Los Angeles Times

Restrictio­n for women alone

A lawmaker cites ‘Billy Graham rule’ to deny access to female reporter

- By Suhauna Hussain

Robert Foster, a firstterm Mississipp­i state representa­tive running for governor, declined to allow a female reporter to cover a campaign trip — that is, unless she brought a male colleague with her.

Foster said in a tweet that the rejection resulted from a pledge he made to his wife that he would follow the “Billy Graham rule,” to “avoid any situation that may evoke suspicion or compromise of our marriage.”

Larrison Campbell, the Mississipp­i Today reporter denied access, wrote in an article Tuesday night that Foster’s campaign manager told her a male colleague would need to accompany her on the 15-hour trip because the optics of a candidate alone with a woman could be used to insinuate an affair.

Campbell and her editor thought “the request was sexist and an unnecessar­y use of resources given this reporter’s experience covering Mississipp­i politics.” Campbell says the practice has unfair and untoward implicatio­ns for her and other women.

“What you’re saying here is that a woman is a sexual object first and a reporter second,” Campbell told Foster on Thursday on CNN.

Foster has faced a sharp backlash for his action, and for his invocation of the so-called Billy Graham rule. So what exactly is this rule and what is the debate around it?

What is the Billy Graham rule and where does it come from?

The practice is named after William Franklin “Billy” Graham Jr., one of the nation’s most prominent Christian evangelist­s for more than six decades before his 2018 death. Graham preached to millions and was pastor to presidents.

In 1948, Graham and his ministry establishe­d four rules of conduct to shield themselves against the negative repercussi­ons of a variety of misconduct, including financial and sexual, wrote professor of religion at Central Michigan University Sara Moslener in an essay for Religion Dispatches. One of those rules was that a man should never be alone in a room with a woman who was not his wife.

Jonathan Merritt, religion writer and author of “Learning to Speak God From Scratch,” grew up in the Southern Baptist community. His father, who served as president of the Southern Baptist Convention in the early 2000s, and other prominent conservati­ve pastors would essentiall­y brag about how they never met alone with women, he said.

Women’s bodies, said Merritt, were viewed as objects of temptation. Religious leaders were meant to be above reproach, and in order to maintain that status they avoided being alone with women, Merritt said.

“Graham was known as an evangelica­l of impeccable character,” Merritt explained. “He’s No. 1 — he’s the guy, and so it makes total sense that people make an effort to emulate him.”

The evangelica­l preacher died last year with the practice as a piece of his legacy that has resurfaced in recent years.

Why are people talking about it?

In a 2017 Washington Post profile, comments made in 2002 by Vice President Mike Pence resurfaced about how he never eats alone with a woman other than his wife and that he doesn’t attend events where alcohol is served unless she attends also.

The rule became widely known (rebranded) as “the Pence rule.”

Where does #MeToo come in?

In February 2018, an online survey on the effects of #MeToo by LeanIn, the organizati­on spearheade­d by Facebook Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg, found that 60% of male managers said they were uncomforta­ble mentoring, socializin­g with or working alone with women in the workplace.

As a result, the Billy Graham rule (or the Pence effect) has informally seeped into workplace culture.

Bloomberg reported, after interviewi­ng more than 30 senior executives last year, that many men across Wall Street have adopted the controvers­ial strategy.

“Women are grasping for ideas on how to deal with it, because it is affecting our careers,” Karen Elinski, senior vice president at Wells Fargo & Co. told Bloomberg.

What are the implicatio­ns for women?

Around the time Pence’s comments resurfaced, many evangelica­l women wrote about how the practice can serve to prevent them from advancing in the workplace, Merritt said.

Generally, the way exclusion of women plays out at work is more subtle than in Foster’s case, where he explicitly attributed his decision to the practice, said Kim Elsesser, whose research at UCLA and the book she wrote, “Sex and the Office: Women, Men, and the Sex Partition That’s Dividing the Workplace,” focus on gender issues in the workplace.

It was true long before #MeToo that some men were hesitant to meet oneon-one with junior female employees, Elsesser said. She has a term for the invisible barriers between men and women at work: “the sex partition.”

Research suggests that the more powerful networks one has, the more one has the opportunit­y to advance in his or her career. If women don’t have the same access to one-on-one interactio­ns with superiors, they are less likely to be assigned an important task or receive a promotion when opportunit­ies arise, Elsesser said.

“If women don’t have access to those same leaders they’re not going to have the same opportunit­ies at work,” Elsesser said. “It is sexism — it is discrimina­tion if you allow access to someone because of their gender or deny access to someone because of their gender.”

Moreover, sexual harassment in the workplace doesn’t require closed doors to take place, analysts say. Solutions that serve to isolate women from men don’t address the root cause of sexual harassment in the workplace, said Anita Raj, director of UC San Diego’s Center on Gender Equity and Health.

Someone who is going to sexually harass is going to do so regardless, she said. “Only changing the culture and increasing accountabi­lity are going to fix it.”

The Billy Graham rule functions primarily in service to a man’s own reputation, “thinly veiled by a condescend­ing veneer of chivalry,” said Moslener in her essay.

“What Graham, Pence and their ilk fail to understand is that neither women nor sexual desire are the problem; the problem is the abuse of male power,” Moslener wrote. “It’s easier to claim that sexual desire is inherently dangerous than to hold powerful men accountabl­e.”

 ?? Rogelio V. Solis Associated Press ?? MISSISSIPP­I STATE Rep. Robert Foster, who is running for governor, refused to allow a female reporter on a campaign trip — unless a male reporter came along — because of the so-called Billy Graham rule.
Rogelio V. Solis Associated Press MISSISSIPP­I STATE Rep. Robert Foster, who is running for governor, refused to allow a female reporter on a campaign trip — unless a male reporter came along — because of the so-called Billy Graham rule.

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