TPM
Gayle Trotter, the conservative activist who became the breakout star of Wednesday’s gun violence hearing
in the Senate with her adamant cry that women need assault rifles to
defend themselves, wrote last year that she opposed the Violence Against
Women Act.
The reason, she said at the time, was the law would create the
prospect of “false accusers” stealing taxpayer money by using shelters
and legal aid.
On Wednesday, Trotter used the fear of violence against women to
support gun laws that allow access to large capacity magazines and
assault weapons in her testimony.
“An assault weapon in the hands of a young woman defending her babies in her home becomes a defense weapon,” she said.
Trotter based her defense of gun rights on the need for women to
defend themselves against those who would commit violent acts against
them. Back in 2012, she was not as supportive of the federal
government’s efforts to protect women with VAWA. The law, she wrote on the website of the Independent Women’s Forum, could promote false accusations of domestic violence.
Trotter opposed VAWA, she wrote last year, because it opened the door to false accusers wasting taxpayer funds.
“Americans all want to deter violence, but we also need to protect
that foundational principle of the presumption of innocence,” said her
April 2012 post. “Needed resources like shelters and legal aid can be
taken by false accusers, denying real victims of abuse access to these
supports. That result runs directly counter to the VAWA’s spirit.”
Trotter was also skeptical of the law for other reasons cited by the Republicans in Congress
who kept it from being renewed last year, including provisions allowing
illegal immigrants victimized by domestic violence to seek temporary
visas.
“VAWA now touches hot button immigration issues, which have the
potential to encourage immigration fraud, false allegations of abuse,
and denial of a rebuttal by the accused spouse, whether male or female,”
she wrote.
Women’s groups have for the most part been outraged by Republican delays of the VAWA renewal. Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-VT) tied
the debate over guns to VAWA on Wednesday after he presided over the
judiciary hearing, tweeting that “improving the background check system
is important in thwarting deadly domestic violence.”
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