Trump signs legislation promoting women in STEM fields
DOI: 10.1063/PT.5.1108
President Trump displays the signed legislation at an Oval Office press event.
White House
On 27 February President Trump signed into law two bipartisan bills that leverage existing programs at NASA and NSF to encourage the advancement of women in STEM fields. Although the bills are relatively minor in scope, they represent Trump’s first encounter with legislation concerning science policy. And his remarks at a brief Oval Office press event
“We want American women who graduate from college with STEM degrees to be able to get STEM jobs that can support their families and help these American women to live out the American Dream, which they are so qualified to live out,” Trump said.
The Promoting Women in Entrepreneurship Act
The Inspiring the Next Space Pioneers, Innovators, Researchers, and Explorers (INSPIRE) Women Act directs NASA to “encourage women and girls to study science, technology, engineering, and mathematics, pursue careers in aerospace, and further advance the Nation’s space science and exploration efforts.” The legislation
Both chambers of Congress advanced the bills swiftly, with no amendments or opposition. “The passage of our two bipartisan bills is an excellent step forward that will grow our economy and help women from all walks of life break into fields where they have been underrepresented,” said Rep. Elizabeth Esty (D-CT), who introduced the NSF bill, in a statement
Discussing
Trump said the Promoting Women in Entrepreneurship Act enables NSF “to support women inventors—which there are many—researchers, and scientists in bringing their discoveries to the business world, championing science and entrepreneurship, and creating new ways to improve people’s lives. So important.” He explained that the INSPIRE Women Act “ensures that the existing NASA programs recruit women to STEM-related jobs and aerospace careers.” He added, “Great news. Really the way to go. Very heavy into the whole NASA situation. So women will be a big, big part of it.”
The president also said that “protecting” holders of STEM degrees is related to his campaign against job offshoring, which he cited as “a tremendous problem that displaces many of our best American workers and brains.” Trump suggested that he would support further legislation promoting women in STEM and in the workforce more broadly: “We need policies that help support women in the workforce, and that’s really very much going to be addressed by my administration over the years, and to get more and more of these bills coming out, and address the barriers faced by females and those in STEM fields.”
The signing event offered a rare glimpse
This article is adapted from a 2 March