[It is by
no means the final word in the growth-versus-austerity fight that has been
under way for two years. Even with the future of the European currency union in
doubt, Germany has insisted that Europe ’s
ailing economies tackle their financial problems through spending cuts, a
policy that critics say has caused higher unemployment, brought Greece to the edge of bankruptcy and worsened the crises in Spain and Italy . ]
By Helene Cooper
Pointedly recognizing “that the right measures are not the
same for each of us,” the leaders of the Group of
8 nations, at a
meeting hosted by Mr. Obama at Camp David, committed to “take all necessary
steps” to strengthen their economies. They said they wanted to keep Greece in the euro zone and vowed to work to promote growth in Europe ,
though behind the scenes distinct differences remained over what kinds of
stimulus policies to pursue.
“Our imperative,” the leaders said in their statement, “is
to promote growth and jobs.”
It is by no means the final word in the
growth-versus-austerity fight that has been under way for two years. Even with
the future of the European currency union in doubt, Germany has insisted that Europe ’s
ailing economies tackle their financial problems through spending cuts, a
policy that critics say has caused higher unemployment, brought Greece to the edge of bankruptcy and worsened the crises in Spain and Italy .
The leaders did concede somewhat to Ms. Merkel’s position
on austerity, acknowledging that national budget deficits had to be addressed.
But they added that spending cuts must “take into account countries’ evolving
economic conditions and underpin confidence and economy recovery,” a
recognition of how much the austerity packages have dampened consumer and
political confidence in Europe .
Also, in a warning to Iran, the leaders pledged to take
steps to guarantee continued oil supplies after an oil embargo against Iran
begins on July 1.While Greece is not part of the Group of 8 — the club is made
up of the United States, France, Germany, Britain, Italy, Canada, Japan and
Russia — the political and economic crisis facing Athens hovered over the
meeting. Greece has been unable to form a government after voters, angry
over austerity measures, brought down the last government, and there is now
talk of bringing back the drachma and abandoning the euro.
Ms. Merkel and Mr. Obama met privately after the meeting
ended. In her public remarks, the German chancellor said that growth and
deficit-cutting reinforced each other, and that “we have to work on both paths,
and the participants have made that clear, and I think that is great progress.”
With his own re-election bid tied to a fragile American
economic recovery that could easily reverse if Europe ’s
economy takes another turn for the worse, Mr. Obama was pushing hard on
Saturday for a euro-zone growth package. American officials said they hoped
that after the full-court press this weekend at Camp David, Ms. Merkel would be
more amenable to the pro-growth argument when she meets with European leaders
this week at a summit to come up with specific steps to fight rising debt while
spurring the economy.
The last time world leaders met to discuss the European
debt crisis, in Cannes last November, the French president at the time, Nicolas
Sarkozy, joined with Ms. Merkel to push Italy to stick to an austerity package. But the tone was
different this time. Mr. Sarkozy lost his re-election bid to François Hollande,
who came into office last week promising to focus on growth. And even before
they showed up at Camp David to gang up on Ms. Merkel, Mr. Hollande and Mr. Obama had
forged a new alliance at a prearranged meeting at the White House to focus on
growth.
In comments to reporters afterward, Mr. Obama said that the
group needed to discuss “a responsible approach to fiscal consolidation that is
coupled with a strong growth agenda.”
“If a company is forced to cut back in Paris or Madrid , that might mean less business for workers in Pittsburgh or Milwaukee ,” Mr. Obama said to explain why the European crisis
matters to the United
States . He
said that while Europe ’s predicament is “more complicated” since it requires
coordination among multiple governments, steps his own government took to blunt
the impact of the American financial crisis in 2008 and 2009, including the
stimulus, can stand as an example for Europe .
In a tense meeting here at this storied presidential
retreat, it seemed at times as if it was Ms. Merkel — who faces stiff
opposition at home to more bailouts of its neighbors by German taxpayers —
against the world. Things did not seem to get off to a good start either on
Friday night, as Mr. Obama greeted his guests for dinner in a rustic wood
cabin.
“How’ve you been?” Mr. Obama asked Ms. Merkel.
She shrugged and pursed her lips.
“Well, you have a few things on your mind,” Mr. Obama said
consolingly.
Mike Froman, Mr. Obama’s top adviser on international
economic affairs, was careful not to publicly single out Ms. Merkel and Germany when talking to reporters after the meeting. The debate
over austerity vs. growth, he said, “has been going on for some time, and we
welcome the evolution on that debate.”
But it remains unclear how far Ms. Merkel will go, despite
the pressure from other leaders. Ms. Merkel on Saturday was fresh from a war of
words with Greece over that country’s continued membership in the euro, with
Greek politicians complaining that Ms. Merkel had suggested a referendum asking
Greece whether it wanted to stay in the euro, a claim that a
spokesman for Ms. Merkel has denied.
Separately, the leaders also said they “stand ready” to
call on the International Energy Agency to take appropriate action to guarantee
oil supplies if prices spike. “There have been increasing disruptions in the
supply of oil to the global market over the past several months, which pose a
substantial risk to global economic growth,” the group said in a statement.
The oil statement was meant to reassure oil markets that
nations will consider tapping into their oil reserves if there is a supply
shortage. It is particularly meant to send a warning to Iran — which is the target of an oil embargo to begin July 1 as
part of the western effort to rein in Tehran ’s nuclear ambitions — that the West will work to
counteract high oil prices once the sanctions go into effect. Finally, it is
meant to reassure countries like India and China that they will not be hurt by higher prices once the
sanctions begin.
Still, American officials expressed optimism that
negotiations with Iran
over its nuclear program, which are set to reopen at
the end of the month in Baghdad , might be productive.
The intimate setting of the meeting — in secluded Camp
David, where the leaders slept in cabins and their attendants shared rooms —
allowed for a more relaxed atmosphere, White House officials said.
Mr. Obama and Prime Minister David Cameron of Britain were on treadmills early Saturday morning discussing ways
to help ease the debt crisis.
“Nobody felt defensive or put on the defense,” Mr. Froman
said, disputing reports that Ms. Merkel was isolated.
[But just last Wednesday, Mr.
Boehner refuted his own argument by ramming through the House a bill that
seriously weakens the Violence Against Women Act. That followed the Republican
push in Virginia and elsewhere to
require medically unnecessary and physically invasive sonograms before an
abortion, and Senate Republicans’ persistent blocking of a measure to better
address the entrenched problem of sex-based wage discrimination.]
Despite the persistent gender gap
in opinion polls and mounting criticism of their hostility to women’s rights,
Republicans are not backing off their assault on women’s equality and
well-being. New laws in some states could mean a death sentence for a pregnant
woman who suffers a life-threatening condition. But the attack goes well beyond
abortion, into birth control, access to health care, equal pay and domestic
violence.
Republicans seem immune to criticism.
In an angry speech last month, John Boehner, the House speaker, said claims
that his party was damaging the welfare of women were “entirely created” by
Democrats. Earlier, the Republican National Committee chairman, Reince Priebus,
sneered that any suggestion of a G.O.P. “war on women” was as big a fiction as
a “war on caterpillars.”
But just last Wednesday, Mr.
Boehner refuted his own argument by ramming through the House a bill that
seriously weakens the Violence Against Women Act. That followed the Republican
push in Virginia and elsewhere to require medically unnecessary and physically
invasive sonograms before an abortion, and Senate Republicans’ persistent
blocking of a measure to better address the entrenched problem of sex-based
wage discrimination.
On Capitol Hill and in state
legislatures, Republicans are attacking women’s rights in four broad areas.
ABORTION
On Thursday, a House
subcommittee denied the District of Columbia ’s
Democratic delegate, Eleanor Holmes Norton, a chance to testify at a hearing
called to promote a proposed federal ban on nearly all abortions in the
District 20 weeks after fertilization. The bill flouts the Roe v. Wade standard
of fetal viability.
Seven states have enacted similar
measures. In Arizona , Gov. Jan
Brewer signed a law that bans most abortions two weeks earlier. Each measure
will create real hardships for women who will have to decide whether to
terminate a pregnancy before learning of major fetal abnormalities or risks to
their own health.
These laws go a cruel step
further than the familiar Republican attacks on Roe v. Wade. They omit
reasonable exceptions for a woman’s health or cases of rape, incest or grievous
fetal impairment. These laws would require a woman seeking an abortion to be
near death, a standard that could easily delay medical treatment until it is
too late.
All contain intimidating criminal
penalties, fines and reporting requirements designed to scare doctors away.
Last year, the House passed a measure that would have allowed hospitals
receiving federal money to refuse to perform an emergency abortion even when a
woman’s life was at stake. The Senate has not taken up that bill, fortunately.
ACCESS TO HEALTH CARE
Governor
Brewer also recently signed a bill eliminating public funding for Planned
Parenthood. Arizona law already
barred spending public money on abortions, which are in any case a small part
of the services that Planned Parenthood provides. The new bill denies the
organization public money for nonabortion services, like cancer screening and
family planning, often the only services of that kind available to poor women.
Gov. Rick Perry of Texas
and the state’s Republican-dominated Legislature tried a similar thing in 2011,
and were sued in federal court by a group of clinics. The state argues that it
is trying to deny money to organizations that “promote” abortions. That is
nonsense. Texas already did not
give taxpayer money for abortions, and the clinics that sued do not perform
abortions.
Last year, the newly installed
House Republican majority rushed to pass bills (stopped by the Democratic-led
Senate) to eliminate funding for Planned Parenthood and Title X. That federal
program provides millions of women with birth control, lifesaving screening for
breast and cervical cancer, and other preventive care. It is a highly effective
way of preventing the unintended pregnancies and abortions that Republicans
claim to be so worried about.
EQUAL PAY
Gov. Scott Walker of Wisconsin ,
the epicenter of all kinds of punitive and regressive legislation, signed the
repeal of a 2009 law that allowed women and others to bring lawsuits in state
courts against pay discrimination, instead of requiring them to be heard as
slower and more costly federal cases. It also stiffened penalties for employers
found guilty of discrimination.
He defended that bad decision by
saying he did not want those suits to “clog up the legal system.” He turned
that power over to his government, which has a record of hostility toward
workers’ rights.
President Obama has been trying
for three years to update and bolster the 1963 Equal Pay Act to enhance
remedies for victims of gender-based wage discrimination, shield employees from
retaliation for sharing salary information with co-workers, and mandate that
employers show that wage differences are job-related, not sex-based, and driven
by business necessity.
DOMESTIC VIOLENCE
Last month, the
Senate approved a reauthorization of the Violence Against Women Act, designed
to protect victims of domestic and sexual abuse and bring their abusers to
justice. The disappointing House bill omits new protections for gay, Indian,
student and immigrant abuse victims that are contained in the bipartisan Senate
bill. It also rolls back protections for immigrant women whose status is
dependent on a spouse, making it more likely that they will stay with their abusers,
at real personal risk, and ends existing protections for undocumented
immigrants who report abuse and cooperate with law enforcement to pursue the
abuser.
Whether this pattern of
disturbing developments constitutes a war on women is a political argument.
That women’s rights and health are casualties of Republican policy is
indisputable.