Critics say that officials for the event slated to begin Sept. 4 in Charlotte make it difficult for moms to credential their children, leaving delegate moms at a loss as to how to provide for their tots.
Top feminist icon Gloria Steinem said that by not even offering child care at the event the Democratic Party will alienate female voters, and that the party should acknowledge that, where there are women, there are occasionally babies too.
 
Gloria Steinem suggested that the Democratic
Party could recognize that where there
are women, there are often children.
“Women are the key to a Democratic victory, and sometimes, children are the key to women,” said Steinem in a statement noted by the Charlotte Observer. “It’s both right and smart for the Democratic Convention to behave as if children exist.”
Activists with the National Organization for Women in California also said the rules set up an “insurmountable barrier for mothers.”
“The DNC requires children and babies to have a credential to enter the convention, and then denies these credential requests from moms,” said Hollywood NOW President Lindsey Horvath. “The DNC credentialing process is being used as a tool to prevent mothers from participating at the convention and is nothing short of discriminatory.”
Convention spokeswoman Joanne Peters said that delegates can access a directory of private child care options, and that lactation centers for nursing mothers will be available - but that children require credentialing to access the convention floor.
California Democrat Susie Shannon, 45, who planned to come to the convention with her 4-year-old daughter Gracie, called Peters’ response “not enough.”
“When the Democratic Party refuses to provide child care at the convention and denies automatic access for young children to join their moms who serve as delegates on the convention floor, an entire group of women are disenfranchised,” said Shannon. “Moms with young children 6 years of age and under who cannot be left at home, some of whom are breast-feeding, are relegated to second-class status within the Democratic convention.”