republicans said the bill raised revenue. The Constitution requires bills that raise revenue to originate in the House, not the Senate.
The new version of the bill resolves the House GOP's procedural objection by removing the portion that would have increased the number of special visas allotted for undocumented immigrant victims of domestic violence. Law enforcement uses them to grant legal status to undocumented victims so that those victims can assist in prosecuting their attackers, who might otherwise use their lack of legal status as leverage to keep them silent.
Victims' advocates are hardly thrilled that the provision on law-enforcement visas has been dropped, but they hope to see it resolved in a separate bill -- specifically, comprehensive immigration reform.
What's more, proponents seem to have a larger legislative strategy in mind, designed to overcome far-right opposition.
Sahil Kapur reported that the plan is to "isolate" VAWA critics to secure majority support.
In a series of moves Wednesday that effectively isolate House Republicans, a bipartisan group of senators and House Democrats unveiled companion bills to reauthorize the Violence Against Women Act. [...]
The Senate Republicans flanking Democrats were Sens. Mike Crapo (R-ID), Kelly Ayotte (R-NH) and Susan Collins (R-ME) — all VAWA co-sponsors.
"This is not a partisan issue," said Collins. "It cannot be a partisan issue."
"As you can see from the representation here," said Crapo, "it's on a bipartisan basis that we have support for this in the Senate.... We're going to get it done."
At this point, the House GOP has run out of excuses.





Ann Romney loves women, so maybe she can help out...
No doubt there will be some members of the House who will find other reasons for objecting to the bill. It makes no difference how many times the bill is amended and passed in the Senate. The radical right has an opinion looking for a justification.
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True colors shining through for the GOP obstructionists! It is unbelievable that in 2013, in the United States of America, that elected "leaders" can behave so very, very badly. How is it that this was allowed to sunset -- procedural?! then fix it.
Good to be brought up again -- but really!
Also, the law/order set ought to be supportive of anything that assists law enforcement and prosecution of crimes, so why the resistance to special visa provision?!
Every one of those "leaders" mothers, grandmothers, daughters, sisters, aunts, wives -- ought to call them out on this.
Another way to get around the procedural problems of a revenue bill is to designate the visas for those who are abused to be gratis. Of course, that would explode so many heads on the right that we would have to have a mass grave the size of a football field.
Thanks for continuing to follow the VAWA story. I’ve been doing domestic violence policy work for several years, and this is definitely the most ink the bill has ever gotten. Hopefully continued reporting will pressure the House to get their act together. Passing a strong VAWA is in both parties’ best interest. Its programs are relatively cheap, they reduce crime, and constituents don’t like it when you pick on vulnerable populations. I can’t imagine what the GOP was thinking with this.
Amazing how the State of Wisconsin can produce a lazy dimwit blowhard like Sen. Ron Johnson and at the same time produce an intelligent, energetic, classy Rep. Gwen Moore.
Why does one group of people (women) need special protections against another group (men) to the point of hysteria and disregard for presumption of innocence? Why can a man be kicked out of his house, thrown into jail, forbidden to see his kids without any evidence, simply from an accuser's word? VAWA is a discriminatory law, which needs to be seriously rewritten or abolished. Enough is enough
Thank you Anton. How about a Violence against Men Act for equal time.
Granted some of this won't make it to the final revision, it originally cost $1.6 billion, how much this time? Did that include setting up the new Office on Violence Against Women, do we really need more special offices and departments? Billions in grants? Seems pretty sexist to grant women, gays, and now illegal immigrants special rights and privileges.
Where are the Equal Rights folks now? Lets face it people, this just another office, commission, task force, or department with a well meaning name that simple grows on its own to mainly support the people that work there. More studies, more grants, more paperwork- no results. We can't afford anymore crap like this.
We need a Department of Getting Rod of Sh!t.