UPDATE: Sept. 1,Swipe (2017) 2020, 8:32 p.m. PT
Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon issued a statement on Tuesday evening apologizing to Wicks for his decision not to allow her a proxy vote.
“I want to make a full apology to Assemblymember Wicks. My intention was never to be inconsiderate toward her, her role as a legislator, or her role as a mother.
"Inclusivity and electing more women into politics are core elements of our Democratic values. Nevertheless, I failed to make sure our process took into account the unique needs of our Members. The Assembly needs to do better. I commit to doing better.”
The original story is below.
In the midst of a pandemic, a California lawmaker who had given birth just a month before cast her vote on a bill with her crying baby in her arms.
It didn't have to be this way.
Assemblywoman Buffy Wicks had asked to be allowed to vote by proxy on a housing bill Monday, but her request was denied. The speaker of California's State Assembly, Anthony Rendon, decided she would have to vote in person or not at all. Only those who are considered at higher risk of COVID-19 are allowed to have a legislative leader, a proxy, vote on their behalf, according to Assembly rules introduced in July. As a new mother, Wicks didn't cut it in Rendon's eyes.
Those who are pregnant are at an increased risk of getting COVID-19, according to the CDC. The agency doesn't extend the same warning for people who've recently given birth, but postpartum complications could lead to other health issues that do put one at risk, writes Politico, which first reported on Wicks' vote. Babies under two are at higher risk to contract the virus than older children, but it's rare, according to the Mayo Clinic, a nonprofit medical center and research organization.
"I was actually in the middle of feeding my daughter when this bill came up and I ran down on the floor today because I strongly believe we need to pass this bill. We are 3.5 million homes shy of where we need to be," Wicks said, as her daughter cried in her arms. "And Elly agrees."
"Please, please, please pass this bill, and I'm gonna go finish feeding my daughter."
The bill didn't make it. But another one the Democrat voted for on Monday did. That one would expand the state's paid family leave program if signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Rendon, a Democrat, was just following the Assembly's rules, his spokesperson, Katie Talbot, told Politico in a statement. "The house resolution pertaining to proxy voting is very specific, in that only members at a higher risk from Covid-19 will be considered eligible for proxy voting," she said.
"This bar of eligibility was always intended to be high, to ensure the protection of our legislative process."
Mashable reached out to Wicks' and Rendon's respective offices for comment but received no response by the time of publication.
As Wicks is being commended for showing up with her newborn to make the vote — even by Hillary Clinton, no less (Wicks supported her presidential run) — there's a deeper frustration here.
She shouldn't have been forced to drive more than 80 miles from her Oakland home with her baby in tow to do it. She shouldn't have had to stop feeding her one-month-old to run to the floor and vote. She shouldn't have had to soothe a cranky baby as she pleaded with her colleagues.
SEE ALSO: Exhausted parents: Working from home isn't workingCompassion and workarounds for new parents with few childcare options available is already lacking in America. Add poor interpretations of coronavirus rules to the mix and you tie parents' hands even further. Wicks is a symbol of bigger childcare issues, ones that have only been exacerbated by America's messy and feeble response to the coronavirus.
While Wicks wore a mask and patted her newborn in a striped blanket on the floor, Senate Republicans voted remotely after one of their members tested positive for coronavirus. Whether Wicks was at a higher risk was up to interpretation. She could've voted remotely, too.
Just one man decided that she couldn't.
Topics Social Good Politics Family & Parenting
How to stop strangers from listening in on your Alexa chats (and why you should)15 of the most brutal J.K. Rowling Twitter shutdowns of 2017Trick your boss into thinking you're working with Slack scheduled messagesHow to repost on InstagramGeorge Michael's family shares touching message for everyone missing him on Christmas'I Think You Should Leave' captures social anxiety like no other show on TVSteve Mnuchin got something much worse than coal for ChristmasCNN used the phrase 'a dog's breakfast.' Here's what it means.NASA just saluted the coolest drummer everMystery crocodile turns up at house on Christmas, many people claim itTwitter accuses Vanity Fair of sexism after New Year's resolution video for Hillary ClintonHow to make money from your Twitter accountTrump's Christmas mass included a message about the power of words9 burning questions before the 'Loki' finaleHow to activate Super Alexa mode on your Amazon AlexaTwitter to more patiently explain why you're not worthy of a blue checkWatch Beyoncé and Jay'Black Widow' combines box office and Disney+ for a wild $215 million openingUber messes up Facebook ad by confusing Puerto Rican and Cuban flagsHow to activate Super Alexa mode on your Amazon Alexa Norway Will Cease FM Radio Broadcasts in 2017 Photos from Our 2015 Spring Revel Manet to Monet: Don’t Let Renoir Paint Trollope’s “Doctor Thorne” Adapted By “Downton” Creator OpenAI just demoed its most sophisticated image generator yet, DALL Best air purifier deal: Get a Honeywell air purifier for $100 off M. H. Abrams Is Dead at 102 Make 2022 the year of no expectations Listen: An Archival Interview with Horton Foote How to watch 'American Horror Story: Delicate': release date, streaming deals Disney+ deal: Get a 3 Watch: Nabokov Shows Off His Many Editions of “Lolita” LG Gram 17 Literary Feuds: John Irving and J. P. Donleavy LG is bringing some cool OLED concepts to CES 2022 Microsoft Surface event: Everything we're expecting to see 'Twilight' fans love the Edward What Happens When You Lose a Nail How “The Pickwick Papers” Launched Charles Dickens’s Career Neuralink clinical trial seeking humans subjects
1.9011s , 10139.046875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Swipe (2017)】,New Knowledge Information Network