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"path": "/2026/02/28/trump-foreign-policy-women-usaid-united-nations-health/",
"publishedAt": "2026-02-28T12:00:00.000Z",
"site": "https://msmagazine.com",
"tags": [
"Global",
"National",
"Politics",
"Violence & Harassment",
"Donald Trump and the Trump Administration",
"Foreign Policy and National Security",
"Global Women's Rights",
"United Nations",
"Women in the Military",
"Another Casualty of Trump’s New Foreign Policy: Women",
"Ms. Magazine"
],
"textContent": "For decades, policymakers across political parties understood that political, economic and social progress cannot be achieved by leaving half the population behind. Advancing women’s opportunities, leadership and rights through foreign policy and programs was seen not only as the morally right course, but as an effective strategy for promoting peace and prosperity around the globe.\n\nThe first Trump administration, in recognition of these facts, took actions that seemed to belie support for women’s economic empowerment—for example, President Trump signed the bipartisan Women, Peace and Security Act into law in 2017 to advance women’s leadership and protect women in times of conflict.\n\nBut Trump’s second administration has taken a sharply different approach, mounting a sustained assault on women’s rights and reversing bipartisan policies his own administration once championed.\n\nThe post Another Casualty of Trump’s New Foreign Policy: Women appeared first on Ms. Magazine.",
"title": "Another Casualty of Trump’s New Foreign Policy: Women"
}