Category Archives: Level The Playing Field In The Political Arena

Obama, Are You Listening? It’s Time For Parity For Women In The Cabinet

Lynette Long: PARITY IN THE CABINET???.

After the turmoil of the 2008 primaries and election, as the dust is settling, there appears to  be a new movement afoot of activism on behalf of parity for women in all areas, but particularly representation in government.  Many believe that women will never achieve a “level playing field” until we have 50% women represented in the three branches of goverment.  A good place to start, in the view of the esteemed Dr. Lynette Long, is with representation in the Cabinet over which incoming President Barack Obama has full control.  Dr. Long challenges Obama to select 50% females for his cabinet.

In PARITY IN THE CABINET???, Lynnette Long discusses this goal in depth:

“The current cabinet of the United States is attended by the President, fifteen Cabinet Members, and six cabinet level administrative offices that includes the Vice-President and the White House Chief of Staff for a total of 22 members. The Bush Cabinet has four women: Condoleezza Rice as Secretary of State, Elaine Chao as Secretary of Labor, Mary Peters as Secretary of Transportation, and Margaret Spellings as Secretary of Education. In addition Susan Schwab has Cabinet level rank as United States Trade Secretary. Out of the 22 people that attend cabinet meetings, The President, the Vice-President, the Cabinet, and the Cabinet level administrative offices, five are currently women, which is 23%. Will President-Elect Obama appoint more women to his cabinet than President Bush? I am starting a cabinet watch. Help me. I would like to see 50% of the female cabinet women. I am starting a cabinet watch. As the cabinet members become appointed I will color the titles blue or pink. Please lobby the Obama campaign for more women in the cabinet.  Call his office at 202-224-2854. Thanks.”

(See also Lynette Long: WHAT OBAMA CAN DO FOR WOMEN. )

· The President

· Secretary of State

· Secretary of the Treasury

· Secretary of Defense

· Attorney General

· Secretary of the Interior

· Secretary of Agriculture

· Secretary of Commerce

· Secretary of Labor

· Secretary of Health and Human Services

· Secretary of Housing and Urban Development

· Secretary of Transportation

· Secretary of Energy

· Secretary of Education

· Secretary of Veterans Affairs

· Secretary of Homeland Security

Cabinet-level administration offices

· Vice President of the United States

· White House Chief of Staff

· Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency

· Director of the Office of Management and Budget

· Director of the National Drug Control Policy

· United States Trade Representative

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The Business Of Electing Hillary: Post Mortem

Commander in Chief (TV series)

Image via Wikipedia

Yesterday I was at a brunch with a number of women, most of whom, I think, were former Hillary Clinton supporters in the primary.  The talk turned to what went wrong, and it seemed to me to be very much a primer for Business 101.  Although the subject was politics it was also really about business, the business of getting selected as nominee of your party, then elected president.  The theme of the discussion could have been “What Not To Do In Your Business or How You Should Have Revised Your Plan On the Fly As Mistakes Became Evident.“  Lessons from the Hillary Campaign, a short list; a complete list would stretch ad infinitum:

  • Don’t Put Someone In Charge Who Has Zero Experience In The Field ( Patty Solis Doyle as campaign manager)
  • Don’t Believe Your Own Press Clippings and Get Overconfident, ( Sense of Entitlement, Underestimating Opponents, ie. Barrack Obama)
  • Don’t Ever Run Out Of Money, The Ultimate Mistake ( Someone had to tell Clinton they’d blown all the money by Iowa, the first primary???  Track your money and guard every penny.  Whole auto companies have been saved by counting their green backs one by one on a desk each night.)
  • Don’t Buy Snow Shovels When There’s No Snow In The Forecast, Hire A Helicopter, Or Order Sandwich Platters With Your Last Dime ( Part of the Don’t Ever Run Out of Money rule…. Also part of the zero experience syndrome.)
  • Don’t Let A Consultant Run Your Business Or Your Campaign ( He goes back to a secure job and collects a paycheck from you whether your product explodes in your face or not.  You want someone with “skin in the game”, ie. you lose, he hurts as well.)
  • Don’t Think A Man ( Bill Clinton or Mark Penn) Knows More Because He’s A Man ( This was your campaign, if mistakes were to be made they should at least have been your mistakes, made from your gut.)
  • Use Common Sense, Don’t Delegate It ( When Mark Penn’s big game plan was for Hillary to be accepted as Commander in Chief, instead of making an all out play for women; when the first poll came in showing she already was viewed as an acceptable commander in chief, she needed to pivot that sucker fast and go after those she finally acknowledged at the end, her only truly reliable block, women voters.
  • Learn to Count ( Did Mark Penn really not understand proportional voting and think it would all be wrapped up by California?  And he was paid or is still owed $7 million for this advice?  Are you kidding?)
  • When You Identify Your Weakness, Don’t Avoid It, Try To Fix It ( Caucuses)
  • Don’t Try To Be “The Best Little Girl In The Class When You Lose“, Possibly expecting payback ( You may get pay back but it probably won’t be the kind you were expecting.  Ask Sen. Lieberman who has already been taken to the woodshed for his opposition and may lose his committee chair.)
  • Don’t Seriously Tick Off Your Most Ardent Supporters ( See Lynnette Long’s blog, http://www.lynettelong.com/my_weblog/2008/11/parity-in-the-c.html.)
  • Stand for Principle Over Expediency ( There were many lessons to be learned from your run.  Every supporter you had will have to decide if they agree with Lynette Long’s blog or not.  If they do, it doesn’t bode well for your future.  And that’s no way to run a business or a campaign either.)

(Footnote- February 3, 2009.  Well, I’m a big Hillary fan and devoted a lot of time and energy to try to get her elected.  I think I was in a very disappointed mood when I wrote this.  And Lynette Long may have been also, when she wrote her blog. Hillary did get pay back by going over to the Obama side and displaying loyalty.  She was appointed Secretary of State, and, in these early days, it looks like she is going to make that a more energetic and principled department.  We wish her… and us… the best.)

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Congratulations to Bev Perdue, North Carolina’s first woman governor!

Feminist Law Professors ; Congratulations to Bev Perdue, North Carolina’s first woman governor!.

AdvancingWomen.com joins Feminist Law Professors in giving our …..

Congratulations to Bev Perdue!

Charlotte Observer account of her victory here.  Excerpts below:

Lt. Gov. Bev Perdue rode a national tide of Democratic support Tuesday to become the first female governor of North Carolina.

Perdue, who has held office in Raleigh for nearly a quarter century, was propelled into the governor’s office despite a sweeping drive across the state and the nation for new faces and change. …

Perdue’s victory makes her the 30th woman to serve as a governor in the United States. She rarely spoke about the possible precedent but won in a state that didn’t officially pass the constitutional amendment giving women the right to vote until 1970. In the 19th century, the first bill allowing women to vote was sent to the state legislative committee on insane asylums.

–Ann Bartow

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Tough Times Of Election 2008 – Lemonade from Lemons

Whichever candidate each of us decides to vote for, polls show that most of us are not happy with the direction our country has been headed. So, however today’s election turns out, although many of us will be temporarily deflated or ecstatic over the results, in the end, we need to recognize we will all share a common future, so we had better seek common ground, assess the situation we’re in and figure out how to make the best of it.

Women In Government  – Even if both Senator Clinton and Governor Palin were roundly trashed in some areas and by some media, women did score “18 million cracks in the highest, hardest” glass ceiling. And the end result of all the trashing was the launching of a new wave of women’s awareness and activism. Good for us!

EconomyAlthough the news is bleak, we can look at the state of the economy as a crisis we are in the process of overcoming.  And remember what we said about a crisis? “Although it certainly will be a challenge to recognize it as the crisis is unfolding, some good may come of it. You will see who your strongest leaders are….. If someone had a big hand in the disaster, hopefully he will be shipped off to a small atoll near Greenland. Problems will be faced. New strategies and early warning systems will be developed. Not only will new and better systems be installed but new leaders will emerge from the smoke and din of crisis.”  And we definitely will be getting new leaders.

Environment- Looks like the time has come for Green. Green businesses, green homes…. at long last, attention to the environment.  Just when we thought the time would never come, it’s here.

Careers -There will still be some careers that thrive. HR World suggests “If you want to recession-proof your career, the key is to focus on work that continues even when most people don’t have disposable income to spend. So while consumers may not hit the mall as often, you can guarantee that people will continue to get sick, pay taxes and use energy. These are just a few of the careers and industries that can be expected to thrive in a down economy”, all listed at Top 25 Careers to Pursue in a Recession – HR World.

Business – For which businesses will be able to sustain themselves in a recession, you can take a clue from Top 25 Careers to Pursue in a Recession only put yourself in the position of the owner of the business:

  • Health Care: People will always get sick
  • Education: No matter how dire the economy is, there are always jobs for teachers
  • Accounting: Death and taxes are a sure thing. You need to keep track of  your money whether you’re making it or losing it.
  • Federal Government: Most federal-government jobs end only when workers retire.
  • Skilled Services: Hair will always grow, and drains will always clog, so you can expect steady work in skilled services like plumbing and hairstyling.
  • Consulting: Recessions are crunch times for companies as well, and they’re likely to bring in consultants for advice on efficiency and squeezing the most out of their resources.
  • Government Contracting: Despite money troubles, roads must be maintained and schools must be built.
  • Food: People need food to survive, and it’s not likely that anyone is going to just stop eating — no matter how bad the economy gets.”

There are a lot more of these more or less recession proof jobs.

Our point here is, however the election turns out, even if polls show that most of us are not happy with the direction our country has been headed, in the end, we’re all going to be all right, anyway.

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State Of The Female Nation: Election 2008

As we look back at this long, I think exhausting, electoral season, I guess we can feel lucky we have a democratic process, with a peaceful instead of bloody change of regimes. None-the-less, I can’t help feeling that the light it  has shone on the prevailing attitudes towards and treatment of women candidates has illuminated some dark places in our hearts and has been, at least metaphorically, both brutal and bloody.

No one has addressed this better or managed to make more incisive points than the esteemed Lynette Long or other guests who’ve posted on her blog.  Some, I believe, have really gotten down to some root causes and  effects which I’d like to share with you, from a  non-partisan, but pro-woman standpoint.

Artemis March in a guest post Lynette Long: SARAH PALIN: A RORSHACH FOR FEMINISTS discusses where women stand today, both with how they are portrayed in the media, and their standing as candidates in the political parties:

“The truth is this: A woman can’t deal with sexism solo. She has to have a Greek Chorus to amplify, interpret, and spin with, for, and about her. And, after 40 years, there is no Greek Chorus for women at the national level. Nada. Zip.

  • There is no feminist voice in the Old Media, let alone a feminist perspective informing all the media. The media are totally androcentric in their framing of all issues. Women who are allowed face time either see the world as their male bosses do, or tread very carefully with their small departures.
  • The DNC never had Hillary’s back, never became her Greek Chorus. They not only betrayed their best candidate in 75 years, but they also betrayed the many constituencies for whom she has a long record of fighting.

After 40 years, feminist organizations and spokeswomen have not been able to create a cultural context that would make it impermissible to attack women and perpetrate the kind of vicious misogyny directed at Hillary Clinton and now at Sarah Palin. It would be a tall order given that patriarchy has been organizing our social world and our culture for 5,000-6,000 years. The only good news here is that the behavior of the DNC has made it transparent to many of us that we’ll never get there by being an appendage of the DNC and held hostage to Roe.

If establishment feminists had any real clout with the DNC, Hillary would be taking the oath of office on January 20. Rather than attacking women candidates who don’t fit their precious self-image, leftist so-called feminists and those wondrous postfeminists should get over themselves. If they had done that a year ago, Hillary would be on her way to the White House, and we wouldn’t be in this mess of opting between which set of candidates scares us less.

Sarah Palin is a rorschach for the Left and for feminists. She has exposed the boundaries and implicit rules for inclusion in their clubs, thereby sparking a much needed dialogue about what feminism is and can be. She has thrown into relief the limitations of establishment feminist strategies, and blown open the door to alternative strategies. Sarah Palin arrived on the national scene at the moment when many Hillary supporters were recognizing an old political truth: If you can’t walk away from the table, you have no bargaining power. If you have no alternatives, you will get nothing but crumbs.”

And speaking of alternative strategies, Greta Van Susteren came up with an alternative strategy on Lynette Long: ARE YOU KIDDING??? FROM GRETA ON GRETAWIRE.

“I can’t get over it….are they nuts?”, Greta asks about women who portray themselves as leaders for women but proceed to attack other women running for office.

Their inertia (and now criticism of those who disagree with them) has made them utterly irrelevant.    I will give them credit for starting the ball rolling for women (that was yesterday) but now (today) they are in the way.  Now they are putting a stop on women.  They are hurting women.  I can’t figure out why….

Real Feminists are DOERS — working ! Role models! Taking a chance!  Showing everyone women can!  And yes, Feminists are Governors and Governors are Feminists! Feminists are not women drinking the kool aid – blogging with each other how terrible the world is to women.  That doesn’t help.  Frankly, that’s lame…really lame.

Yes, there is sexism in the world and lots of it — but a real Feminist goes out and fights it…and fights it by becoming a role model, being successful, showing we can and we want to…and a Feminist has independent thoughts and positions – yes, dares to disagree with the women who are stuck in the past …those women just blogging …thinking “woe is me..there is sexism out there that stands in my way..that is why I have become so utterly pathetic where only my very small crowd of equally pathetics will listen….I am so unhappy and it must be someone else’s fault.”

You don’t have to agree with Governor Palin on all issues or even one issue to know that she truly IS a Feminist.  She is out there being a role model…she is a doer on a giant level..she takes hits from the media and she keeps going..nothing is stopping her…in fact, she doesn’t have time to sit around and complain.  She creates more opportunity for women each day than one can quantify.  This is what women wanted.  Yes, women can be Governors..engineers…..run for Vice President…professional athletes…news anchors…professors….business owners….lawyers…doctors….and even astronauts.  We wanted women to have choices…we wanted it so that women had equal opportunity to succeed.

Feminists should be excited for what Governor Palin has done for women — you don’t have to vote for her but you should give her credit for what she has been doing and is doing for women.”

And the following comment by Greta really hit home with me.  I keep getting hate emails from one side or the other, attacking one candidate or the other.  And the thing that both puzzles and galls me is that these are from people who never sat in a phone bank calling to ask for support, never block walked, never painted a sign or planted it in a lawn, never attended a rally or donated a dollar to either party.  And yet a day or two before one of the most important elections our country has held, they believe a flood of spam hate email will actually influence, convince and carry the day.  Wake up!

So I join Greta when she says…

“Get over it. Here is an idea: instead of sitting on your keyboard sniping at other Feminists …get off your a** and campaign for the other ticket! That’s a novel idea: DO! and make yourself relevant again! who knows? you might even become happy!”"

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Palin Displays Her Feminist Side

Lynette Long: Palin Displays Her Feminist Side – From the Washington Post.

AdvancingWomen.com adheres to a strictly non partisan policy, but we do support women and we’d like to see a lot more of them in office and a lot more of them recognizing and talking about positions which will help women.  So we’re always glad to see another excellent post by Lynette Long who is very outspoken on her pro-women positions.

Lynette Long

Lynette Long

HENDERSON, Nev. — Extolling the virtues of equal pay and opportunity for women, this afternoon GOP vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin framed her White House quest in terms of feminist values.

“I have a question for the women in the audience,” the Alaska governor began her speech here at the Henderson Pavillion, underneath an arching white tent. “Are you willing to break the highest, hardest glass ceiling in America?”

Palin surrounded herself onstage with two higher-profile defectors from Sen. Hillary Clinton’s camp — Lynn Rothschild, a member of the Democratic Platform Committee, and Elaine Lafferty, a former editor-in-chief of Ms. Magazine — along with Shelly Mandell, the president of the Los Angeles chapter of the National Organization for Women, Linda Klinge, the vice president of Oregon’s NOW chapter and Prameela Bartholomeusz, a small business owner and member of the Democratic National Platform Committee….

Lynn Rothschild, former Hillary Clinton Supporter

Lynn Rothschild, former Hillary Clinton Supporter

And while Palin has spoken repeatedly on the stump about shattering the “glass ceiling” with her candidacy, this afternoon she lashed out at Democratic nominee Barack Obama as a hypocrite who fails to treat women — including Clinton — as equals.

“When the time came to make a decision, Barack Obama couldn’t bring himself to pick the woman who got eighteen million votes in the primary,” Palin said of Obama’s vice presidential pick, comparing it to the discrimination women face in the workplace every day. “The qualifications are there, but for some reason the promotion never comes … You’ve got to ask yourself, why wasn’t Senator Hillary Clinton even vetted by the Obama campaign?”

Elaine Lafferty, former editor-in-chief Ms. Magazine

Elaine Lafferty, former editor-in-chief Ms. Magazine

Palin went on to suggest Obama discriminated against women employees in his own Senate office, as opposed to GOP presidential nominee John McCain.

“There is a difference between what Barack Obama says and what he does,” she declared. “Out on the stump, he talks about things like equal pay for equal work, but according to Senate records, women on his staff get just 83 cents for every dollar that the men get. What is with that? Does he think that the women aren’t working as hard? Does he think they’re 17 percent less productive?”

“I know one senator who does pay women equal pay,” she added, referring to McCain.

Within minutes of Palin’s remarks, Obama senior advisor Anita Dunn issued a statement saying, “Senator Obama has fought for equal pay for an equal day’s work, while Senator McCain has suggested that women don’t get equal pay because they need more education and training. While Senator Obama has proposed a plan to help working women, the McCain-Palin campaign offers just more negative attacks and distortions.”

An Obama aide who asked not to identified said that women on McCain’s staff earn more comparable salaries to men on staff because they occupy more senior, high-paid posts in the Arizona senator’s office, not because Obama discriminates against women.

Palin went on to say, if elected, she would pursue policies such as flexibility in labor laws so women could engage in more telecommuting and would push for a tax code “that doesn’t penalize working families.”

“Working mothers need an advocate, and they will have one when this working mother is working for all of you,” she said, as the crowd cheered.

A former high school basketball player, Palin then launched into a detailed discussion of Title IX, a 1972 law that banned discrimination in any educational program or activity that receives federal financial assistance. The law applies to a broad range of activities, but it has helped ensure high schools and colleges provide equal funding for sports programs and other measures in which men and women participate.

Palin said that she had benefited from Title IX, and for women of her generation, “Over time, that opened more than doors to just the gymnasium. It allowed us to view ourselves, and our futures, in a different way.”

While she credited feminists with the enactment of Title IX — saying, “We owed that opportunity to women, to feminists who came before us” — Palin quickly emphasized that Americans who embraced a different ideology could also push for gender equality. “A belief in equal opportunity is not just the cause of feminists. It’s the creed of our country.”

Toward the end of her remarks Palin seemed to echo the theme that Clinton touted as First Lady: that women across the globe deserved the same rights that American women enjoy, including freedom for sex trafficking and honor killings. “If I am elected, these women will have an advocate and an defender in the forty-seventh vice president of the United States,” she told the audience.

Let’s hope that either candidate who is elected will choose to advocate for and defend women. It’s high time.

For more posts by Lynnette Long, go to Lynette Long

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Is Tina Fey Parody Helping Or Hurting Sarah Palin?

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Image by Surfer Labor via Flickr

Fourteen million people watched Saturday Night Live when Sarah Palin dropped by and took over the stage and the microphone from her late night clone/imitator Tina Fey. In some circles there is no higher compliment or touchstone than to be parodied by SNL. It means you’ve arrived.

There’s little doubt Palin has energized the conservative Republican base and drawn huge, enthusiastic crowds when she speaks. Is she critiqued, marginalized and mocked by the liberal elite? Yes, many of them. Will it make a difference? Maybe not, since the liberal elite are not voting for her anyway. I did read a report from one woman, a Democrat and not a Palin fan, who said, out of curiosity, she attended a Palin rally: “Whatever they may say, Governor Palin is a star. The moment she took command of the stage I knew I hadn’t seen such star power since Bill Clinton’s personality filled the stage. So whatever happens in the election, I think Sarah Palin is going to be a huge star in the Republican party.”

Peggy Noonan, conservative Wall Street Journal columnist and Ronald Reagan speech writer, a member of her own party, does not much like Palin: “There is little sign that she has the tools, the equipment, the knowledge or the philosophical grounding one hopes for, and expects, in a holder of high office.”

Even if that were true, if Palin ever does get elected to higher office, she certainly wouldn’t be the first president we could say that about. What do you think? Do you find Sarah Palin refreshing and energizing, or ready for the icy trail back to Alaska and the arctic wilderness? Let us hear from you.

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There’s More Fat To Be Chewed With Ophelia

A Fireside Chat with Ophelia.

The New Agenda, a non partisan group which seeks to advance women’s rights has this to say about its the weekly call-in show for members and guests of The New Agenda,, hosted by Amy Siskind. :

Thank you to those of you who joined us for our first week of Chewing the Fat with Ophelia.  The show was a resounding success with callers from PA, OH, FL, IN, NM, WI, MN, NJ and NY buzzing in to let their hair down and chew some fat!

Please join us tomorrow night, Monday, October 20th from 10-11 p.m. EST for our second show.

“It’s getting bad out there. The news seems to go from bad to worse. The sexism is running rampant. The economy is a mess. Our political system seems corrupt. With so much anxiety, upset, fear and just plain outrage, we need to be there for each other! The format will be open. Please call with your questions, concerns, or just to vent. Hopefully we can all feel a little better after an hour together, and maybe even learn a thing or two along the way!

This is a new kind of radio: internet podcasting. The “radio” is your computer – all you have to do is go to the website when the show is scheduled to start, and the show will play right there on your computer screen. (You do have to have your computer speakers turned on!) There’s also a telephone number for you to call in and talk to the host or ask a question, just like with traditional radio shows: (347) 324-5942. Plus, there’s a chat room feature too, so you can “chat” with other listeners while you’re listening to the show. And if you miss the live broadcast, a recording of the program is automatically stored right there on the page so you can listen to it later.

CHEWING THE FAT WITH OPHELIA

The call-in number is (347) 324-5942. Join us!

The New Agenda, Team
New Agenda, Media Alert

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A Female Head of State? What’s Your Point, Honey?

South face of the White House.

Image via Wikipedia

Prepping Women for the White House – International Museum of Women.

What’s Your Point, Honey? Promotes Not One, But Many Women Leaders

Image Borgman (c) 2007 The Cincinnati Enquirer. Used by permission of Universal Press Syndicate

Nearly 100 years after universal suffrage, U.S. women have yet to hold the highest office in the land. Currently, they make up 18 percent of governors, 16 percent of senators and 16 percent of representatives. What’s being done to change these statistics? Filmmakers Amy Sewell and Susan Toffler confront this question head on in their upbeat feminist documentary, What’s Your Point, Honey? Through candid and formal interviews with pre-teens, prominent women leaders and everyone in between, the directors have created a film about and for young women who dream of doing great things.

AdvancingWomen.com is proud to support all young women…. and, in fact, all mature women as well,  who dream of doing great things.  We look forward to seeing one of them sworn in as President of the United States one day.

But as the film’s subtitle, “It’s not about one…” reminds us, it’s not just about getting one woman to the top position, but shifting the political climate so that, by the time these young girls are of eligible running age, it will “be so normal for women to run that we’ll never look back.”

To read more on the making of this film go to

Prepping Women for the White House – International Museum of Women.

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