The Hutchinson Report
Did Palin really say she wouldn't hire blacks?
By Earl Ofari Hutchinson
OW Contributor
Sarah Palin admittedly hasn't had much of a track record when
it comes to acknowledging let alone promoting diversity during her
short tenure as Alaska governor. She's on record with a terse
utterance on hate crimes legislation and another one on cultural
diversity.
During the 2006 gubernatorial campaign she told the Eagle
Forum that she opposed expanded hate crime legislation. In her
gubernatorial campaign booklet in 2006, Palin gave her equally
terse view of discrimination. She simply said that she and her
gubernatorial running mate would provide opportunities for all
Alaskans. There is no record that Palin has made any other public
statements on diversity and minority issues since then. This in
itself might be cause for only a slight eyebrow raise.
But Palin's skimpy track record and paucity of words on
diversity is relatively tame compared to the far more damaging
accusation that's making the rounds. On April 29, fourteen Alaska
black leaders that included prominent ministers, NAACP officials,
and community activists met with Palin to voice their complaint
over minority hiring and job opportunities. During the meeting she
allegedly said that she didn't have to hire any blacks. Even more
damning, she purportedly said that she didn't intend to hire any.
This charge is so racially incendiary that it sounded like
yet another one of the legion of Palin urban legends that have
fueled the cyber gossip mill from the instant Republican
presidential contender John McCain plopped her on his ticket. The
charge had to be confirmed or denied. If Governor Palin or any
other public official flatly said that they had no intention to
hire blacks that would be politically unpardonable. And for a
potential vice-president it would and should be the kiss of death.
In a phone message to this writer, Megan Stapleton, a Palin
spokesperson who works with the McCain-Palin campaign committee,
vehemently denied that Palin ever said that she would not hire
blacks. Sharon Leighow, a communications spokesperson in the Alaska
governor's office, also disputed the allegation. She said that
Palin's press secretary was part African American and that two of
her senior advisors were Filipino and Korean.
But Leighow was also adamant that Palin did not hire staff
persons based on color, but solely on talent and skill. As she put
it, "Governor Palin is totally color-blind."
In a call to this writer, Gwen Alexander, President of the
African American Historical Society of Alaska who initially
reported Palin's quip, stuck by her contention that Palin made the
racially charged retort. She also charged that Palin did not
support or even officially acknowledge the group's annual
Juneteenth Commemoration.
June 19 is celebrated as the date of slave emancipation in
Texas. Alaska is one of thirteen states that has designated it an
official holiday. Other Alaska governors have sent the traditional
greeting and acknowledgment to the Society. Alexander says Palin
snubbed the group.
The unofficial charge then is that Palin is insensitive to
the state's African Americans, and that includes refusing to hire
and appoint African Americans. That charge is hotly disputed by
Palin's staff and they cite names and numbers to back it up. But
apart from the veracity of the charge and the denial, Palin's
statement that she's absolutely color blind when it comes to hiring
and appointments does set off warning bells.
The color blind argument strikes to the heart of the
continuing debate over what and how far governors, indeed all
public officials, should go to insure that their staffs and their
appointments truly represent the broadest diversity possible.
Officials must make a concerted outreach effort to make that
happen. Palin's color blind posture more often than not has been
nothing but a convenient excuse not to seek out, and hire and
promote African Americans and other minorities in their
administration, no matter how qualified.
Diversity is a major issue in this election. It's implicit in
Democratic rival Barack Obama's White House run. It's explicit in
Ward Connerly's anti-affirmative action initiative on the ballot in
three states this November. Obama opposes it. McCain backs it, and
so does Palin.
Palin's commitment to diversity is no small point in Alaska.
According to the 2000 Census figures blacks make up officially
about four percent of the state population. But those who
self-identify at least in part as African American bump up the
percentage much higher. This is not an insignificant number
especially when American Indians, Aleuts, Eskimos, and Asians are
taken together. Minorities then make up about one quarter of
Alaska's population. This makes the state one of the most
ethnically diverse in the nation. Diversity must be more than a
word that an Alaska governor pays campaign lip service to and then
ignores.
Palin's campaign and gubernatorial spokespersons say the
knock that she is hostile to blacks and minorities is unfair. That
may well be true. But to those Alaska black leaders who challenged
Palin on her administration's minority hiring practices, to them
the knock is much deserved.
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Campaign 2008