Maine Gov. Janet Mills (D) shot back at a question asked during a governors panel by saying not all Republicans are weird.
Actor Julia Louis-Dreyfus and the Democratic Governors Association hosted a panel with the eight Democratic women who are state governors. At the end of the panel discussion, Louis-Dreyfus asked the governors questions that were submitted by her podcast listeners, including one asking why Republicans are so weird.
“They didn’t use to be weird,” Mills said. “I grew up in a Republican family, and we have a solid group of Republicans in Maine who are not supporting Trump, who are supporting Kamala Harris because they know the traditional Republican Party is not about Trump and never was. He has purged anybody who was free-thinking, and the traditional conservative Republican, they don’t have a place to go anymore, so they’re not all weird. But the Trump MAGA Republicans are weird.”
Louis-Dreyfus, who is known for her sitcom roles in “Seinfeld” and “Veep,” in which she played a U.S. vice president, opened the panel with a quip about Sen. JD Vance (R-Ohio), saying Donald Trump’s running mate would call the panel “a coven of semi-menstruating witches.” She then gave the governors a pop quiz, asking them to name their state flower. (They all passed.) Louis-Dreyfus spoke with the governors about a variety of topics, including the status of women’s reproductive rights since the loss of Roe v. Wade’s protections in 2022.
New York Gov. Kathy Hochul said that after Roe was overturned, she went to a vigil at Prospect Park in Brooklyn and said it was a “moment of pain” but also strength.
“I held sobbing women in my arms,” Hochul said. “It broke my heart to know that something that my mother’s generation fought for, I certainly took for granted, that my daughter Katie’s generation now has lost and I’m going to fight like hell to get back for my granddaughter.”
A year after the Supreme Court decision, Hochul signed two bills into law to increase access to abortion pills and over-the-counter contraceptives for New Yorkers.
Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly praised her state for becoming the first to vote to protect abortion rights after the ruling in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health stripped away the national right. She said the Dobbs decision has “awoken people” to not take reproductive rights for granted.
“I hope they remember this so their granddaughters don’t have to go through this,” she said.
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