Quantcast
breaking news

In Perry's Office, Women Hold Majority of Top Posts

By: Emily Ramshaw, The Texas Tribune
Updated: January 21, 2013
When Gov. Rick Perry looks up from his desk these days, more often than not, he is surrounded by women.

For the first time in his tenure, his chief of staff and deputy chief of staff are women. So are his director of communications, his press secretary, his heads of scheduling and administration, and his human resources director, along with the bulk of his appointments staff.

In all, about 60 percent of the 256 governor's office employees are female. Among Perry's most senior staff -- those charged with making key decisions for the governor -- two-thirds are women.

"Rick Perry has never needed a binder full of women," said Deirdre Delisi, Perry's first female chief of staff, alluding to Mitt Romney's comments during a presidential debate about how he sought help recruiting women for cabinet posts while he was governor of Massachusetts.

Perry's opponents suggest that his tenure has not been kind to Texas women. The state's longest-serving governor has worked to further restrict access to abortion. And he has been unwavering in his desire to force all Planned Parenthood clinics -- which may not provide abortions if they accept state or federal tax dollars -- out of a program that provides family planning services to the state's poorest women.

But they cannot argue about his hiring practices, especially in light of a New York Times report this month -- and an ensuing controversy -- about President Obama's inner circle being dominated by men.

In an interview, Perry said "no one should be shocked" by the number of women in his administration. "I live every day with four strong women," he said, referring to his wife, Anita, his daughter, Sydney, and his two dogs, Rory and Lucy.

And it just so happens, he added, that this particular staff lineup "is probably the most experienced, capable and knowledgeable group of people working around me since I started."

But he confessed that the gender makeup in his office, while meaningful, is hardly intentional.

"I looked up one day and thought, 'That's kind of interesting,'" he said, then turned to the lone male staffer in the room and joked, "Where are all the guys?"

Delisi, a political consultant who chaired the state's Transportation Commission at Perry's urging after leaving the governor's office, said that although the number of women in leadership roles in his administration has reached a new high, it is not novel.

Perry "surrounded himself with strong, capable women at the Agriculture Department, in the lieutenant governor's office and when he became governor," she said. Being his first female chief of staff, she added, "didn't feel like breaking new ground."

Ann Bishop, the former executive director of the Employees Retirement System whom the governor named his chief of staff in November, is accustomed to women stocking the executive offices of state agencies. Throughout her career, she has been a deputy comptroller and was the inaugural head of the state's Department of Information Resources. Even she said she was "pleasantly surprised" to walk into her first staff meeting at the governor's office and see how many of her new colleagues were female.

"The governor surrounds himself with the brightest and best," she said, "and women are obviously part of that mix."

Texas Tribune donors or members may be quoted or mentioned in our stories, or may be the subject of them. For a complete list of contributors, click here.

This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at http://www.texastribune.org/2013/01/21/perrys-office-women-hold-majority-top-posts/.

Comments

Readers Feel...

hello
Related Content

In light of recent severe weather, an Abilene woman wanted to know she could be safe on her own property, but finding that safety was more difficult than expected....

It's important to have a severe weather plan, but don't forget to practice it....

Researchers say sharing a bed with your baby is dangerous and increases the risk of sudden infant death syndrome....

A San Antonio, Texas high school student says he feels like a failure because he isn't being allowed to graduate with his class due to one wrong answer on the TAKS test....

Studies, and teachers, say that students who exercise frequently do better in school....

Emergency teams worked through the night in Moore, Oklahoma searching for survivors of Monday's devastating tornado. The violent funnel was more than a mile wide and remained on the ground for close...

The 12th annual Click It or Ticket campaign runs from May 20th to June 2nd as law enforcement officials crack down on seat-belt violations....

Since disabled pig Chris P. Bacon gained fame online a few months ago, he's also gained some weight and a new wheelchair....

Dozens of Colorado sheriffs have joined a lawsuit against new gun restrictions set to go into effect later this summer....

As many as three tornadoes hit Young County, Texas on Friday evening....

 
Find Articles Here
 
End
      Page 683 of 644
 
Search BigCountryHomepage.com