Albuquerque Journal

Diversity concerns Clinton camp

Hacked emails suggest quotas for top positions

- BY MARY CLARE JALONICK

WASHINGTON — Senior staff members on Hillary Clinton’s nascent campaign were conscious about diversity in the top ranks two months before the Democratic presidenti­al candidate formally announced her bid, according to hacked emails from the personal account of a top campaign official.

In February 2015,

Clinton lawyer and chief of staff Cheryl

Mills sent a list of potential hires to campaign chairman John Podesta.

Among the suggestion­s was “Political Director-Hispanic Woman.” They eventually hired Amanda Renteria, who is Latina.

Mills sent “Robby’s List of the top 10 or so positions,” referring to Clinton campaign manager Robby Mook.

The email breaks it down: “four ‘POC,’ or people of color, four women ‘assuming COO is a white woman’ and six white men.” So, the email says, that is “33% diverse, 33% women, 50% white men.”

The email was among more than 3,000 released by the anti-secrecy group WikiLeaks on Monday and is just one of the tens of thousands posted over the last two weeks. The notes were stolen from the email account of Podesta as part of a series of highprofil­e computer hacks of Democratic targets that U.S. intelligen­ce officials say were orchestrat­ed by Russia, with the intent to influence the Nov. 8 election. Russia has denied the allegation­s.

The campaign officials’ focus on diversity came in the same month that Clinton’s advisers circulated data collected from her family’s foundation that found only three of the foundation’s 11 highest paid employees were women — and a Democratic consultant expressed concern about the political fallout from the gender discrepanc­y.

Emails released last week about the Clinton Foundation highlighte­d a large disparity in the median salaries of the top-paid men and women working for the organizati­on.

According to the emails, the median salary of the highest paid men at the foundation was $346,106, while the median salary of the highest paid women was $185,386 — roughly a $160,000 difference. The numbers came from the foundation’s 990 tax forms for 2013, according to the emails.

“There are huge discrepanc­ies, and it wouldn’t surprise me if they (the media) went here next,” wrote Ian Mandel, a Democratic consultant.

At the time of the email exchange on salaries, the foundation was already under fire by Republican­s for accepting large donations from foreign government­s, including while Clinton was secretary of State. Republican­s said the foreign donations created an unacceptab­le conflict of interest if Clinton were elected president.

Clinton has called for legislatio­n that would force businesses to disclose gender pay data to the government. Republican­s have blocked the legislatio­n because they say it would expose businesses to lawsuits.

Clinton also has said half of her presidenti­al Cabinet will be women if she wins.

Podesta and other Clinton backers warn the emails may have been altered by the hackers, but they haven’t been able to point to any such cases.

Also in Monday’s batch of emails was a September 1, 2008, memo Podesta wrote to President-elect Barack Obama while heading Obama’s transition team. The memo was included as an attachment to a later email to Obama staffers.

In the memo, Podesta gives advice on choosing a White House chief of staff — a job that would eventually go to Rahm Emanuel — and how that person would need to work with the vice president, which Podesta called “an incredibly tricky aspect of the job.”

“While I know Senator (Joe) Biden well, and he is no Dick Cheney, he is still opinionate­d and there is still plenty of room for conflict between keeping him in the loop and not letting him put his elbow on the scale,” Podesta wrote.

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Cheryl Mills

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