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bigtree

(85,998 posts)
Mon Mar 25, 2013, 12:05 PM Mar 2013

Gloria Steinem and Friends Want Obama to Appoint a Female to Head FCC

Last edited Mon Mar 25, 2013, 01:23 PM - Edit history (1)

____________________

tweeted by, Gloria Steinem ?@GloriaSteinem 27m
Every @FCC chair in history has been a man. Make number 29 a woman. My letter http://bit.ly/10rIUeS Add your voice http://chn.ge/UIJJjA


March 22, 2013

The President
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20500

Dear Mr. President,

We're writing to make sure that with all that crosses your desk, you see a piece of good news. The best qualified candidates to chair the Federal Communications Commission are all women. You will be able make good policy and good history at the same time.

You have the chance to democratize the media with one key appointment when you nominate the next Chair of the Federal Communications Commission. We are writing to urge you to pick a woman.

This would be a truly historic appointment. There has never been a female chair of the Federal Communications Commission and a woman chair would go far to making women more visible and powerful in the media and technology.

As we step into 2013, women are still underrepresented in the leadership of America's media and its technology industries. Women hold only 6 percent of all TV and radio station licenses and under one-third of TV news directors are women. Of top executives working for technology companies just over 5 percent are women. Media companies have some of the most powerful resources at their disposal in shaping attitudes and culture. And as the Internet transforms American media and telecommunications, it has become central to the nation’s competitiveness as well as the future of culture, news, and communication.

A number of well-qualified candidates are reported by The National Journal to be under consideration for the top job at the FCC, including former OECD Ambassador, Karen Kornbluh, current FCC Commissioners Mignon Clyburn and Jessica Rosenworcel, Clinton administration FCC executives Susan Ness and Cathy Sandoval.

While there is no easy fix to getting women into the top jobs in the telecom and media industries, the government watchdog can and should be headed by a woman. The FCC holds broad regulatory power over the most important media, communications, and technology companies in the United States. Plus, there is a powerful "bully pulpit" effect to having women at the head of this agency.

You earned the majority of the women’s vote because you represented views on issues from violence against women to pay equity. In your second term you can demonstrate your commitment to equality in leadership in a different but equally important area of the federal government, oversight of the media and telecom industries.

The FCC’s broad regulatory authority over huge swaths of the U.S. economy makes it a very powerful government agency and over the next year it will face a series of critical decision points – from how to structure a complex wireless spectrum auction to how to respond to an anticipated decision in a legal challenge over its authority to enforce its “Open Internet” rules. In addition, it must decide how to help improve broadband speed, service, and pricing in the United States when its rules are under pressure from industry. In the late 1990s the US had the highest broadband speeds and penetration rates of almost anywhere but today the U.S. comes in sixteenth and the average U.S. cost per megabit per second is several times that in South Korea, France, and the UK.

The next FCC chair must be someone who is willing to put the public’s interests first and work to ensure that American businesses and workers have the tools they need to ensure U.S. competitiveness in the 21st century. Consumers want an independent FCC chair – not an industry insider – but someone who is willing to put the needs of consumers over the desires of industry executives.

The identity and personal experience of a regulatory chief matters. William Kennard, for example, who was appointed the first African-American chair of the agency by President Bill Clinton, made a top priority of closing the digital divide for African-Americans and for Americans with disabilities. Never in the 80 years of the FCC has a woman of any race or group been its chair, though women have been the nation's majority for a long time.

The post atop the FCC is one of the most important opportunities available to raise the bar for representational diversity and decision-making in the media and telecom sectors, which are the infrastructure of this generation and of the future.

This petition has already been signed by activists from across the country who agree with us that the time is now for the FCC to be headed by a woman. The time is now.

Most Respectfully,

Siobhan “Sam” Bennett
President & CEO of She Should Run

Julie Burton
President of The Women’s Media Center

Melanie Campbell
CEO & Executive Director of the National Coalition on Black Civic Participation

Geena Davis
Founder of the Geena Davis Institute on Gender in Media

Margot Dorfman
CEO of the U.S. Women’s Chamber of Commerce

Madeline Di Nonno
Executive Director of the Geena Davis Institute on Gender in Media

Lauren Embrey
Chair of the Board of The Women's Media Center

Gloria Feldt
Co-Founder and President of Take The Lead

Kristin Rowe-Finkbeiner
Executive Director & CEO of MomsRising

Sandra Finley
President & CEO of the League of Black Women

Jane Fonda
Co-Founder of The Women’s Media Center

Kim Gandy
President & CEO of the National Network to End Domestic Violence

Eleanor Hinton Hoytt
President and CEO of Black Women’s Health Imperative

Shelby Knox
Director of Women’s Rights Campaigns for Change.org

Terry Lawler
Executive Director of New York Women in Film & Television

Pat Mitchell
President and CEO of The Paley Center for Media

Robin Morgan
Co-Founder of The Women’s Media Center

Terry O’Neill
President, National Organization for Women Foundation

Anika Rahman
President & CEO of the Ms. Foundation for Women

Susan Scanlan
Chair of the National Council of Women’s Organizations

Karen See
President of the Coalition of Labor Union Women

Eleanor Smeal
President of the Feminist Majority Foundation

Katherine Spillar
Executive Editor of Ms. Magazine

Gloria Steinem
Co-Founder of The Women’s Media Center

Dee Strum
National President of the National Coalition of 100 Black Women

Linda Young
Chair of the National Women’s Political Caucus

27 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Gloria Steinem and Friends Want Obama to Appoint a Female to Head FCC (Original Post) bigtree Mar 2013 OP
Be careful what you ask for - Obama is perfectly capable of appointing Carly Fiorina...... djean111 Mar 2013 #1
+1 Jamaal510 Mar 2013 #14
gender-neutral doesn't cover the concerns and benefits of a woman chair, expressed in the letter bigtree Mar 2013 #18
he'll nominate whoever he believes in bigtree Mar 2013 #17
gender should not be a consideration. bowens43 Mar 2013 #2
Affirmative Action demwing Mar 2013 #6
Because it's still not a level playing field. UnrepentantLiberal Mar 2013 #9
it shouldn't be assumed that the woman nominated wouldn't share the President's goals bigtree Mar 2013 #16
Exactly. theKed Mar 2013 #19
I nominate Gloria Leonard. bluedigger Mar 2013 #3
Grammar quibble--they're calling for him to appoint a woman, not a female. geek tragedy Mar 2013 #4
"Female" can be used as an adjective OR a noun demwing Mar 2013 #8
The press release said woman, not female. geek tragedy Mar 2013 #10
That was not your original point demwing Mar 2013 #12
the letter referenced both 'female' and 'woman' chair in the same sentence bigtree Mar 2013 #13
Waste of time. Man or woman LittleBlue Mar 2013 #5
They weren't asking Obama to become a liberal, UnrepentantLiberal Mar 2013 #11
"Don't celebrate a woman getting the position" - Sorry, but I will demwing Mar 2013 #22
Good for you LittleBlue Mar 2013 #26
Good for you demwing Mar 2013 #27
The nominee should be firmly in favor of net neutrality. nt Generation_Why Mar 2013 #7
As a woman, I have no more use for female corporate shills than I do for male ones. forestpath Mar 2013 #15
Exactly. djean111 Mar 2013 #20
It wouldn't surprise me a bit if he chose her, or somebody just as bad. forestpath Mar 2013 #21
Why? demwing Mar 2013 #23
I don't have to explain myself to you. forestpath Mar 2013 #24
I'm sorry, you apparently didn't get the memo demwing Mar 2013 #25
 

djean111

(14,255 posts)
1. Be careful what you ask for - Obama is perfectly capable of appointing Carly Fiorina......
Mon Mar 25, 2013, 12:10 PM
Mar 2013

just sayin'.

Jamaal510

(10,893 posts)
14. +1
Mon Mar 25, 2013, 12:38 PM
Mar 2013

It shouldn't matter what gender, race, ethnicity, etc. a person is--all that is really important is that whoever heads it is the most qualified for the job. The same is true for other positions, as well.

bigtree

(85,998 posts)
18. gender-neutral doesn't cover the concerns and benefits of a woman chair, expressed in the letter
Mon Mar 25, 2013, 01:02 PM
Mar 2013

"There has never been a female chair of the Federal Communications Commission and a woman chair would go far to making women more visible and powerful in the media and technology.

As we step into 2013, women are still underrepresented in the leadership of America's media and its technology industries. Women hold only 6 percent of all TV and radio station licenses and under one-third of TV news directors are women. Of top executives working for technology companies just over 5 percent are women. Media companies have some of the most powerful resources at their disposal in shaping attitudes and culture. And as the Internet transforms American media and telecommunications, it has become central to the nation’s competitiveness as well as the future of culture, news, and communication."


I think these points raised are worthy and fair considerations.

bigtree

(85,998 posts)
17. he'll nominate whoever he believes in
Mon Mar 25, 2013, 12:47 PM
Mar 2013

. . . that shouldn't be a caution about considering appointing a woman. The appointment would/should be judged on the merits of the nominee; man or woman.

bigtree

(85,998 posts)
16. it shouldn't be assumed that the woman nominated wouldn't share the President's goals
Mon Mar 25, 2013, 12:42 PM
Mar 2013

. . . and aspirations in office.

Certainly there's a binder-full somewhere . . .

What about the concerns expressed in the letter?

 

geek tragedy

(68,868 posts)
4. Grammar quibble--they're calling for him to appoint a woman, not a female.
Mon Mar 25, 2013, 12:16 PM
Mar 2013

Female=adjective.

Woman=noun.

 

geek tragedy

(68,868 posts)
10. The press release said woman, not female.
Mon Mar 25, 2013, 12:27 PM
Mar 2013

"female" would imply that they wanted girls to be considered.

 

demwing

(16,916 posts)
12. That was not your original point
Mon Mar 25, 2013, 12:35 PM
Mar 2013

you were quibbling that "female" was inappropriate because it was an adjective. It's also a noun.

bigtree

(85,998 posts)
13. the letter referenced both 'female' and 'woman' chair in the same sentence
Mon Mar 25, 2013, 12:37 PM
Mar 2013

"This would be a truly historic appointment. There has never been a female chair of the Federal Communications Commission and a woman chair would go far to making women more visible and powerful in the media and technology."

 

LittleBlue

(10,362 posts)
5. Waste of time. Man or woman
Mon Mar 25, 2013, 12:20 PM
Mar 2013

it's going to be a corporate shill.

Don't celebrate a woman getting the position, like it's some sort of victory, unless you know they aren't beholden to the 1%. We're falling behind Romania in internet speed thanks to the too-friendly relationship between our government and big cable. The whole notion that the FCC promotes competition is a farce.

 

demwing

(16,916 posts)
22. "Don't celebrate a woman getting the position" - Sorry, but I will
Mon Mar 25, 2013, 01:57 PM
Mar 2013

I celebrate equality where I see it.

 

LittleBlue

(10,362 posts)
26. Good for you
Mon Mar 25, 2013, 02:15 PM
Mar 2013

And I'll celebrate when we get an FCC chair who actually does his/her job as a protector of the people, and not concern myself with whether they were born with an innie or an outie.

 

demwing

(16,916 posts)
27. Good for you
Mon Mar 25, 2013, 03:23 PM
Mar 2013

I'll be glad when we don't have to discuss why the United States ranks a pitiful 77th on a list of countries ranked by % of political offices held by women. (http://www.ipu.org/wmn-e/classif.htm)

 

forestpath

(3,102 posts)
15. As a woman, I have no more use for female corporate shills than I do for male ones.
Mon Mar 25, 2013, 12:39 PM
Mar 2013

And I have no doubt Obama will choose a corporate shill.

 

djean111

(14,255 posts)
20. Exactly.
Mon Mar 25, 2013, 01:10 PM
Mar 2013

That's why I mentioned Fiorina - corporate shill extraordinaire.
Right up this administration's alley.

 

forestpath

(3,102 posts)
21. It wouldn't surprise me a bit if he chose her, or somebody just as bad.
Mon Mar 25, 2013, 01:42 PM
Mar 2013

It would surprise me if he didn't.

 

demwing

(16,916 posts)
25. I'm sorry, you apparently didn't get the memo
Mon Mar 25, 2013, 02:10 PM
Mar 2013

baseless, incendiary comments must be rationalized and supported to the first person that challenges said comment.




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