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President focuses on triumphs and struggles black women face in
US
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Hillary Clinton shared some of the spotlight at annual black
caucus dinner
Paying
tribute to those who helped clear a path for him, President Barack Obama said women of the civil
rights movement were “the thinkers and the doers” who made things happen and
that every American has benefited from their labor and sacrifice.
“Women made the movement happen,” he declared Saturday night.
Obama said black women were the “foot soldiers” who did the
behind-the-scenes work of strategizing boycotts and organizing marches while
others received the credit.
“Even if they weren’t allowed to run the civil rights
organizations on paper, behind the scenes they were the thinkers and the doers
making things happen each and every day, doing the work that no one else wanted
to do,” he said in a keynote speech to the Congressional Black Caucus
Foundation’s annual awards dinner.
But Obama said that while black women and girls have made
progress since and are opening more of their own businesses and graduating from
high school and college at higher rates, they are still overrepresented in
low-paying jobs and underrepresented in management.
He even invoked his wife, Michelle, as an example of the
attitudes about black women that he said persist. The first lady, a lawyer with
degrees from two Ivy League universities, has spoken on occasion of being told
by her teachers that she was setting her sights too high.
“Those stereotypes and social pressures, they still affect our
girls,” said Obama, the father of two teenage daughters. “So we all have to be
louder than the voices that are telling our girls they’re not good enough, that
they’ve got to look a certain way or they’ve got to act a certain way or set
their goals at a certain level.”
Obama has had the dinner spotlight to himself during all but one
of his nearly seven years in office. But with the campaign to succeed him in
full swing, he had some competition for attention at Saturday’s gathering
sponsored by a major Democratic Party constituency group.
Democratic
presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton, who wore lipstick red, attended
the dinner to mingle with the crowd of several thousand. Vice President Joe
Biden, who is considering a late entry into the Democratic race, attended a
caucus prayer breakfast.
In his remarks, Obama also touched on the issue of criminal
justice, promising to work with CBC members and other lawmakers in the months
ahead to advance legislation intended to make the system fairer and encourage
the use of diversion and prevention programs.
He also swiped at conservatives who blame him for animosity
toward law enforcement officers.
“I want to repeat because somehow this never shows up on Fox
News,” Obama said. “I want to repeat because I’ve said it a lot, unwaveringly,
all the time: Our law enforcement officers do outstanding work in an incredibly
difficult and dangerous job. They put their lives on the line for our safety.
We appreciate them and we love them.”
Among those honored Saturday night was the late Amelia Boynton
Robinson, an organizer of the Bloody Sunday march for voting rights to
Montgomery, Alabama, in March 1965, and who was badly beaten by police. She
celebrated the march’s 50th anniversary earlier this year by crossing the
Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama, while holding hands with Obama.
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