UNITY SEEKS TO DIVERSIFY
FUTURE PRESIDENTIAL DEBATES
McLean, VA, September 23, 2008 --
With the first presidential debate of the 2008 campaign days away, UNITY:
Journalists of Color, Inc. wants to ensure this will be the last election cycle
that fails to include women or people of color as moderators.
UNITY, the largest organization of journalists in the world, calls on the
Commission on Presidential Debates to reevaluate a process that has failed to
recognize the nation's changing demographics and has selected only one woman of
color and one man of color to moderate presidential debates in the commission's
20-year history.
"The journalists who were selected as moderators this year are outstanding,
respected members of the profession. It is a glaring oversight, however, to
have such a lack of diversity in a nation and an election where race, gender
and age play such significant roles," said UNITY President Karen Lincoln
Michel, during a meeting of the UNITY board of directors last week.
Jim Lehrer of PBS will moderate the debate on Sept. 26; Tom Brokaw of NBC News
on Oct. 7, and Bob Schieffer of CBS News on Oct 15.
At its recent annual fall meeting, the UNITY Board of Directors denounced the
apparent pattern of exclusion and resolved to work with the commission to
achieve greater diversity in future election cycles.
"While it is significant that a woman of color will moderate the
vice presidential candidate debate, the dearth of diversity in the
higher-profile presidential debates is extremely disturbing," said Barbara
Ciara, president of National Association of Black Journalists. "Gwen
Ifill moderated the vice presidential debate in 2004. It couldn't have been
that difficult to elevate her to one of the presidential debates."
Ifill, of PBS' NewsHour and Washington Week, will moderate the vice
presidential debate on Oct. 2. Ifill is an African American.
"This issue occurs because so few of the nation's news outlets employ
journalists of color to cover national politics, a fact underscored in a study
by UNITY and Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communications at ArizonaStateUniversity,"
said O. Ricardo Pimentel, president of the National Association of Hispanic
Journalists. "In a recent interview on PBS, Bob Schieffer even noted the
lack of women and people of color in key reporting positions and said that led
the commission 'to go to three old white guys' when choosing moderators for the
debates."
The UNITY study was released in July during UNITY's national conference in Chicago and found that journalists of color make up only
13 percent of Washington
press corps.
"It is difficult to understand the thought process that would allow these
debates to have such a narrow spectrum in a nation where people of color will
soon be a majority of the population," said Ronnie Washines, president of
Native American Journalists Association. "There is also the additional
irony of this being the first presidential election in U.S. history
where the candidates so clearly demonstrate the changing diversity of this
country."
In an interview with TV Week, Frank Fahrenkoph, debate commission co-chair,
said he had received "absolutely nothing but positive remarks . . . from
the general political realm" about the choice of moderators.
"I am not sure who is included in Mr. Fahrenkoph's view of the 'general
political realm,' but it apparently is not the millions of people of color,
women and young people who should be represented in the discussions about who
will be the next president of the United States," said Jeannie
Mariani-Belding, president of the Asian American Journalists Association.
About
UNITY: Journalists of Color
UNITY: Journalists of Color, Inc. is a strategic alliance advocating news
coverage about people of color, and aggressively challenging its organizations
at all levels to reflect the nation's diversity. UNITY, representing more than
10,000 journalists of color, is comprised of four national associations: Asian
American Journalists Association, National Association of Black Journalists,
National Association of Hispanic Journalists, and the Native American
Journalists Association.
In addition to planning the largest regular gathering of journalists in the
nation, UNITY develops programs and institutional relationships that promote
its mission. For more information on UNITY, visit www.unityjournalists.org,
email info@unityjournalists.org
or call (703) 854-3585