Women in government: Waiting, wanting, whatever (Photos)

The American political system and resulting government is a white man-made beast that came with built-in barriers and burdens for women and minorities. Wealthy white men needed a handicap. Would anyone want to debate that?

It was a cultural thing with good intentions mind you, but nonetheless it had its flaws. In time, the flaws could and would be corrected, but only when people decided to “agitate, agitate, agitate,” in the words of Frederick Douglass.

It took too long to end discrimination against African Americans and other minorities, against women, and against gays and lesbians. Yet, enough agitation ensued and eventually, the system responds to people seeking liberty, justice, and equality under law.

Today’ story is that there are not enough women in President Obama’s binder, meaning that he needs more women in his cabinet. Part of the problem is that there is insufficient agitation for this. A bigger part of the problem is that congress is far from being representative of women. American communities have not provided sufficient representation for women in government.

Another aspect of the problem is that the queue is lacking candidates who want the appointments. So, whatever happens next will be the product of agitation.

My agitation is directed at producing higher quality candidates for public office that includes appropriate representation of the American population.

“Obama needs some binders of women

By Ruth Marcus, Published: January 9

About all those white guys: What a shame.

Not an outrage, but a shame. The face of power that President Obama has chosen to present to the country and the world with his second-term Cabinet picks is striking — except for the African American president at the top of the pyramid — for its retro look, white and male. It’s “Mad Men” Goes to Washington, except Peggy’s leaving.

On the foreign policy team, white guy for secretary of state, white guy for defense secretary, white guy for CIA. For Treasury secretary, white guy. Obama’s replacement as chief of staff — as yet unnamed, but the rumor mill names no one but . . . white guys.

To be clear: I’ve got nothing against white guys. Some of my best husbands are white guys. White guys get to be secretary of state, too, and John Kerry will be the first in 16 years. But to look at the most important jobs in the government, in 2013, and see such lack of diversity is just so drearily disappointing.

Especially because it could easily have been so different. Imagine the tableau of Obama flanked by secretary of state nominee Susan Rice and defense secretary nominee Michèle Flournoy. That would have been the ultimate you’ve-come-a-long-way moment.

And what would have been so nice about it is it wouldn’t have been a stretch. The gratifying thing about my now-imaginary Rice and Flournoy picks is that they would have occurred organically, reflecting the rise of women in the foreign and defense policy establishments.

Thinking about Obama’s selections, I had a flashback to the moment in December 1992, when newly elected Bill Clinton exploded in anger over “bean counters” at women’s groups “playing quota games and math games” in lamenting the lack of diversity in his still-evolving Cabinet choices.

Clinton had a point. He ended up with what was then the most diverse Cabinet in history. And there is something distasteful and fundamentally demeaning about judging a Cabinet solely by the color of its skin or the composition of its chromosomes.

To make this personal: I believe that I bring something to the task of being an opinion columnist because I am a woman, but I do not think I was given the job for this reason. It would be hurtful — in the sense of injured feelings, but also of harmed reputation — if readers were to see a female byline at the top of this column and assume, she got this gig because she’s a woman.

And yet, an opinion page with only white-guy columnists — just like an opinion page with only conservatives, or only liberals — would be lacking in the most important diversity: of viewpoints and experiences. This ought to happen in the natural course of events, with writers of both genders displaying the talent — or foolhardiness — to become columnists. But an editorial page editor who found herself, or himself, with a stable of only white, male columnists would be wise to do some reshuffling, and some outreach.

The White House will point to women in other Cabinet positions — although one, Labor Secretary Hilda Solis, has just announced her resignation — and to women in sub-Cabinet roles. Okay, but State, Defense and Treasury, along with Justice, are the Big Boy jobs. It matters if some of those boys are girls. It sends a disturbing signal when they’re not.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/ruth-marcus-obamas-all-white-team-of-retros/2013/01/09/a8135bf0-5aaf-11e2-88d0-c4cf65c3ad15_story.html?hpid=z2

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James A. George has over 25 years of experience working in the government consulting space with many years interacting with Congressional staff and government executives as a program manager and executive in developing policies. He was liaison between the Office of Secretary of Defense and the...

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