The Guardian (USA)

Time’s Up chief resigns amid outrage over ties to Andrew Cuomo

- Associated Press

The chief executive of the sexual harassment victims’ advocacy group Time’s Up resigned Thursday amid outrage over revelation­s that its leaders advised former New York governor Andrew Cuomo’s administra­tion after he was first accused of misconduct last year.

The Time’s Up CEO and president, Tina Tchen, said in a statement that she’s “spent a career fighting for positive change for women” but was no longer the right person to lead the #MeToo-era organizati­on.

“I am especially aware that my position at the helm of Time’s Up has become a painful and divisive focal point, where those very women and other activists who should be working together to fight for change are instead battling each other in harmful ways,” she wrote.

The group’s chief operating officer, Monifa Bandele, will serve as interim CEO.

Tchen’s resignatio­n comes after the 9 August departure of the organizati­on’s chair, Roberta Kaplan.

Both women had been the target of ire from Time’s Up supporters over the idea they had offered any help to Cuomo, who resigned Monday, three weeks after an investigat­ion overseen by New York’s attorney general concluded he sexually harassed at least 11 women.

The report detailed Cuomo’s attempt to discredit his first public accuser, Lindsey Boylan, after she accused him last December of making inappropri­ate comments, but before she explicitly detailed allegation­s of unwanted touching and kissing.

Text messages obtained by The Washington Post show that Tchen initially discourage­d other Time’s Up leaders from making any public comment about Boylan’s allegation­s.

Later, top Cuomo aide Melissa DeRosa asked Kaplan – her attorney – to review a letter the governor’s supporters intended to circulate attacking Boylan’s credibilit­y.

“Ms Kaplan read the letter to the head of the advocacy group Times Up, and both of them allegedly suggested that, without the statements about Ms. Boylan’s interactio­ns with male colleagues, the letter was fine,” the report said, without explicitly naming Tchen. The letter was ultimately never released.

Later, after Boylan expanded on her allegation­s against Cuomo, Time’s Up called for an investigat­ion.

Boylan noted Thursday that Tchen’s resignatio­n statement didn’t include an apology. “It’s sad that TinaTchen still can’t take responsibi­lity for the harm she’s caused,” Boylan tweeted. That sentiment was echoed by another Cuomo accuser, Charlotte Bennett.

“Instead of offering a sincere apology to the survivors, activists and allies she’s harmed, TinaTchen goes out the same way our former Governor did _ listing her accomplish­ments, pointing the finger at others, and attempting to justify her inexcusabl­e behavior. Good riddance.”

Tchen declined further comment. Time’s Up got its start in January 2018 amid outrage over sexual misconduct by the film producer Harvey Weinstein. More than 300 women in entertainm­ent – from television powerhouse Shonda Rhimes to actresses Reese Witherspoo­n and Eva Longoria – signed an open letter that establishe­d them as founders.

Its high-profile debut continued with that month’s Golden Globes, in which attendees donned black and sported Time’s Up pins to call attention to the movement for gender equality.

Tchen previously served as an assistant to then president Barack Obama, chief of staff to then first lady Michelle Obama and executive director of the White House Council on Women and Girls.

She co-founded the Time’s Up Legal Defense Fund in 2017, along with Kaplan and two other women. The fund was establishe­d to help everyday survivors with legal costs, and had raised nearly $22m less than a year after its founding.

In a statement Thursday, the Time’s Up board praised Tchen’s tenure, saying she “has made a difference in the lives of so many and we are grateful for her hard work and impact”. But accepting her resignatio­n was a measure of accountabi­lity, the board said.

This isn’t the first time the advocacy group has been roiled by leadership issues. Tchen took the helm in 2019, after former WNBA president Lisa Borders stepped down as president and CEO following sexual misconduct allegation­s against her own son.

Tarana Burke, the founder of #MeToo and a member of Time’s Up’s extended board, offered her perspectiv­e on the troubled waters earlier this week to the Associated Press. She described Time’s Up as a young organizati­on with good intentions that’s now grappling with how to wield power.

“I think they have to do a lot of soul searching and at the end of the day,“she said. “It may come out the other end to be that they have to figure out how to work differentl­y, that they have to relinquish some of the power and they have to sacrifice some of the wins in order to do the work well, in the way that people trust.”

 ??  ?? Tina Tchen’s resignatio­n comes after the 9 August departure of the organizati­on’s chair, Roberta Kaplan. Photograph: Monica Schipper/ Getty Images for The New York Wo
Tina Tchen’s resignatio­n comes after the 9 August departure of the organizati­on’s chair, Roberta Kaplan. Photograph: Monica Schipper/ Getty Images for The New York Wo

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