Monday, October 22, 2012
Romney on Bain: 'Women and Minorities' Not Attracted to Industry
Mitt Romney is still receiving backlash for his "binders full of women" comment during the second presidential debate.
According to the Huffington Post, this foot in mouth feeling surrounding women's issues is not entirely a new one for the Massachusetts governor.
In 1994, when Romney was running for a Massachusetts U.S. Senate seat, the Boston Globe asked him why there were so few minorities and women at Bain Capital. Ninety-five of the vice presidents at the firm were white and only nine were women. Romney's response was that the private equity industry does not "attract many women and minorities." His opponent, Senator Ted Kennedy, made the remark an issue in the campaign, and Romney lost women voters by more than two-to-one.
Romney also blamed the elite institutions of higher education such as Harvard School of Business where they found many of their employees. Those schools, he told the Globe, "graduate only a handful of minorities and women."
In 1995, 28 percent of the graduating class from Harvard Business School were women and 14 percent were minorities. When Romney put together a team to head Bain, every member was white and male. The Republican insisted that he could not find "qualified" women and minorities."* Cenk Uygur breaks down the truth of Romney's past business hirings and just who is qualified for the jobs.
*Read more from Similoluwa Ojurongbe/ The Grio:
http://thegrio.com/2012/10/18/mitt-romney-on-bain-capital-private-equity-firm...
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