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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsRumored Romney Running Mate Marco Rubio Votes No On Violence Against Women Act
Senator Marco Rubio, the Republican rumored possible running mate for presumptive GOP presidential nominee Mitt Romney today voted against the Violence Against Women Act (VAWA), which has passed time and time again in a bipartisan fashion for decades. this year the VAWA became a partisan nightmare for Republicans, who opposed extending protections to LGBT people, immigrants, and Native Americans. Because violence against some women is deplorable, but apparently, not all women are equal in the eyes of the GOP.
The House is slated to take up a similar but less-comprehensive bill, and, if passed, the two will have to be hammered out in committee. President Obama, who supports the updated reauthorization, is expected to sign the bill.
No Democrat voted against the bill, and 15 Republicans reached across the aisle to join Democrats in voting to pass the bill.
http://thenewcivilrightsmovement.com/rumored-romney-running-mate-marco-rubio-votes-no-on-violence-against-women-act/news/2012/04/26/38626
Bolo Boffin
(23,796 posts)I think he's much more likely to be the veep nominee than Rubio.
longship
(40,416 posts)Doubling down again.
Laura PourMeADrink
(42,770 posts)Florida Sen. Marco Rubio may be on the short list to be the Republican VP nominee, but he took a risk in voting against the Violence Against Women Act on Thursday.
Notably, two other potential Mitt Romney running mates -- Rob Portman of Ohio and Kelly Ayotte of New Hampshire -- voted for the measure, which was approved by a 68-31 vote. Fifteen Republicans out of the 47-member Senate GOP Conference voted for the bill.
Rubio says he supports reauthorizing the law and hopes to vote "yes" when a House-Senate version returns for a final vote.
But Rubio said he voted against the Senate plan because it would "divert" funding away from domestic violence programs to sexual assault cases, "without any evidence that the increased funding will result in" further prosecutions. He said it gave the Justice Department too much power at the expense of state groups and added that it didn't address other federal programs that are duplicative.
Rubio's office says the freshman senator was siding with the group Florida Coalition Against Domestic Violence, which raised concerns about the measure.
Whether that's enough to diffuse potential attacks in the heat of a presidential campaign remains to be seen.