Duchess Harris,
"The State of Black Women in Politics Under the First Black President"
(page 2 of 8)
The Obama Women
The administration began with such promise. With the election of
Obama came the appointment of the most diverse cabinet in
history.[6]
According to Sam Ali, writing for Diversity Inc.com, 30 percent
of Obama's cabinet appointments were women and 39 percent were Black,
Latino and Asian. Among these appointments were many black women,
including Senior Advisor Valerie Jarrett (a Chicago colleague of the
Obamas, who served as a top advisor on Obama's campaign, then as
co-chair of his transition team) and U.S. Ambassador to the United
Nations, Susan Rice (Rice was Assistant Secretary of State for African
Affairs during Clinton's second term). Desiree Rogers (another Obama
Chicago colleague) was hired as Social Secretary, and Lisa P. Jackson
was made the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency (she
was the former Commissioner of the New Jersey Department of
Environmental Protection). Several of these women were the first black
or biracial women in their positions: Jackson, Melody Barnes (Director
of the Domestic Policy Council), Mona Sutphen (Deputy Chief of Staff for
Policy) and Margaret (Peggy) Hamburg (Food and Drug Administration
Commissioner).[7]
Krissah Thompson, writing for the Washington
Post, said African-American women occupy about seven of three dozen
senior positions in Obama's administration and that the women who are
new to the Washington, D.C. environment find a supportive network
extended by their predecessors. Those women include Donna Brazile,
political strategist and the first African-American woman to direct a
political campaign (Al Gore's in 2000), and Cheryl Mills, who was the
first black woman Deputy White House Council, during Clinton's
administration. Such a support network is important in an arena that is
still largely white and male.
In addition to the appointment of a number of black women to his
administration and staff, during his first months in office, Obama took
several actions that showed solidarity and support for women. The first
bill he signed into law was the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Restoration
Act, which made it easier for workers to sue their employers after
discovering discriminatory payment practices, rather than having to
report incidents within six months of the first occurrence. The bill
changed the initial Supreme Court ruling of Ledbetter v.
Goodyear, which denied Lilly Ledbetter the right to sue her employer
of nearly 20 years after discovering men in her same position received
more money than she, because she reported the discrimination more than
180 days after its first occurrence. Obama's signing of the bill allowed
workers who discover pay discrimination to sue within six months of
learning of the discrimination, regardless of when it began[8]
(although without the passage of the Paycheck Fairness Act, which is
currently pending in the Senate and whose passage would update the Equal
Pay Act of 1963, women's pay will continue to lag behind men's. The pay
gap is even worse for African-American women, who in 2008 made only 61
cents for every dollar men made[9]).
Less than two months later, on March 11, President Obama signed an
executive order to create the White House Council on Women and Girls,
headed by Valerie Jarrett, with Tina Tchen, Director of the White House
Office of Public Engagement, serving as Executive Director. The Council
consists of heads of every Cabinet and Cabinet-level agency, and its
purpose, according to Obama, is "to ensure that each of the agencies in
which they're charged takes into account the needs of women and girls in
the policies they draft, the programs they create, the legislation they
support."[10]
The White House website has dedicated a section to the
Council, where Tchen, Jarrett, and others post regular updates about the
effects of the administration's policies and actions on women. Most
recently, Obama declared August 26, 2010 "Women's Equality Day," in
commemoration of the ratification of the 19th amendment, which granted
women the right to vote. In his proclamation, Obama reminded Americans
of his administrations' commitment to "...advancing women's equality in
all areas of our society and around the world."[11]
These efforts—the
bill, the Council, the proclamation—and the diversity of his
administration, at least show that Obama keeps women, black women
included, in mind. But upon closer inspection, and as time has passed,
these acts appear to be merely token gestures made to appease those who
bought into the hope and change promised by the Obama campaign.
In November 2009, Essence.com posted a "Power List" of 20
black women in Obama's administration (including some who have since
left the administration). The slide show presented photos of and blurbs
about the "big names," like Jackson, Hamburg, and Jarrett, but the 20
black "Obama women" also included members of the First Lady's staff
(Kristen Jarvis, Special Assistant for Scheduling and Travel Aide, and
Dana Lewis, Special Assistant and Personal Aide); the Director of White
House Events and Protocol, Micaela Fernandez; and Daniella Gibbs Leger,
Director of White House Message Events.
While the work these women do should not be underestimated, Travel
Aide to the First Lady and Ambassador to the UN or Surgeon General are
very different positions. If looking exclusively at black women in the
Cabinet or in Cabinet-level positions, the tally of 20 black women in
the Obama administration shrinks to two: Lisa P. Jackson and Susan Rice.
Furthermore, in the selection of Surgeon General, the black woman who is
in the position now was not the President's first choice. Regina
Benjamin was only offered the job after Obama's first choice, CNN's
chief medical correspondent Sanjay Gupta, turned it down. So while we
see a diverse staff, there is still a telling lack of black women in
positions of true power.
In a September 2009 article for More.com, Teresa Wilz, Senior
Culture Editor at The Root, discusses this absence of black women
in upper management and executive positions, despite the numbers of
highly qualified black women available to serve in such capacities.
Regarding the women selected to work in Obama's Cabinet and the White
House, Wilz says, "Let me be clear: Not many individuals, black, white,
brown or other, achieve that level of power, whether at the White House
or at Xerox. And yet there are hundreds of thousands of us, highly
qualified and highly educated, available to be
tapped."[12] Of the
associate and bachelor's degrees awarded to black students, women earn
approximately two-thirds, according to the National Center for Education
Statistics,[13]
and between 1996 and 2007, the number of black women
getting master's degrees grew by 130 percent, while white women's
increase was only 38 percent.[14]
Krissah Thompson also illuminated the shortage of black women in
visible positions of power, citing the Bureau of Labor's statistic that
more than 2.6 million black women were in management and professional
jobs last year, yet "women and minorities still lack representation in
proportion to their numbers on the federal level. In Congress, only 90
members are women, 42 are African-American, 28 are Latino and nine are
Asian."[15] And, from Wilz again:
According to Catalyst,
a New York-based research firm that studies women in business,
African-American women hold only five percent of all managerial,
professional and related positions; white women hold 41 percent. Women
of color are similarly scarce on corporate boards. And until Ursula
Burns was tapped earlier this year to head Xerox, there were no black
female CEOs of Fortune 500 companies.[16]
Wilz pointed to the long-held belief in the black community that
education was the only way to excel as the reason behind this pool of
highly-educated and qualified black women. She blamed their
under-representation in upper level positions both on a lack of
enforcement of company diversity policies, as well as quotas: "...whenever
one of us does manage to break through, her very presence may provide an
excuse for keeping other black women out," she wrote.[17] Frequently,
once a company hires one black woman, the feeling is that one is enough,
and there is no need to hire another.
Finally, she wrote that black women are rarely hired for or
encouraged to pursue positions that put them on an executive track, like
sales or profit-related positions. Instead, companies hire them into
static positions like community outreach or training jobs. Looking to
the Obama administration, we see this trend perpetuated with the
appointment of black women to primarily non-Cabinet level positions.
And for the few appointed to positions of power, when it came time to
defend these black women, the efforts made by the Obama administration
were too little (in the case of Desiree Rogers, the former Social
Secretary), or too late (for Shirley Sherrod).
Tellingly, the administration did stand up for Supreme Court nominee
Elena Kagan, despite concerns regarding her own lack of diversity hiring
practices and apparent racial insensitivity.
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