Quote of note:
To bolster her analysis, Goodman
details salary information for several women who worked at the NAACP's
national headquarters in Baltimore and states that those rumored to
have close relationships with Mfume, or with his son, have fared better
than those who did not.
I ask women this general question:
What proportion of successful women are rumored to have fucked the boss to get their spot?
Mfume Accused of Favoritism At NAACP
Ex-President Denies Rewarding Women
By Matthew Mosk and Cheryl W. Thompson
Washington Post Staff Writers
Thursday, April 28, 2005; A01
Allegations
detailed in a confidential NAACP report claim that Kweisi Mfume gave
raises and promotions to women with whom he had close personal
relationships while he was president of the nation's oldest civil
rights organization.
The 22-page memorandum, prepared last summer
by an outside lawyer, did not accept as true the claims lodged against
Mfume by a female employee but determined that they could be "very
difficult to defend persuasively" if she filed a lawsuit.
Mfume,
56, a Democratic candidate for the U.S. Senate in Maryland, has denied
the allegations. In an interview yesterday, he said the allegations in
no way influenced his Nov. 30 announcement that he would leave the
NAACP after nine years.
"I don't engage in inappropriate
behavior," he said in the interview. "And if I did, I'm sure after nine
years there, 10 years in the Congress and seven years on the
[Baltimore] City Council, it would have been an issue long before your
telephone call to me."