PROGRESSIVE PERSPECTIVES

Staying In The Center Will Work For Obama

December 19, 2008 · 4 Comments

bonnie-erbe

ULTRA-FEMINIST BONNIE ERBE TENDS TO OVERSTATE REALITY

 

By Glenn S. Reiner

The following is a column by angry feminist Bonnie Erbe,  contributing editor at US News & World Report and host of PBS’s weekly news analysis program, To the Contrary with Bonnie Erbie. After reading it, you will clearly understand my response on her blog.

 

Barack Obama’s Cabinet Appointments: More Women Needed

Now that the Obama cabinet selection process is about over, the final tally is close to what I expected it to be, and disappointing to a number of the president-elect’s key constituencies. There is one cabinet-level appointment yet to be announced, out of 15 cabinet positions (filled with today’s announcements) and at least seven cabinet-level appointments. From among these 22 coveted jobs, five appointees are women. Since women are 52 percent of the U.S. population and Obama’s transition team promised a cabinet that “looked like America,” one would have to say that, in terms of gender, Obama has failed.

The stark reality is shown in living color on this New Agenda page link, which sports photos of the Obama cabinet members and makes an important visual point.

While Obama is breaking records for putting his cabinet in place more quickly than prior presidents, he broke no new ground with his female cabinet appointments. No woman had ever been selected to head the key Securities and Exchange Commission before Obama’s selection of Mary Schapiro, but she is not in the cabinet. He had ample opportunity to name female secretaries of defense, treasury, and even veterans affairs. He declined.

I’ve cited this post before, but it’s important to reinforce the fact that Obama’s breaking no new number with his female appointments.

At the start of his first term, President Bush nominated four women to his Cabinet. Bill Clinton had five women in his Cabinet at the start of his presidency, and George H. W. Bush and Ronald Reagan each had two, according to research conducted by New York University’s Wagner School of Public Service in partnership with The Washington Post.

Just because I’m talking quantity does not mean I’m not also concerned about quality. But read the New Agenda list of women he passed over. There were plenty of experienced, talented, professional women available to fill any of his cabinet posts.

Women should take this into account when he’s up for re-election four years from now. Women aren’t the only disappointed constituency. He’s annoyed many Southerners, as well as liberals who see his selections as too middle-of-the-road:

CHICAGO—President-elect Barack Obama spent the campaign fighting the notion that he’s an unabashed liberal. Now he can point to Exhibit A: a Cabinet that’s a middle-of-the-roaders’ dream. Consider the scorecard: The centrist Democratic Leadership Council claims ties with half the group. Movement progressives count a single one, California Rep. Hilda Solis at Labor, a union favorite. But if Obama gives with Solis, he takes away with former Dallas Mayor Ron Kirk, a free-trade advocate for trade representative, no union favorite. Classic Obama, some grumbled. “We just hoped the political diversity would have been stronger,” said Tim Carpenter, executive director of Progressive Democrats of America. “We see a lot of recycled Clinton folks and he gets a strong ‘D’ on the policy side. We hope he will hustle them to be more progressive.”

And then there’s this:

“Women’s groups who have been hoping for an historic breakthrough in the numbers of women and feminists in the cabinet are looking at a Cabinet now that has lower numbers of women than the Clinton Administration,” said Feminist Majority Foundation President Eleanor Smeal. “With only three Cabinet positions remaining, the women’s groups are pushing ahead not only for more women in the Cabinet, but for more women to be appointed to the thousands of plum jobs that are available. A number of groups have formed a Feminist Appointment Wiki Project to make sure that more strong women and feminist names are put forth.”Ellen Malcolm, the president and founder of Emily’s List, told The Washington Post that Obama “obviously started off with a bang, with Janet Napolitano, Hillary Clinton and Susan Rice . . ..we’ve been disappointed to see women suggested for some positions and not chosen.”Women’s groups are also very concerned about the economic recovery package, which so far is specifying the creation of jobs primarily in the construction industries, which under-represent women. Smeal commented that “we are also alarmed that the key components of the economic recovery package revealed to the public are emphasizing construction jobs, which notoriously under-represent women workers. Although we support a physical infrastructure stimulus package, we believe it must be accompanied with a human infrastructure component that will employ a majority of women workers. With women nearly half of the workforce, a successful stimulus package must include jobs that will employ significant numbers of women and men.”

Dear Bonnie:

The old adage, “You can’t please everybody,” seems so prevalent right now.

As you noted, the president elect promised us a centrist administration during the campaign, rebutting GOP claims he would take us radically to the left. Clearly, his cabinet picks have shown he is, indeed, a man of his word!

In choosing his team, he has angered several political factions, who — as always — ‘want what they want, when then want it.’ But doesn’t a mature political mind accept that ‘we get, what we get, when we get it.’

I have yet to see any other president-elect in my 55 years on this planet work as hard as he has during their transition periods. And does he receive gratitude for his efforts? No! Instead he has had criticism thrown his way from every direction.

I get you are a clearly-defined feminist. As a life-long Liberal, I supported the ERA, have done my best as a writer to advocate women’s rights, and have even donated money to NOW.

I believe our woman have come a long way since my birth in the ’50s. And I realize the job isn’t nearly done. I have also come to understand the collective American mindset, which historically has  been noticeably inert and has struggled with the concept of change — especially anything radical. Let’s not forget how our revered founding fathers wrote a Constitution that barely showed much respect for woman.

This is why Obama — deep, sensitive and astute politician he has proven to be — has done his best to create a diversified team, and I believe he has done a damn good job of it at that!

Granted, this clearly isn’t the all-liberal administration I have always dreamed of. Then again, it’s not the Nazi right-wing White house ‘W’ assembled either — Colin Powell and Condi rice being the only exceptions.

So to move to middle, I believe, is not only a proverbial quantum leap, but just what this country needs right now. It is also a huge step in uniting the nation for the first time since the election of Ronald Reagan in 1980.

Instead of complaining about which women you argue he passed over, why not be grateful his five female picks are still a record, even if only marginal. And let’s not forget — again with the exception of Condi Rice — the Bush woman were not only regressive, but hurt the middle-class, poor and needy badly.

For decades, my doctors have been women, as male physicians — with their emotional detachment to patients – have turned me off. I have felt a special kinship to women throughout my adulthood and have always treated them as equals. My mother was a feminist before the term was even coined, so I was brought up with an emphasis on broad-mindedness and forward thinking.

It is for this reason I perceive your stand as an overstatement at best. It would behoove you to take a deeper look within, examine your motives, and reevaluate your spin.

Respectfully Yours,

Glenn S. Reiner

(Coconut Creek, FL)

Categories: American Politics

4 responses so far ↓

  • lynda // December 20, 2008 at 11:37 am | Reply

    perfectly put, as usual! Are you having a good holiday time???

  • Glenn // December 20, 2008 at 12:10 pm | Reply

    My dear, there is no real December holidays in South Florida — only symbolically. Without cold and snow, neither of which we want — it feels like any other month of the year. Plus, with the budget cuts — Bush slashed funding to the states, who cut funding to the cities and counties — there are no real decorations or lights on the streets.

    So I just give a few gifts, and treat this time of the year like any other. Thanksgiving is a totally different thing, as it is indoors. And New Years is okay too.

    The holidays that we real enjoy and can celebrate to the max is Memorial Day, Fourth of July and Labor Day. They are warm-weather occasions and fit us like a glove.

  • linda // January 3, 2009 at 9:47 am | Reply

    Dear Glenn,

    52% women in this country; Obama’s picks do not mirror the population, period.

    And please, “angry feminist”? Both cheap shot and knee-jerk pandering to the male-dominated press.

    Try reporting news neutrally to the people.

    For example, check out the TSR or letemps.ch or the Zuricher Zeitung for facts, and just the facts, and see how US news could be transformed by honesty and truthfulness.

    Regards,
    Linda

    • Glenn // January 3, 2009 at 10:46 am | Reply

      Linda:

      Let’s examine reality here: 15 percent of the people in this country are gay, yet 15 percent of Obama’s cabinet choices were not; in fact, I don’t believe the gay community is represented at all. And I’ve yet to hear any complaints from them.

      Likewise, over 35 percent of all Americans are Black, but only one African-American was picked, prospective Attorney General Eric Holden.

      And Hispanics — the fasting growing minority in this country — selected on a numerically-proportionate basis.

      Following your logic, should I be upset because he didn’t choose enough Liberals or old hippies like myself?

      I sincerely doubt Gloria Steinem has a problem with Obama’s choices. Although the pioneer of women’s rights in the ’60s, she never used anger to get her point across.

      Anger just doesn’t work; it turns most people off. Such was — and from what I understand has always been — the case with Bonnie Erbe.

      If you ever want to budge people on the other side on an issue, you have to put your best foot forward. If they have a problem with your disposition, than they won’t hear a word you say.

      What’s important to note here is when Obama spoke of balance during the campaign, he was referring to political-ideological — not ethnic or gender — balance. And he has, indeed, fulfilled that promise.

      So why be upset with the president-elect, who will have more female cabinet members than any of his predecessors?

      Have a great weekend!

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