Unpacking The Binders
Legends are more interesting and more attractive than the reality underneath them. And sometimes, things are said that inadvertently reveal a great deal more than the speaker intends. So, quoth Mitt Romney in last night’s debate:
…I was serving as governor of my state, [so] I had the — the chance to pull together a Cabinet and all the applicants seemed to be men. And I — and I went to my staff, and I said, how come all the people for these jobs are — are all men? They said, well, these are the people that have the qualifications. And I said, well, gosh, can’t we — can’t we find some — some women that are also qualified? And — and so we — we took a concerted effort to go out and find women who had backgrounds that could be qualified to become members of our cabinet. I went to a number of women’s groups and said, can you help us find folks? And I brought us whole binders full of — of women. I was proud of the fact that after I staffed my cabinet and my senior staff that the University of New York in Albany did a survey of all 50 states and concluded that mine had more women in senior leadership positions than any other state in America.
I propose to take this story at face value as if it were the whole, unvarnished, literal truth. At the end of the post, I’ll get to pointing out that there is reason to question the complete veracity of the story. But, the bulk of what I’m interested in assumes that this is a thoroughly accurate and fair description of what actually occurred back in late 2002 and early 2003 during the transition period between Mitt Romney’s election as Governor of Massachusetts and the time he was sworn in to begin his term of public service.
I want to approach it that way for a reason.
After all, it’s just plain human nature that when people tell stories about themselves, they tend to tell stories about the version of themselves that they wish they actually were, the person that they would like to see in the mirror. There is every reason to think that this is phenomenon is especially prevalent in candidates for high office. So the story at face value tells us something about Governor Romney’s idealized vision of himself as a leader. And that tells us something about the sort of leadership we could expect from President Romney.
Right away, we see that W. Mitt Romney the then-Governor-elect is passively sitting back after getting elected, reviewing resumes and applications during his transition. He doesn’t have any ideas about who he’s going to appoint to Cabinet-level positions? That doesn’t sound right. A leader has people he leads. A team. A leader to an important position who must head up a team of people who will exercise substantial independent discretion and authority needs to be recruiting, not reading resumes.
Maybe the team is not yet complete at any given point in time. Maybe then-Governor-elect Romney needs to leave some spots open for people he owes favors to, maybe then-Governor-elect Romney hasn’t identified everyone with sufficient subject matter expertise to fill every spot. And there is a level of staffing where it’s appropriate to say, “Let’s see what’s out there in the public, let’s open this up.” But for a higher-level position, for an incoming executive, there ought to be no trouble finding most if not all of those position from within the ranks of one’s own supporters, partisans, and acquaintances.
Part of the basic skill set of the executive is the identification of people with strong skill sets to fulfill particular tasks. Ideally, they will have the right blend of their own ideas and personal initiative to do good things on their own, and a willingness to subordinate their own agendas to the larger goals of the team and their leader. Much of what happens in leadership is selling those talented subordinates on the leader’s vision for what the team as a whole is going to do and be about, so the subordinates’ intelligence, initiative, creativity, and talent get focused on those goals.
Romney is not demonstrating that skill set here. He is not recruiting anyone. Events are happening around him, not because he’s making them happen. Granted, the focus of the story is not about his vision for his Governorship, and not about how good he is at finding talented people. Presumably all of these resumes, those of men and women both, demonstrated that the applicants possessed at least adequate and hopefully superior qualifications. Giving Romney that much benefit of the doubt, the next question is how does the Governor select from amongst candidates that were all at least adequately qualified for the positions under discussion.
Being the eagle-eyed executive that he is, then-Governor-elect Romney is putting together his executive cabinet and while reviewing applications he says, “Hey, check it out, these are all doodz. That’s gonna look bad, yo.” (Okay, maybe not quite those words, but “Can’t we find some women that are also qualified?” is so much more pedestrian.) So then he directs outreach to women’s groups, and specifically solicits resumes and applications from women. He gets back binders full of resumes, and then selects women for several unspecified but presumably substantial positions within his administration.
Now, let the record reflect that I’m actually cool with that if it went down that way. If as an incoming executive he detected a significant gender imbalance in the talent pool available to him, then yes, he ought to do outreach to remedy that imbalance and make an effort to craft a cabinet that better reflected his state’s citizenry.
Leaving aside the problem mentioned in my esteemed colleague’s spot-on critique — there shouldn’t have been that imbalance in the first place — the political problem I see is that to a certain kind of Republican, a certain kind of conservative, even a certain kind of libertarian, this looks like giving preferential treatment to a favored group, remedied by then giving preferential treatment to a different favored group. It’s affirmative action. And in order to appeal to that certain kind of voter to whom affirmative action is not a pleasing policy, Governor and Candidate Romney has taken formal stances and formal actions against it.
In 2003, after formally taking office as Governor, Romney abolished the Massachusetts Office of Affirmative Action by executive order, creating in its place a monitoring board with no enforcement powers, insisting that he loves workplace diversity the whole time. When he later got a lot of political heat for it, he tacitly re-implemented affirmative action policies without formally putting them back on the books. His successor returned the letter of the law to its pre-Romney condition.
When he first ran for President back in the 2008 cycle, he (or his campaign) said about affirmative action to the Washington Post, “I believe our nation is at its best when people are evaluated as individuals … I do support encouraging inclusiveness and diversity, and I encourage the disclosure of the numbers of women and minorities in top positions of companies and government – not to impose a quota but to shine light on the situation.” No quotas and everyone is considered as an unique individual, but yes, diversity is a good thing to achieve too. It’s just not a top priority. Pretty de rigeur stuff for a Republican running for President in our contemporary times to say.
And because of that, I deduce that he’s really got no particularly strong feelings about the subject. His concern about women in his cabinet was one of trying to avoid an accusation that he was sexist. In word but not deed, he’s against affirmative action. In deed but not word, he’s only against affirmative action when it’s called that — if you call it something else or you just do it without a name, he’s in favor of it, as long as it’s not called what it is.
The truth seems to be, he just doesn’t care that much about affirmative action one way or the other. As Governor of Michigan, his father was a leader on affirmative action not just within the Republican party but nationally, and Mitt does still openly and appropriately admire his father’s career. This may help explain Mitt’s lukewarm receptiveness to it. And I suspect that this background makes him, deep down, receptive to it. But five plus years of running for President in today’s Republican Party requires that he suborn those basic instincts and judgments to the doctrines demanded by the base.
What would the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission be like under a Romney appointee? What would the Department of Labor be like? What would their priorities be? If Congress ever gets around to passing the Employment Non-Discrimination Act, would it meet a Romney veto or a Romney signature, and should that bill ever become law, how high a priority would enforcement by these agencies be? If these sorts of issues are matters of indifference to President Romney, it’s a good bet that they will be easily placed near the bottom of the priority list.
What his story tells us is that despite whatever rhetoric he feels obliged to recite on the campaign trail, he’s perfectly willing to actually do affirmative action when he sees that it needs to be done. But he’s desperately unwilling to be identified as doing it — because he fears backlash from his political support group.
This echoes what seems to be the case about healthcare policy: Romneycare good, Obamacare bad. The most substantial criticism of Obamacare, the individual mandate, was the centerpiece of Romneycare. I understand the federalism argument; I just don’t agree with it. So what seems to actually make Romneycare good and Obamacare bad is the label attached to it, not what’s actually inside the package. Romney actually has no ideological trouble with the individual mandate or any of the coverage or underwriting restristrictions; substantively, he has no quarrel with Obamacare. He just needs to be perceived as being opposed to it, and he’ll be perfectly happy to actually implement it so long as he can do it in the dark, when no one is paying attention.
There’s a degree of deception involved there, and the ones who are really being deceived are the people already at his back, not the people he’s trying to convince to start supporting him. And there is no substantial ideology, no substantial vision of what good policy will be, or even identification with any a particular policy goal there.
A leader originates goals for his team, and articulates why those goals are worth pursuing. If compromise is eventually necessary, the leader identifies what can be achieved, what can be salvaged, and what must be set aside. The point is not the achievement or non-achievement of the goal — it is the establishment of a goal, and the communication of the commitment to the goal’s pursuit. Deep down, on not only affirmative action and civil rights, but also healthcare and probably a lot of other things, Romney does not have strong feelings, much less passion, about the goals he is articulating on the campaign trail. His policy agenda, at its core, is made of plastic and not steel.
What’s more, leadership isn’t doing the right thing but only through the back door where no one can see it happening. Leadership would be saying to the world, “I know this isn’t going to be popular with some of the people who voted for me, but we need to do it because it’s the right thing to do.” Then-Governor-elect Romney didn’t do that openly; he did it quietly and we’re really only hearing about his outreach to women for the first time now.
Inevitably as President, something’s going to come up that social conservatives are going to get very excited about, and that excitement and attention will deny President Romney the discretion he would like to do as he would prefer. That leads me to predict that at some point in his Administration, and probably either directly on or powerfully motivated by social issues, President Romney will not have the testicular fortitude to stand up to his own base, and he will cave in, personally half-heartedly, do so something that pleases them which he personal would rather not do if he felt he had the freedom to do as he pleased.
The way that this will manifest which comes immediately to my mind is the appointment of a Justice to the Supreme Court of the United States. While the social right has been largely quiet about the Supreme Court so far in this cycle, if and when a Justice retires or passes away (and four of them are at least septuagenarian) this will immediately turn into political wildfire. This will be especially true if the vacancy is created by the not-implausible departure of either Anthony Kennedy or Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
The result will be a nominee who looks, at least ideologically, like the Justices whom the social right holds up as model Supreme Court Justices: Antonin Scalia, Clarence Thomas, and Samuel Alito. These Justices are all intensely smart, engage in outstanding scholarship, and with very few exceptions reach socially conservative results to their reasoning in nearly any case where a social issue is raised — even if their paths sometimes deviate from one another along the way. Whether such a nominee also pleases President Romney will be irrelevant.
Now, there is reason to question the veracity of the story about then-Governor-elect Romney reaching out to women when he found applications for cabinet-level positions to be too overwhelmingly male for at least some facet of his tastes. A little bit of exaggeration, a little bit of selective memory, a little bit of spin, and a whole of coaching and refinement during debate preparation — soon enough it becomes hard to tell a lie from something more innocuous. That’s not a particular indictment of Romney’s honesty since that’s something inherent in an elaborate candidacy.
Still, Romney’s brag about having the most gender-inclusive cabinet of any Governor may not be exactly true so much as just plain incorrect, depending on what you count as “senior staff.” And the binders in question may well have been prepared by a third-party entity before the election even took place, and available to the incoming administration ab initio, rather than having been the result of an outreach directive made by Romney personally. Maybe.
Wherever last night’s “binders” statement is placed on the continuum between the rock-solid verifiable objective truth on one end and a brazen intentional deception on the other, it does reveal what Romney wants us to believe about him. I’ve little doubt that Romney does have a strong suite of executive skills at his disposal — a good sense for how money works, an understanding of how to delegate and coordinate tasks, and a grasp of the methods by which policies are fashioned and implemented both in business and governmental settings.
But just like the reality of the story may not be as good as the legend, the reality of his executive skill set may not match its legend, either. This revelation about something he probably really thinks he did, and something that he probably really thinks he ought to be proud of himself for doing, tells me that some of the executive skills I’ve thought he had great strength in may not be as strong as I’d previously thought.
Romney decided the best man for the job of lieutenant governor was a gal named Kerry Healey. Good enough for me.
Midway through his four-year term, 42 percent of his 33 new appointments were women, according to a study done by the UMass Center for Women in Politics and Public Policy using some of the data collected by MassGAP.
But over the next two years, women made up only 25 percent of the 64 new appointments Romney made. By the end of his term, the number of women in high-ranking positions was slightly lower than it was before Romney took office.
And that’s close enough for rock’n’roll. [The abridged version making the rounds simply has his admin as lower in female %age, not only at the end of his term. On the whole, his record shows anything but “sexism.” Clean bill.]
http://www.boston.com/politicalintelligence/2012/10/17/binders-full-women-mitt-romney-claim-not-entirely-accurate/jrKRRGSIPqjvuKX8dgq6gL/story.html
unless there’s something like this in his history. ;-P
http://www.weeklystandard.com/blogs/obamas-female-debate-coach-complained-about-hostile-workplace-white-house_654745.htmlReport
Did I call him a sexist? I don’t think I did, and if you read that into the post, I’ll walk that back here and now as unambiguously as you please.
I said the issue of affirmative action isn’t important to him. By extension, that implies that the issue of diversity isn’t important to him, either, other than for political cover. But that’s different than sexism, the accusation of which would imply that he thinks men are better than women in some material fashion. There’s no evidence of that and that’s not what I either wanted to analyze or imply. I’ve presumed in the post that he found talented, qualified women for these jobs. Whatever it takes to be a good lieutenant governor of Massachusetts, Kerry Healey had it and he recognized that in her. So that’s a good thing and it speaks well of Romney to have recognized it.
I do suggest that there is a leadership problem insofar as he didn’t know any such women on his own to recruit personally — not because he didn’t know of women qualified for these posts but apparently because he didn’t know any men qualified for them, either, and had to solicit resumes from the public for important positions in his gubernatorial cabinet. One would think that Gov. Romney didn’t need to go to monster.com to find Ms. Healey, but the story he told about himself involves looking at resumes and job applications for appointed positions for which, as he did with Ms. Healey, he should have had some idea of who would be a good choice all on his own.
The issue of why he didn’t know any women and was only getting resumes from men is the subject of Tod’s post, but not the subject here.
I suppose we could open up the “affirmative action is
racismsexism” box if we were to read into this story the idea that Romney intentionally appointed a less-qualified woman to a job instead of a better-qualified man. But we’ve got nothing on the table here suggesting that anything like that ever happened. I don’t think outreach to achieve diversity, whether you call it affirmative action or not, is a bad thing, and I personally think that the choice between diversity and talent is in most situations a false one. You can and should have both and the same time, and a good executive finds a way to acheive both goals.ReportIf short of alleging full-fledged “sexism,” it’s a ding on Romney he really doesn’t have coming. His record is credible if not creditable. And if he had a dearth of female applicants for posts in Massachusetts, he certainly won’t have that problem this time.
Pssst–Romney’s first nominee to the Supreme Court:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Janice_Rogers_Brown
Bank it. 😉Report
I don’t think its sexism per se, if only because there isn’t a word that means “disdain for anyone who isn’t a rich white guy amazingly like Mitt Romney”.Report
I had a convo with a guy at work today where we both agreed that saying “binders full of women” is … wrong. It may be that it’s only politically wrong. Or that it’s morally wrong. Or that it’s contextually wrong. But wrong nonetheless.
Any intelligent, forward thinking politician wouldn’t have uttered the phrase. They’d have said “I had binder’s full of resume’s from women who were qualified for the job but had been systematically overlooked previously”. Or, well, something like that.
There’s a lot to criticize Romney for on this score. If someone wants to argue the comment was sexist, I wouldn’t be inclined to defend him. But that might be because unlike TVD, I don’t think Romney’s record is creditable. The guy is a grifter, and his cohort is – for lack of a better term – is the 1%.Report
When Romney speaks in overly precise manner, he’s a automaton that can’t connect with people. When he uses verbal shortcuts, he’s just wrong.Report
And he lies to fill in the gaps.Report
yeah. I’ll give him this much. I don’t like the man, but I’ll give him this much.Report
It reminded me of this old and (inexplicably) famous joke:
YOUNG LADY: My family have sent me to see you because I’m so fond of pancakes.
PSYCHIATRIST: Well, I can’t see anything wrong with that. I myself am very fond of pancakes.
YOUNG LADY: Oh, then you must come to visit me. I have trunks and trunks FULL of them!Report
While I admit I’m playing off the popularity of the phrase in the post’s title, my real issue here isn’t the phrase “binders full of women.” I’m assuming here that we can fairly imply in the phrase “women’s resumes” and trying instead to look deeply at why Gov. Romney was proud of making this outreach.Report
Applying the same standard as President Obama’s recent speeches, I’ll say that this was already reported on back in 2003 and therefore it’s a useless distraction to bring it up now.Report
In fairness, Romney brought it up so it’s fair game. Considering the alternative was the unwinnable “72%” game, this filibuster was ace.Report
The disturbing thing it says about him to me is that he doesn’t view affirmative action as just ‘casting a wider net’, but as a quota. He doesn’t say that he found all these great candidates he wouldn’t have seen otherwise; he says ‘look how many wimminz I appointed! That makes me a good guy, amirite?’
I can’t tell you how many times I was trotted out to meeting or trade shows that had nothing to do with my specialty just so my dept could go ‘Look, we’ve got a female engineer with a PhD!’. It’s insulting.Report
“The disturbing thing it says about him to me is that he doesn’t view affirmative action as just ‘casting a wider net’, but as a quota.”
And every time we see an article about how only 1-in-x of executives are women, how only some-percentage of engineers are women, how the number of women business owners is lower than the number of men business owners…we see the reinforcement of that view.Report
Maybe, but I don’t read simple statistics as a call for quotas. I see them and think ‘Why is that the case? Is there a structural reason that ought to be addressed so more of x are encouraged to try and possibly succeed in that field?’
Affirmative Action was originally put in place to force businesses to ‘cast a wider net’. I see nothing wrong with that. It’s frequently the case that corporate culture becomes hopelessly inbred – beyond just distinctions of race or gender, it’s all too often ‘who you know, not what you know’. To the extent that EEO laws counter that, I think they’ve done some good. New blood, diversity if you will, tends to be a plus.
The difficulty is when the goal is articulated as just meeting a quota and so the person hired, who is outside the ‘norm’ for the field, is treated as unworthy – someone there only because they fill a quota. Yes, some people take advantage of that (just like some people take advantage of being related to someone on the Board of Directors). However, the attitude which is reinforced by stories like Romney’s undermines everyone in certain fields who isn’t a white male.
True story: There were over 170 students in my graduate program. Only 7 of us were women. We were all in the top 20% of the class. Every single one of us routinely had to deal with male students who said, frequently to our faces, that we’d only gotten in because we were women.
On the one hand, you could say that this is the negative consequence of imposing affirmative action. On the other hand, I’m old enough to know perfectly well that if affirmative action hadn’t been imposed during my mother’s generation, there little chance that even such a paltry number of women would have been admitted to a grad program in engineering (I offer as evidence the fact that in my undergrad days the head of the Young Republicans on campus kept writing columns in the school paper saying that women shouldn’t be admitted to colleges except Nursing and Education because in the others they were taking spots from men who would need those degrees to support families).Report
*snort* A friend of mine tells the story about a man yanking the curtain aside while she was on the toilet, to ask if the Nursing student(her) was the person who had gotten an A in her otherwise all-male class. He was quite upset.Report
But that’s what the diversity argument for affirmative action is all about: Diversity, affirmative action’s boosters claim, is a good in and of itself, not because it’s the natural result of casting a wider net, but because people with diverse life experiences bring diverse perspectives to the table.
Personally, I’m skeptical of the value of this, but this isn’t Romney Not Getting It.Report
Diversity is what makes our Government Scientists great.
Seriously, it’s where a lot of diverse folks hang out,
and they like to hang out there because it’s not hostile to them.
No quotas needed, they take all comers (always got job openings
for scientists!)
But diversity is what brings people to the table,
and gets them to settle for lower pay.Report
Then it’s Romney not articulating it, because he said nothing about valuing diversity. He came across, at least to me, as some trying to get points for going through the motions. ‘Look, I got an out come that made me look good.’ not ‘I realized that I couldn’t govern well with a team that didn’t include a single voice from a group that makes up over half my constituents.’Report
Burt (not his real name), thanks for this and thanks also for the link to Tod Kelly’s succinct dispatch on what Mitt Romney should have said about working women.
On a stylistic note, the one thing I didn’t like above is the filibustering. You really, really, really didn’t need 2,612 words (plus a 400-word bonus comment) to say what you had to say.Report
I appreciate the feedback, Hal!
Unfortunately, I didn’t have time to write a shorter post.Report
I am pleased/unhappy with your witty/offensively short response.Report
Cheers, either way.Report
Woodrow Wilson?Report
I was thinking Mark Twain, but apparently it’s been attributed, correctly or otherwise, to many people.Report
I couldn’t remember which of the two, probably because I’ve seen it credited to both at different times.Report
How did you write that comment so quickly?Report
By coming very close to plagiarizing [someone I thought was] Mark Twain. He wrote the joke for me.Report
Sheesh. I knew you were an attorney before I got to the end of the article. Seriously, why do you guys all write as if you’re being paid by the word.
Other than that I agree with you.Report
My compensation arrangement IS by the word, good sirReport
🙂Report