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Women's Groups Unite Behind Moseley Braun in 2004
By Yvonne Scruggs-Leftwich, Women's Enews
Editor's Note: The following is a commentary. The opinions expressed are
those of the author and not necessarily the views of Women's Enews or the National Organization for Women.
August 27, 2003
The National Organization for Women and the National
Women's Political Caucus endorsed Carol Moseley Braun for president
yesterday, on the 83rd anniversary of U.S. women gaining the right to
vote.
In so doing, activist women once again stood firmly in the "bully pulpit
of their familiar" (to paraphrase author Alice Walker)from which they
continue to fight to push women out of the margins and into the center
of the political arena.
This time, they are lending their clout to an accomplished former
senator and former ambassador, who despite her considerable political
stature, is being largely ignored by many influential onlookers. In
media discussions, her name is too often omitted from the roster of
candidates.
Commentary about the Democratic and Republican candidates' "stud factor"
and "alpha male" appeal appeared in the Washington Post on July 13,
accompanied by caricatures of the men "flexing their muscles" in various
stages of jock undress. An earlier Washington Post commentary on May 25
discussed the relative advantage of candidates' "military record gaining
a role in the 2004 Presidential Race."
Moseley Braun was mentioned in neither of these gender-biased
pieces. When she's left out like this, it contributes to the sexist
assumption that she cannot be a serious candidate since she isn't
visibly competing in this primarily male context.
Moseley Braun's Campaign Called 'Silly'
Moseley Braun has been dogged by allegations of improper money
management. However, the truth is that after intense smear efforts by
partisan detractors who charged her with IRS campaign reporting
irregularities, it turned out that she owed the princely sum of $311.
This was such a small amount in the scheme of political campaigns that
she was not even fined penalties or interest. Although she was fully
investigated and found to be without guilt, baseless allegations
continue to be dragged into assessments of her qualifications. The
"politics of personal destruction" find an easy target in an
overachieving and successful Black woman public official like Carol
Moseley Braun. Yet, most white male politicians benefit from press'
amnesia. For example, George W. Bush not only presided over the demise
of an oil business and a baseball team, but also spent many years
immersed in an alcoholic haze, all of which facts are very rarely
mentioned.
A male writer for a major East Coast daily recently called her candidacy
"silly," the same label he applied to the bid by Rev. Al Sharpton, the
other African American in the field of nine Democratic contenders.
Given the degree to which stereotyping often drives the media's
perspectives, it is hard to discern whether that writer's "silly" label
for Moseley Braun's candidacy was because of her gender, her race, or
all of the above, as often is the experience of Black women. It was not
based upon her qualifications.
Moseley Braun Has Years of Public Service
Moseley Braun has 25-plus years experience as an elected official at the
local, state and national levels, giving her far more political
experience than either Bill Clinton or, certainly, George W. Bush when
they ran for office. She is a lawyer who was elected to the Illinois
state legislature and also elected to countywide office in Cook County,
Ill. She is the first African American woman elected to the U. S. Senate
and only the second African American senator since the Civil War and
Reconstruction. She recently completed service as the U. S. ambassador
to New Zealand.
National opinion polls have affirmed that Carol Moseley Braun has a high
approval rating among voters and is running respectably high in the
otherwise all-male Democratic primary field. In an August poll of
Democrats' preferences in an Illinois presidential primary, she led with
22 percent support of those polled. Dick Gephardt followed with 16
percent. In a NBC/Wall Street Journal poll, Braun placed fifth, ahead of
John Edwards, Bob Graham, Rev. Al Sharpton and Dennis Kucinich.
A tendency exists to overlook her, which has bizarre and distracting
consequences. At one highly partisan political action committee meeting
last spring, a savvy African American activist who generously supports
candidates of her choice, was asked to contribute to Carol Moseley
Braun's campaign. Her surprising response was that, while she would make
an initial pledge, she really did not yet know the candidate's platform.
She asked: What does she stand for?
The planks of Moseley Braun's platform have been public for the last 15
years and explicit since earlier this summer, when she announced her
candidacy. For political players not to know about them suggests just
how successfully the male-dominated media pack has belittled the only
female candidate in the field.
Nonetheless, Moseley Braun is still standing, just as when she alone led
the successful defeat of former Senator Jesse Helms' determination to
continue federal recognition of the discriminatory National Society
Daughters of the American Revolution. She continues to challenge the
status quo, aggressively advancing an institutional-change agenda. The
two endorsements from politically powerful women's advocacy
organizations are based explicitly upon this tradition and her strong
progressive record.
Moseley Braun's Campaign Quantum Leap from Chisholm's
Carol Moseley Braun's campaign experiences are a quantum leap forward by
contrast to those of Congresswoman Shirley Chisholm, who in 1972 was the
first woman and the first African American to mount a fully orchestrated
national presidential campaign. She was neither supported by Black
elected officials' organizations nor by most women's groups.
Chisholm wrote once about an encounter with a male voter in Harlem who
criticized her in a way that seems positively quaint today. "Young
woman, what are you doing out here in this cold?" the man challenged
her. "Did you get your husband's breakfast this morning? Did you
straighten up your house? What are you doing running for office? That is
something for men!"
What Moseley Braun Needs to Win
The question is: What will overcome the appearance of a stealth
candidacy by Carol Moseley Braun and force her determination to win into
mainstream consideration and media coverage?
When asked this question, candidate Carol identifies three imperatives:
The first two are to raise money and do well in some early primaries;
the thirdand what she describes as the most importantis for
Americans to believe in her as a viable candidate who will govern
effectively as president.
Well, women are showing that they believe in her and there are 9 million
more registered women voters than men!
In additional to her new high-profile endorsements from women's
organizations, Moseley Braun's supporters also include Gloria Steinem,
co-founder of Ms. Magazine; Dr. Dorothy I. Height, president emeritus of
the National Council of Negro Women; Coretta Scott King, founder of the
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Center for Non-Violent Social Change; Marie
Wilson, founding president of The White House Project, which recruits
women for public office and Dr. C. DeLores Tucker, former secretary of
state, Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, political power broker and chair of
the National Political Congress of Black Women.
Let's hope the support and energies of such high-profile women will help
Moseley Braun achieve the respectful attention her candidacy deserves.
For more information:
Carol Moseley Braun for President: - http://www.carolforpresident.com
Yvonne Scruggs-Leftwich, Ph.D., is a consultant on national policy and
civil rights issues and a senior faculty member at the National Labor
College of the George Meany Center for Labor Studies, located in the
Washington, D.C. area.
Women's Enews is a news service based in New York City.
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