Re: DRAFT: OH Organizing Event
Seems indisputable to me.Okay. If policy is okay, I am.
Sent from my iPhoneShe hasn't said these words:"Demanding an end to the epidemic of violence against transgender women of color in this country is a women’s issue."
On Wed, Sep 9, 2015 at 9:03 PM, Jennifer Palmieri <jpalmieri@hillaryclinton.com> wrote:Which one hasn't she said?
Sent from my iPhoneAdding a few more people - I also wanted to flag this line, which she has not said before:· Standing up and saying loudly and clearly that yes, black lives matter – that’s a women’s issue, too. And demanding an end to the epidemic of violence against transgender women of color in this country is a women’s issue.
On Wed, Sep 9, 2015 at 8:13 PM, Lauren Peterson <lpeterson@hillaryclinton.com> wrote:Hi everyone -Sending around TPs for the OH organizing event. Planning to send to the book at 9 with any edits that come in before then, but will also look for edits overnight.Please note that this includes a section on paid leave and a jab at Kasich. I've copied that section below.Thank you!LP###· The movement of women into the American workforce over the past 40 years drove more than $3.5 trillion in economic growth. But today, that progress has stalled.
· Studies show that nearly a third of America’s decline relative to other countries is because they’re expanding family-friendly policies like paid leave. And we’re not.
· Take your own Governor Kasich. When he was in Congress, he voted against the Family and Medical Leave Act – not once, but twice.
· I was proud to champion the Family and Medical Leave Act. And I was proud to stand by my husband’s side when he made it the first law he signed as president. Since then, it’s been used more than 200 million times. That’s 200 million times someone has been able to keep their job while spending time with a family member who needed them. It’s also 200 million more times than it would have been used if then-Congressman Kasich had his way.
· FMLA is a great start. But it’s not enough to guarantee that you won’t lose your job for taking time to be with a sick family member – not when too many people still can’t afford to lose a paycheck.
· Just this week the US Department of Labor released a report showing that if the US had the same percentage of women in the workforce as Germany or Canada, we would see an estimated 5 million more women per year in the workforce.
· That’s why I’ve made paid leave central to my campaign. And it’s why I’ll keep fighting for it as president.
· Every worker deserves up to 12 weeks of paid family leave to care for a new baby or a seriously ill family member. Every worker should be able to earn 7 paid sick days.
· I will work to be the president who brings America into this century – because we cannot afford to be the only country that provides no paid leave for any reason.
· Here in Ohio, 42 percent of workers have no access to paid sick days. That’s 2.2 million Ohioans who can’t take the day off to recover from the flu or care for a sick child without losing a paycheck or even their job. And Governor Kasich has done nothing about it.
<2015-09-10 WI Organizing Event 8pm.docx>
· The movement of women into the American workforce over the past 40 years drove more than $3.5 trillion in economic growth. But today, that progress has stalled.
· Studies show that nearly a third of America’s decline relative to other countries is because they’re expanding family-friendly policies like paid leave. And we’re not.
· Take your own Governor Kasich. When he was in Congress, he voted against the Family and Medical Leave Act – not once, but twice.
· I was proud to champion the Family and Medical Leave Act. And I was proud to stand by my husband’s side when he made it the first law he signed as president. Since then, it’s been used more than 200 million times. That’s 200 million times someone has been able to keep their job while spending time with a family member who needed them. It’s also 200 million more times than it would have been used if then-Congressman Kasich had his way.
· FMLA is a great start. But it’s not enough to guarantee that you won’t lose your job for taking time to be with a sick family member – not when too many people still can’t afford to lose a paycheck.
· Just this week the US Department of Labor released a report showing that if the US had the same percentage of women in the workforce as Germany or Canada, we would see an estimated 5 million more women per year in the workforce.
· That’s why I’ve made paid leave central to my campaign. And it’s why I’ll keep fighting for it as president.
· Every worker deserves up to 12 weeks of paid family leave to care for a new baby or a seriously ill family member. Every worker should be able to earn 7 paid sick days.
· I will work to be the president who brings America into this century – because we cannot afford to be the only country that provides no paid leave for any reason.
· Here in Ohio, 42 percent of workers have no access to paid sick days. That’s 2.2 million Ohioans who can’t take the day off to recover from the flu or care for a sick child without losing a paycheck or even their job. And Governor Kasich has done nothing about it.
· Standing up and saying loudly and clearly that yes, black lives matter – that’s a women’s issue, too. And demanding an end to the epidemic of violence against transgender women of color in this country is a women’s issue.
Hi everyone -Sending around TPs for the OH organizing event. Planning to send to the book at 9 with any edits that come in before then, but will also look for edits overnight.Please note that this includes a section on paid leave and a jab at Kasich. I've copied that section below.Thank you!LP###· The movement of women into the American workforce over the past 40 years drove more than $3.5 trillion in economic growth. But today, that progress has stalled.
· Studies show that nearly a third of America’s decline relative to other countries is because they’re expanding family-friendly policies like paid leave. And we’re not.
· Take your own Governor Kasich. When he was in Congress, he voted against the Family and Medical Leave Act – not once, but twice.
· I was proud to champion the Family and Medical Leave Act. And I was proud to stand by my husband’s side when he made it the first law he signed as president. Since then, it’s been used more than 200 million times. That’s 200 million times someone has been able to keep their job while spending time with a family member who needed them. It’s also 200 million more times than it would have been used if then-Congressman Kasich had his way.
· FMLA is a great start. But it’s not enough to guarantee that you won’t lose your job for taking time to be with a sick family member – not when too many people still can’t afford to lose a paycheck.
· Just this week the US Department of Labor released a report showing that if the US had the same percentage of women in the workforce as Germany or Canada, we would see an estimated 5 million more women per year in the workforce.
· That’s why I’ve made paid leave central to my campaign. And it’s why I’ll keep fighting for it as president.
· Every worker deserves up to 12 weeks of paid family leave to care for a new baby or a seriously ill family member. Every worker should be able to earn 7 paid sick days.
· I will work to be the president who brings America into this century – because we cannot afford to be the only country that provides no paid leave for any reason.
· Here in Ohio, 42 percent of workers have no access to paid sick days. That’s 2.2 million Ohioans who can’t take the day off to recover from the flu or care for a sick child without losing a paycheck or even their job. And Governor Kasich has done nothing about it.
Sent from my iPhone
Adding a few more people - I also wanted to flag this line, which she has not said before:· Standing up and saying loudly and clearly that yes, black lives matter – that’s a women’s issue, too. And demanding an end to the epidemic of violence against transgender women of color in this country is a women’s issue.
On Wed, Sep 9, 2015 at 8:13 PM, Lauren Peterson <lpeterson@hillaryclinton.com> wrote:Hi everyone -Sending around TPs for the OH organizing event. Planning to send to the book at 9 with any edits that come in before then, but will also look for edits overnight.Please note that this includes a section on paid leave and a jab at Kasich. I've copied that section below.Thank you!LP###· The movement of women into the American workforce over the past 40 years drove more than $3.5 trillion in economic growth. But today, that progress has stalled.
· Studies show that nearly a third of America’s decline relative to other countries is because they’re expanding family-friendly policies like paid leave. And we’re not.
· Take your own Governor Kasich. When he was in Congress, he voted against the Family and Medical Leave Act – not once, but twice.
· I was proud to champion the Family and Medical Leave Act. And I was proud to stand by my husband’s side when he made it the first law he signed as president. Since then, it’s been used more than 200 million times. That’s 200 million times someone has been able to keep their job while spending time with a family member who needed them. It’s also 200 million more times than it would have been used if then-Congressman Kasich had his way.
· FMLA is a great start. But it’s not enough to guarantee that you won’t lose your job for taking time to be with a sick family member – not when too many people still can’t afford to lose a paycheck.
· Just this week the US Department of Labor released a report showing that if the US had the same percentage of women in the workforce as Germany or Canada, we would see an estimated 5 million more women per year in the workforce.
· That’s why I’ve made paid leave central to my campaign. And it’s why I’ll keep fighting for it as president.
· Every worker deserves up to 12 weeks of paid family leave to care for a new baby or a seriously ill family member. Every worker should be able to earn 7 paid sick days.
· I will work to be the president who brings America into this century – because we cannot afford to be the only country that provides no paid leave for any reason.
· Here in Ohio, 42 percent of workers have no access to paid sick days. That’s 2.2 million Ohioans who can’t take the day off to recover from the flu or care for a sick child without losing a paycheck or even their job. And Governor Kasich has done nothing about it.
<2015-09-10 WI Organizing Event 8pm.docx>
"Demanding an end to the epidemic of violence against transgender women of color in this country is a women’s issue."
Which one hasn't she said?
Sent from my iPhoneAdding a few more people - I also wanted to flag this line, which she has not said before:· Standing up and saying loudly and clearly that yes, black lives matter – that’s a women’s issue, too. And demanding an end to the epidemic of violence against transgender women of color in this country is a women’s issue.
On Wed, Sep 9, 2015 at 8:13 PM, Lauren Peterson <lpeterson@hillaryclinton.com> wrote:Hi everyone -Sending around TPs for the OH organizing event. Planning to send to the book at 9 with any edits that come in before then, but will also look for edits overnight.Please note that this includes a section on paid leave and a jab at Kasich. I've copied that section below.Thank you!LP###· The movement of women into the American workforce over the past 40 years drove more than $3.5 trillion in economic growth. But today, that progress has stalled.
· Studies show that nearly a third of America’s decline relative to other countries is because they’re expanding family-friendly policies like paid leave. And we’re not.
· Take your own Governor Kasich. When he was in Congress, he voted against the Family and Medical Leave Act – not once, but twice.
· I was proud to champion the Family and Medical Leave Act. And I was proud to stand by my husband’s side when he made it the first law he signed as president. Since then, it’s been used more than 200 million times. That’s 200 million times someone has been able to keep their job while spending time with a family member who needed them. It’s also 200 million more times than it would have been used if then-Congressman Kasich had his way.
· FMLA is a great start. But it’s not enough to guarantee that you won’t lose your job for taking time to be with a sick family member – not when too many people still can’t afford to lose a paycheck.
· Just this week the US Department of Labor released a report showing that if the US had the same percentage of women in the workforce as Germany or Canada, we would see an estimated 5 million more women per year in the workforce.
· That’s why I’ve made paid leave central to my campaign. And it’s why I’ll keep fighting for it as president.
· Every worker deserves up to 12 weeks of paid family leave to care for a new baby or a seriously ill family member. Every worker should be able to earn 7 paid sick days.
· I will work to be the president who brings America into this century – because we cannot afford to be the only country that provides no paid leave for any reason.
· Here in Ohio, 42 percent of workers have no access to paid sick days. That’s 2.2 million Ohioans who can’t take the day off to recover from the flu or care for a sick child without losing a paycheck or even their job. And Governor Kasich has done nothing about it.
<2015-09-10 WI Organizing Event 8pm.docx>
Sent from my iPhone
She hasn't said these words:"Demanding an end to the epidemic of violence against transgender women of color in this country is a women’s issue."
On Wed, Sep 9, 2015 at 9:03 PM, Jennifer Palmieri <jpalmieri@hillaryclinton.com> wrote:Which one hasn't she said?
Sent from my iPhoneAdding a few more people - I also wanted to flag this line, which she has not said before:· Standing up and saying loudly and clearly that yes, black lives matter – that’s a women’s issue, too. And demanding an end to the epidemic of violence against transgender women of color in this country is a women’s issue.
On Wed, Sep 9, 2015 at 8:13 PM, Lauren Peterson <lpeterson@hillaryclinton.com> wrote:Hi everyone -Sending around TPs for the OH organizing event. Planning to send to the book at 9 with any edits that come in before then, but will also look for edits overnight.Please note that this includes a section on paid leave and a jab at Kasich. I've copied that section below.Thank you!LP###· The movement of women into the American workforce over the past 40 years drove more than $3.5 trillion in economic growth. But today, that progress has stalled.
· Studies show that nearly a third of America’s decline relative to other countries is because they’re expanding family-friendly policies like paid leave. And we’re not.
· Take your own Governor Kasich. When he was in Congress, he voted against the Family and Medical Leave Act – not once, but twice.
· I was proud to champion the Family and Medical Leave Act. And I was proud to stand by my husband’s side when he made it the first law he signed as president. Since then, it’s been used more than 200 million times. That’s 200 million times someone has been able to keep their job while spending time with a family member who needed them. It’s also 200 million more times than it would have been used if then-Congressman Kasich had his way.
· FMLA is a great start. But it’s not enough to guarantee that you won’t lose your job for taking time to be with a sick family member – not when too many people still can’t afford to lose a paycheck.
· Just this week the US Department of Labor released a report showing that if the US had the same percentage of women in the workforce as Germany or Canada, we would see an estimated 5 million more women per year in the workforce.
· That’s why I’ve made paid leave central to my campaign. And it’s why I’ll keep fighting for it as president.
· Every worker deserves up to 12 weeks of paid family leave to care for a new baby or a seriously ill family member. Every worker should be able to earn 7 paid sick days.
· I will work to be the president who brings America into this century – because we cannot afford to be the only country that provides no paid leave for any reason.
· Here in Ohio, 42 percent of workers have no access to paid sick days. That’s 2.2 million Ohioans who can’t take the day off to recover from the flu or care for a sick child without losing a paycheck or even their job. And Governor Kasich has done nothing about it.
<2015-09-10 WI Organizing Event 8pm.docx>
