Theres no way to reconcile this situation above the fray of racism.
Posted on 07/21/2010 6:22:53 PM PDT by Second Amendment First
The White House struggled mightily Wednesday to make things right with an aggrieved Shirley Sherrod but it is working nearly as hard to distance President Barack Obama and his top aides from the racially tinged firing fiasco.
Administration officials unanimously leveled the finger of blame at Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack on Wednesday for sacking Sherrod on insufficient evidence even as West Wing officials admitted they did nothing to stop Sherrod from being let go on the basis of a single, shabbily edited video clip.
There was no pressure from the White House. This was my decision, said Vilsack, who agreed to reverse his decision and offer Sherrod a job after White House officials pressured him to change course Tuesday night.
But even while lavishing plaudits and apologies on the 62-year-old Sherrod, administration officials fiercely countered Sherrods claim that a Vilsack aide told her the West Wing ordered her firing out of fear the video would anger whites.
This was, as you heard Secretary Vilsack say yesterday, a decision that was made by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, said White House press secretary Robert Gibbs, who refused even to say which senior Obama aides have been involved in the process.
The president was briefed yesterday and has been briefed, obviously, today as well, added Gibbs, who said the White House was informed but not consulted about the firing.
Obama himself hasnt spoken publicly or released a personal statement on the dust-up. Its not clear if he plans to call Sherrod to apologize, as other administration officials have.
The incident underscored the paradoxical reality that race, an issue Obama dealt with so deftly during the 2008 campaign, has proven to be an unexpected and persistent stumbling block. That point was vividly illustrated a year ago when Obama walked back his remark that Cambridge, Mass. police acted stupidly in arresting Harvard Professor Henry Louis Gates, a leading African-American scholar.
Sherrod herself seemed to recognize Obamas unique dilemma during a TV appearance Wednesday, remarking on the irony of the first black president presiding over the firing of the first black woman to coordinate federal government efforts on behalf of Georgias farmers.
Gibbs left open the possibility the president might call Sherrod to offer his own apology and revealed that Obama was first told about Sherrods firing early Tuesday as a fait accompli.
Obama, who initially was told only about the part of the speech in which Sherrod admits to not putting her full force behind the white farmer, voiced no objections. Later, he was briefed on the whole video and called for a review of her case, Gibbs said.
Obama talked about the fact that a disservice had been done here and that an injustice had happened and that because the facts had changed, a review of the decision based on those facts should be undertaken, he said.
But Gibbs, speaking at his daily briefing, repeatedly brushed aside questions about the White Houses role in the firing. He refused to say why no one objected to the decision and even to name the senior administration officials who were first told of Vilsacks decision late Monday.
I think there are a number of people that are responsible, he said. I think there are a number of people responsible at the USDA, Gibbs said. I think, you know, I think there are a number of people that have been involved in this situation at many different levels and at many different venues that will, as a result of this, take a look at the actions and decisions that were made.
Gibbs also sidestepped suggestions that the administration was too quick to abandon African-American subordinates, including former Obama environmental aide Van Jones.
On Wednesday, a red-faced Vilsack called Sherrod to offer an emotional apology and an unspecified promotion if shed come back to work.
Two days earlier, Vilsack forced her summary resignation after a video surfaced showing the African-American grandmother appearing to admit discriminating against a white farmer in 1987. The clip turned out to be part of a larger speech in which Sherrod explained that the incident changed her racial outlook and prompted her to work hard on behalf of the farmer.
I didnt take the time I should have, and as a result a good woman has gone through a very difficult period, Vilsack said. I did not think before I acted. ... Shes been put through hell.
Sherrod, a rural agriculture coordinator in Georgia and a fixture on cable talk show sets over the past 48 hours was extraordinarily gracious, according to Vilsack.
But she hasnt said whether shell take the job.
I accept their apology. Im bigger than some of them. I can move beyond this, Sherrod told CNN after watching Gibbs offer a similar administration-wide mea culpa.
Later, she said in a telephone interview with the Associated Press, "They did make an offer. I just told him I need to think about it."
Vilsack said he would conduct a review of the incident, starting with the departments e-mail system, revealing that Sherrods e-mails explaining her side of the story prior to her firing were sent to the wrong addresses and werent seen until the story exploded.
She sent an e-mail to me which I did not get, he said. We did not discover it until after the fact.
He also met Wednesday with the Congressional Black Caucus, and the groups chairwoman, Rep. Barbara Lee (D-Calif.), said, When one makes a mistake, we expect an apology. And he did that.
This is a moment our nation needs to really understand that we have to begin to discuss race, said Lee, who added that despite Obamas election, this is not a post-racial era. In many ways, race has been swept under the rug.
If White House officials were in a repentant mood Wednesday, the atmosphere was markedly different a day earlier, when officials believed they had nipped a negative news story in the bud.
According to administration officials, deputy chief of staff Jim Messina praised the initial response to the incident at the regular 8:30 a.m. staff meeting Tuesday. The sources differed on the substance of Messinas praise but agreed that he applauded the speed of White House communications in response to the flap, which was driven by a 2-minute version of the Sherrod video posted to Andrew Breitbarts Big Government website.
One source, who is unhappy with the administrations handling of the incident, paraphrased Messinas remarks: We could have waited all day we could have had a media circus but we took decisive action, and its a good example of how to respond in this atmosphere.
But two other senior officials present at the meeting, who responded to a call to the White House press office, said the gist of Messinas words had been inaccurately conveyed to POLITICO and that Messina a top political operative and senior manager was merely speaking in his capacity as deputy chief of staff for operations and cheerleader to boost staffers morale.
Messina was merely praising the White House staff for communicating well, sharing well, basically rising to the occasion on the Sherrod story, one official said. It was an institutional or procedural point.
Hey Ben Smith, way to protect your guy....
Hell zero started the fray before he even stepped into the white house.
Ben Smith has changed his name to Ben Dover.
LIARS! LIARS! LIARS!
Simple rule. If you have to tell people how "big" you are...you aren't.
It’s interesting how the media is no longer trying to blame Breitbart or Fox. They must realize that Breitbart’s point that the focus of his video was on the racist NAACP reaction to the speech, rather than the speech itself, will just further point out racism in the NAACP.
Who are they kidding? Hussein is the Generalissimo of race baiting.
He was never above the fray...
Seems to be a matter of Crisis of Principles here, of which libs have NONE, and so make it up as they go along -— “hammenaa hammennaa hammenna ... “ (in my best Ralph Cramden impression) ...
At some point, this admin is going to run out of sacrifices.
Told my sister, if there’s a white guy in this anywhere, just like Blago, he will be the fall guy.
Bingo
| Aides: White House trying to distance Obama from Sherrod controversy Theres no way to reconcile this situation above the fray of racism. |
See today’s WSJ: JournaLists conspired to protect Barky via an email system of hundreds of “reporters.”
It is a true story...
The bastards elected him.
Maybe he should have checked the mixed race box on hs census form.
“Ben Smith has changed his name to Ben Dover.”
They try to make him look like a Christian, a Capitalist Free Market guy... straight and honorable... They are not very good at it.
LLS
No matter how much the White House tries to spin this story, Obama looks incompetent.
He and his NAACP cronies fire a person and then apologize and offer to rehire.
Joe Public can spot incompetence quickly.
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