By Sikivu Hutchinson
When George W. Bush was in office he provided a robust platform and bully pulpit for
Christian conservatives, creating the Faith Based Initiatives office, letting his
“born again” status guide imperialist Middle East policy, condemning abortion
and same sex marriage, and cozying up with prominent white evangelicals. Shortly
before Bush left office, liberal religious leader Jim Wallis proclaimed in Time Magazine that the Religious Right’s era was over and a “new
age” of progressive faith-based politics was nigh. Evangelicals, Wallis declared,
were “leaving the Religious Right in droves”.
Has Wallis had a sit down with his white middle
American evangelical brethren lately?
In the years since his lofty claims Religious Right
Christian fascism has come roaring back with a vengeance, renewing its voice
and impact under the white supremacist ethos of Donald Trump. Outpacing Bush, the Trump administration is
shaping up to be the most militantly fundamentalist Christian-aligned
administration in American history. Case in point is the newly minted “Conscience
and Religious Freedom” division of the Department of Health and Human Services’
Office of Civil Rights, the administration’s latest and most insidious weapon to
dismantle abortion rights and LGBTQI rights.
Trump’s appointment of Catholic attorney and notorious
abortion foe Roger Severino to head the division is exhibit A in the advancement
of a far right, Christian fundamentalist agenda to reverse Obama-era civil
rights protections. Severino joins Betsy
DeVos and Ben Carson in Trump’s mob of fundamentalist ideologues masquerading
as civil rights defenders. His crusade
to defend “religious freedom” as the preeminent right (he’s dubbed it the “first
right”) has elicited backlash among LGBTQI activists and community-based organizations
fighting against the systematic denial of health care to transgender patients. According to the 2015 U.S. Transgender
survey, transgender adults routinely
experience health care discrimination by providers. Religious providers have
often claimed that they oppose serving transgender patients on the grounds that
they would be forced to do gender transition surgeries. However, a Center for American
Progress report found that most trans patients were discriminated
against by health providers on the basis of their gender identities rather than
surgery.
The new HHS civil rights office bolsters
the reactionary direction of state and regional public policy in red states on
abortion and LGBTQI rights. Last year, political pressure forced the closure of
Planned Parenthood facilities in Wyoming and North Dakota—making them the only
two states in the U.S. without clinics. Closures of Planned Parenthood facilities
in the Southwest and Midwest are especially harmful to the socioeconomic
stability of working class and low-income families of color for whom access to abortion
services, birth control and health screening are life and death matters.
Following this trend, the Mississippi legislature
recently passed a bill that would ban abortions at 15 weeks, making it the
most draconian anti-abortion law in the nation. Applauding the bill,
Mississippi Governor Phil Bryant said that it would cause the state to be the
“safest place for an unborn child” in the country. Bryant’s lie is all the more
enraging when one considers that Mississippi has consistently been ranked last in health care provision and
has one of the highest poverty rates in the nation.
Going against the Trump tide of Christian fascism, the
California Assembly recently voted to approve SB320,
which would allow funding for medication abortion at public universities. If
passed by the full California legislature, SB320 would provide abortion access
to students and make it easier for them to continue their education and
graduate from college. SB320 is
especially important due to the high concentration of working class and low-income
women of color who attend public universities and often rely on their schools
for primary care. For example, African American students in the Cal State
system have the highest rate of food insecurity and homelessness. These socioeconomic factors make it more
likely that they will rely on health care at K-12 public schools and colleges. In addition, the disturbing proliferation of
crisis pregnancy centers (CPCs) in working class communities of color also makes
passage of the bill imperative for public school students.
The Supreme Court is currently weighing a case (NIFLA vs.
Becerra) brought by CPCs that challenges a 2015 California law requiring them
to inform clients that they aren’t medically licensed practitioners. Under the
law, these fraudulent facilities must also apprise women of “all family
planning and pregnancy-related services” including abortion. According to a new report
by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine, 61% of those utilizing
abortion care in 2014 were women of color, making the crackdown by HHS and red
state legislatures all the more perilous for the socioeconomic future of
communities of color.
Trump’s strategic alliances with professional
antiabortion crusaders and Christian fascists will fundamentally reshape the
U.S.’ public policy and medical climate for decades to come. This makes it all the more important for
gender justice educators and activists of color to work strategically with
young women of color in schools, communities, cultural centers and statehouses
to fight for reproductive justice and LGBTQI health access as non-negotiable
human rights.
Sikivu Hutchinson is the author of Moral Combat: Black Atheists, Gender Politics, and the Values Wars (2011), Godless Americana: Race and Religious Rebels, (2013) and the novel, play and film short White Nights, Black Paradise (2015), on Peoples Temple and the 1978 Jonestown massacre. Her forthcoming novel Rock ‘n’ Roll Heretic: The Life and Times of Rory Tharpe, is due in the fall of 2018. Twitter @sikivuhutch