The Clinton Presidency:
Building One America
In 1992, Americans were struggling to maintain the sense of community
and respect for diversity that makes our nation strong. The economic
gap between haves and have-nots was increasing. Between 1980 through
1992, the bottom 60 percent of Americans saw little if any increase in
income, unemployment for African Americans and Hispanics reached record
highs, and the poverty rate for African Americans remained at or above
30 percent. Over the last eight years, President Clinton and Vice
President Gore have worked to bridge racial divisions and economic
disparities. They have appointed the most diverse and inclusive
administration in history, launched initiatives to close economic and
social gaps, and established the One America office in the White House
to build a strategy of closing opportunity gaps and to promote
understanding and reconciliation.
Appointed the Most Diverse Administration in History
THEN: | Few women and minorities in the top levels of government.
The impressive strides made by women and minorities had not
been fully reflected in the top levels of government. When
President Clinton came to office, there were just two women and two
minorities in the cabinet. Between 1976 and 1992, there were just
57 African Americans appointed to federal judgeships, and in 1992,
just 10 percent of the federal bench were minorities and only 11
percent were women. Comparatively, in 1990, women made up 51.3
percent of the population while minorities made up 25.1 percent of
the U.S. population. |
NOW: | Appointed the most diverse cabinet in history.
President Clinton appointed the most diverse Cabinet in
history. Over the past eight years, he has appointed seven African
American Cabinet Secretaries, and women make up 44 percent of
Clinton Administration appointees, including the first woman to
serve as Secretary of State, Madeline Albright, and the first to
serve as Attorney General, Janet Reno. The President also appointed
the first Asian American to serve in a Cabinet, Commerce Secretary
Norman Mineta. The President has appointed more African Americans
to federal judgeships than were appointed during the last sixteen
years combined and 14 percent of all Clinton Administration
appointees are African American, twice as many as in any previous
Administration. President Clinton appointed three times as many
female judges as the two previous administrations and the most
Hispanic judicial nominees of any President. Record numbers of
people with disabilities are also serving in the White House and
throughout the Clinton Administration. |
Closing Economic and Social Gaps
THEN: | Economic gaps in American society expanding
The economic gap between haves and have-nots was increasing.
Between 1980 through 1992, the bottom 60 percent of Americans saw
little if any increase in income, unemployment for African
Americans and Hispanics reached record highs, and the poverty rate
for African Americans remained at or above 30 percent. |
NOW: | Expanded opportunity and a strong economy improves conditions
for all Americans
Under President Clinton, unemployment and poverty rates have
declined for all groups, while family incomes have increased. The
Clinton Administration has worked to increase opportunity by
expanding access to higher education and job training, expanding
loans to minority small businesses, and launching efforts to close
the digital divide and expand new markets in underserved
communities. Examples of progress under the Clinton-Gore
Administration include:
- Under the Clinton-Gore Administration, the unemployment rate
for African Americans fell from 14.2 percent in 1992 to 7.3
percent today and the African-American poverty rate has
dropped from 33.1 percent to 26.1 percent in 1998 -- the
lowest level recorded, and the largest five-year drop in
African-American poverty since 1967-1972. At the same time,
the typical African-American household's income is up $3,317.
- Unemployment for Hispanics fell from 11.8 percent in October
of 1992 to 5.0 percent today. The Hispanic poverty rate has
dropped from 29.6 percent to 25.6 percent -- the lowest since
1979. And over the past three years, the income of the
typical Hispanic household has risen $3,880 -- or 15.9
percent -- the largest three-year increase in Hispanic income
on record.
- The Clinton-Gore Administration launched an initiative to end
racial and ethnic health disparities, setting a national goal
of eliminating the longstanding disparities by the year 2010
in six key health areas: infant mortality, diabetes, cancer
screening and management, heart disease, AIDS and
immunizations.
- The Clinton-Gore Administration has fought hate crimes and
racial profiling by fighting for the Hate Crimes Sentencing
Enhancement Act, which increased penalties for hate crimes as
part of the 1994 Crime Bill. As a result of Presidential
leadership, the number of law enforcement agencies across the
country reporting hate crimes to the Justice Department has
risen from 2,771 in 1991 to 12,122 in 1999 -- giving
authorities a more accurate picture of the problem.
President Clinton is also working to end racial profiling, by
directing Cabinet agencies to collect data on the race,
ethnicity, and gender of individuals subject to certain stops
by federal law enforcement to help determine where and when
racial profiling occurs.
- The Clinton-Gore Administration has fought to protect the
rights of all Americans, increasing funding for civil rights
enforcement from $47.6 million in 1992 to $92 million in
2001. The President also ordered a comprehensive review of
federal affirmative action programs, which concluded that
affirmative action is still an effective and important tool
to expand educational and economic opportunity to all
Americans. And President Clinton focused the nation's
attention and resources to help stop the rash of church
burnings across the country, creating the National Church
Arson Task Force in 1995 to investigate these crimes,
prosecute those responsible, and speed the rebuilding
process.
- President Clinton has taken action to ensure fairness and
equal participation in our society for legal immigrants. In
1997 and 1998 the President succeeded in restoring
disability, health and nutritional benefits for certain legal
immigrants. The Administration's English as a Second
Language/Civics Education Initiative provides limited English
speaking adults with instruction in both English literacy and
critical life skills necessary for effective citizenship and
civic participation and the Administration has significantly
reduced the backlog of citizenship applications.
- President Clinton and Vice President Gore have improved
relations between the federal government and Native American
tribes. In July 1999, the President visited the Pine Ridge
Reservation in South Dakota to encourage investment in Indian
Country, making him the first sitting President to visit a
reservation since Franklin D. Roosevelt. The President also
issued executive orders promoting tribal sovereignty,
protecting sacred Indian sites, improving the academic
performance of American Indian and Alaska Native students and
supporting the nation's tribal colleges.
- The Clinton-Gore Administration has worked to ensure equal
pay for women and close the wage gap. They addressed the wage
gap by winning $20 million in his FY 2001 budget initiative
for the National Science Foundation (NSF) to provide grants
to post-secondary institutions and partner organizations to
promote the full participation of women in science and
technology fields. The Equal Opportunity Employment
Commission initiated an Equal Pay Task Force to provide
assistance to field enforcement staff in their development of
cases involving equal pay and employment discrimination in
compensation.
- President Clinton and Vice President Gore have worked hard to
assure equality of opportunity and full participation by
persons with disabilities. The Clinton-Gore Administration
has vigorously defended the Americans with Disabilities Act,
worked with States to implement the Olmstead decision to
prohibit unjustified isolation of institutionalized persons
with disabilities, and fought for accessibility in public
transportation, housing, and technology. As part of the
Administration's work to improve employment opportunities for
people with disabilities, the President created the
Presidential Task Force on Employment of Adults with
Disabilities and signed the Ticket to Work and Work
Incentives Improvement Act.
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Addressing the Wage Gap by Supporting Enforcement
"I am grateful that the EEOC is there to assist people like me who
have gone through so much in the workplace. It is never easy to
confront difficult or painful situations, but I hope that I can serve
as an example to women across the country who work hard to build
their professional career but still do not receive salaries equal to
their male counterparts. I would like to thank you, Mr. President,
for your leadership on this issue."
-- Karen Simmons-Beathea, of Washington, DC, May 11, 2000. Karen
Simmons-Beathea was hired as the first Executive Director of
Baltimore Cable Access Corporation in 1993. Though she was
continually promised salary increases, she was kept at her starting
salary throughout her three years of employment at BCAC. In 1996,
Ms. Simmons-Beathea presented the board of directors with a study,
which she alleged demonstrated that she was significantly underpaid
compared to male executive directors in other markets, which operate
community-based cable television. A month after this presentation,
the company terminated her and replaced he with a less qualified male
at a salary higher than what she had been receiving. Ms.
Simmons-Beathea filed a complaint with the EEOC, was assigned an EEOC
attorney, and settled her case this year.
Launched the One America Initiative
THEN: | America's leaders lacked a coordinated effort to resolve
problems.
America was struggling to maintain the sense of community that
makes our nation strong. Even though the country was becoming more
diverse, serious economic and social gaps were prevalent,
particularly among minority groups. And too often political
rhetoric expanded these divisions rather than working to close
them. Despite these problems, there was no coordinated strategy to
promote reconciliation and address the economic and social divide
in this country. |
NOW: | Working to build One America
President Clinton launched the One America initiative, and
created a new office in the White House to ensure that we have a
coordinated strategy to close the opportunity gaps that exist for
minorities and the underserved in this country. Examples of
Clinton-Gore Administration efforts to build one America include
the following:
- The One America initiative office helped resolve
discrimination claims against the Department of Agriculture.
Due to procedural hurdles created by previous
administrations, several thousand African American farmers
were left without a filing remedy for alleged discrimination,
which had occurred years ago. Under the President's
leadership, legislation was passed which overcame the statute
of limitation problems blocking settlement of discrimination
claims. Currently pending claims are being expedited for
review to assure that justice is served. As of November 2000,
farmers have received over 323 million dollars in settlement
fees from the federal government.
- Through the One America initiative, President Clinton has
provided leadership to corporate America, and the legal and
faith communities to action. The President's call to action
to the legal community to enlist their support in the fight
for equal justice resulted in the formation of "Lawyers for
One America," a unique collaboration with a mission to change
the landscape for racial justice through increased pro bono
service and diversity within the legal community. Corporate
leaders convened at the White House to pledge to promote
diversity, close the opportunity gap that exists in America
and lead our nation towards the goal of building One America.
And President Clinton met with a broad group of American
religious leaders to highlight new commitments and programs
they have pledged to undertake within the faith community to
ensure that the nation's religious organizations are doing
their part to expand diversity, end racism and promote racial
reconciliation in America.
- In 1995, President Clinton created NCATF to coordinate the
efforts of federal, state and local law enforcement in the
battle against arsons, bombings and attempted bombings of
places of religious worship. NCATF has opened 945
investigations that have led to 431 arrests and 305
convictions so far. The NCATF arrest rate is twice that of
the general arrest rate for arsons nationwide. Thanks to the
successful coordination efforts of the Clinton
Administration, the number of arsons and attacks on places of
worship continues to decrease.
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Increased Opportunity for All Americans
- Lowest African American and Hispanic unemployment rates on record,
with the unemployment rate for African Americans falling from 14.2
percent in 1992 to 7.3 percent today. Unemployment for Hispanics
has fallen from 11.8 percent in October of 1992 to 5.0 percent
today.
- All groups of Americans, from richest to poorest, have seen their
incomes rise for three years in a row. The average income for the
lowest 20 percent increased by 5.4 percent compared to an increase
of 3.9 percent for the highest 20 percent.
- Median household income increased for African Americans by almost
15 percent between 1993 and 1999. The median household income for
Hispanics is $30,735, the highest ever recorded, while the median
household income for Asian Americans is higher than the national
average.
- Poverty rates are at record lows, with the African American poverty
rate down to the lowest level on record, the Hispanic American
poverty rate down to the lowest level since 1979, and the Asian
American poverty rate as low as it's ever been. Poverty among
African American children has also dropped to the lowest level on
record.
- Highest homeownership rate on record, reaching 67.2 percent in the
second quarter of 2000 -- the highest ever recorded. Minority
homeownership rates were also the highest ever recorded.
- Filed more cases to enforce fair housing laws than any other
Administration.
- Higher education achievement, with reading and math scores of
9-year-olds in the highest-poverty schools rising by nearly one
grade level on the National Assessment of Educational Progress
between 1992 and 1996.
- Highest number of African American high school graduates enrolling
in college ever, increasing from 48 percent in 1992 to 59 percent
in 1997. Over the last 10 years, SAT test scores for college-bound
African American students have increased by a total of 13 points.
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