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Wednesday
Mar092005
Wednesday, March 9, 2005 at 10:56AM
The congressional staffers she faced,
Gwen Robinson remembers, were white. The project she was seeking some
federal money for was in predominantly black Bond Hill. "You're sitting
with people whose eyes glaze over because they have no sense of this
community," said Robinson, president of the Cincinnati-Hamilton County
Community Action Agency. "It definitely does make a difference." In a
metro area where one in nine residents is black, the seven men who
represent Cincinnati in the U.S. House have almost no black staffers
working for them. Cincinnati's congressmen stress that
they work hard for all their constituents, regardless of color. As
conservative Republicans, they say it's often hard to find blacks to
work for them. Election polls show blacks, for example, backed Democrat
John Kerry over President Bush by an 8-1 margin last year. Two years after Republican
leaders pledged to hire more black staffers in their offices - in the
wake of racially explosive comments that toppled then-Senate Majority
Leader Trent Lott - there is little evidence of change, both nationally
and locally. No one on Capitol Hill is tracking the numbers of black
staffers, or high-level black staffers. Attempts to follow up on the
pledge to increase black participation were intermittent and haphazard.
An Enquirer survey
of House members representing the 15-county metro area found that five
of the seven members have no black staff members. None in the office of
Rep. John Boehner, who represents most of Butler County. None in the
office of new Rep. Geoff Davis, who represents Northern Kentucky. Davis
spokeswoman Jessica Towhey said Davis hired based on the resumes he
saw, which didn't specify race. Reps. Steve Chabot and Rob Portman
represent the city of Cincinnati, which is 43 percent black. Between
them, they have one black staffer out of 29. [more]