Elizabeth Warren's pregnancy discrimination experience is something that still happens all the time

Her story holds up to scrutiny, and she's far from alone

Elizabeth Warren.
(Image credit: Illustrated | Sean Rayford/Getty Images, Tomiganka/iStock, Asya_mix/iStock)

One story that Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), a contender for the Democratic presidential nomination, tells on the campaign trail is how she was ushered out of a teaching job in 1971 because she became pregnant. It was a hard-knock lesson in how American employers mistreat their workers, and the discrimination that working women in particular face — but also an ironic change in life circumstances that ultimately put Warren on a course for politics and a run for the presidency.

The story made headlines this week after some conservative media outlets tried to debunk Warren's story. But not only does Warren's narrative hold up, it's not even a relic of an unfortunate past. Pregnancy discrimination is still a widespread problem in American employment today.

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Jeff Spross

Jeff Spross was the economics and business correspondent at TheWeek.com. He was previously a reporter at ThinkProgress.