Read the February 2023 monthly newsletter here.
Monthly Newsletter - January 2023, Vol. 6: Ed. 1
Read the January 2023 monthly newsletter here.
Event Recap - Discussion with Jane Campbell, December 6, 2022
Speaking from her office of the U.S. Capitol Historical Society within the shadow of the Capitol, former Cleveland mayor Jane Campbell met with the Club on December 6.
Campbell explained that she came to Washington at the behest of Louisiana Senator Mary Landrieu, who wanted Campbell as her chief of staff with the special task of expediting federal money for repairing coastal Louisiana and New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina. Having done that and coming to the end of her two-year commitment to the job, Campbell and Landrieu were suddenly faced with the horrific 2010 British Petroleum Gulf oil spill. Landrieu asked Campbellto stay on with the special task of expediting BP’s fines to coastal restoration without first being clogged in the federal bureaucracy. “We succeeded,” she said, “moving 80% of the fines – about $4.5 billion – swiftly to where and when it could do the most good.”
When Landrieu lost her election in 2014, Campbell moved to work for Washington Senator Maria Cantwell. But with control of the Senate having switched to the Republicans, Campbell found working in the minority less fulfilling than working in the majority, so took on the job of running the Washington office of the National Development Council. That run ended when the Trump administration forsook community development, so she took up the reins of the U.S. Capitol Historical Society.
She had just begun to feel up to speed with the USCHS when the pandemic hit and both the Capitol and the USCHS offices closed. “The pandemic did have one benefit for the USCHS, though,” Campbell said. “We became more national and we reached far more people. That’s because we moved from mostly face-to-face small events to also presenting webinars that featured national experts – these could be seen by hundreds or even thousands of people.” She explained that the USCHS effort at bringing to the Capitol local middle school students – especially from DC impoverished neighborhoods with children who did not think of the building as meant for them – was shut down during the pandemic but in similar fashion it evolved into digital dramas and documentaries that could be used by social studies teachers across the country.
The Capitol and USCHS had only recently re-opened to more normal public access when the January 6 attack burst upon it, shutting down the Capitol again. Campbell was not in the building that day. “The attack was on a Wednesday and on the Monday previous I told our whole staff to stay away and work from home on the 6th. Having been a mayor, I think I developed a sense for a community’s mood, and I had a bad feeling about what the coming demonstration would bring. None of our people was hurt.”
Asked how Cleveland might improve, Campbell offered two points: hasten and enhance the connection of Cleveland to Lake Erie; and work harder as a unified region. Addressing the first, she said that she expected more action from Mayor Bibb and County Executive Chris Ronayne, but that new work along the lakefront takes enormous time, money and energy. Addressing her second point, she noted that there are 57 communities in Cuyahoga County. Columbus – now the largest city in Ohio – required annexation into the city to secure access to the water system. By contrast, Cleveland’s water department provides service to over a million people in different municipalities. The multiple decision makers put the region at a disadvantage unless its dozens of political entities align for mutual improvement.
Asked about divisiveness on Capitol Hill, she lamented that media favors reporting on drama and conflict at the expense of solid law-making. She cited the dearth of reporting on the negotiations to bring about the infrastructure bill as compared to covering sensational statements by publicity-hungry Representatives. Moreover, she said, there are still leftover tensions stemming from the January 6 attack. Especially in the House, she noted, there are Members who resent, maybe even fear, other Members on account of actions taken that week.
The U. S. Capitol Historical Society website is https://capitolhistory.org. It presents historical articles, a list of its past and future webinars, support opportunities and more.
Monthly Newsletter - December 2022, Vol. 5: Ed. 12
Read the December 2022 monthly newsletter here.
Event Recap - Meeting with Mary Jordan, November 15, 2022
Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter Mary Jordan joined the Club for a discussion on November 15.
Jordan was born and raised on Cleveland’s West Side, her parents having immigrated from Ireland where her father had been a farmer and shopkeeper in County Mayo. She said she first began reporting at age 16 when she worked at NBN radio, a small station that broadcast Hungarian, Polish, Irish and more than a dozen ethnic hours and that was a popular stop for mayoral candidates.
While still in high school she won a trip to Washington and went by herself on a bus. “Here I was from the West Side of Cleveland walking the corridors of Capitol Hill. I thought it was the most thrilling, fascinating thing.”
“So I have been about this for a long time,” she continued, switching to the present election season, “but never have I seen the kind of rigidity of electoral candidate selection that I recently saw in Georgia when I was there interviewing a group favoring Hershel Walker for the U. S. Senate.” She said members of the group resoundingly put party over character in their selection.
“It’s a very difficult time for politics,” she said. “CNN reporters in Arizona were assigned body guards because Steve Bannon urged supporters to ‘go after them.’ It’s such a different environment than when I first came to Washington.”
Asked about bias in the media, she replied that she believed that elements of media have contributed to the harsh division among the electorate. “It was a mistake that the Fairness Doctrine [in broadcast news programs] ended with the introduction of cable news shows. Fox News Channel swiftly took advantage. Laws never caught up with the expanding media and then fell further behind when social media spread. People are listening to false information and retaining it. At least there are now efforts to get people out of their bubbles and start watching more than just a single news outlet. One of these efforts was funded by Frank McCourt at Georgetown University.” She noted another called Unite, which was started by Tim Shriver and works to bring factions together.
“Extremists have given both parties bad names,” she continued. “People have grown sick of the political parties and more have turned to calling themselves independents.” She added that compared to other countries, U. S. elections are vastly longer and churn through vastly more money. “But I see two good trends,” she said, “One is that more people are aware that false information is out there, and two, that more young people are voting.”
She remarked that her husband Kevin Sullivan had recently returned from covering the Ukraine war for the Post and reported that there was no electricity at night. “You’d think that under these conditions, there would be looting, but Kevin saw none. Rather he saw Ukrainians fierce in their dedication to one another and their unity in a devotion to expelling the Russians.”
She talked about her experience in Mexican prisons, relating that inmates have to pay rent. “This results in the very rich ones – drug lords, say -- having excellent food and living conditions while someone who might have stolen a loaf of bread for their impoverished family might sleep under a blanket in a courtyard. “The system is grossly unequal,” she said.
Of the horrific decade-long kidnapping of three girls in Cleveland early in the century, Jordan said she was keeping up with the victims, with whom she helped write a book (the proceeds of which helped the women start over in Cleveland, a city they love.)
Having run the London bureau for the Post, she met members of the royal family on numerous occasions. She described Princess Diana as “luminous in person, much better than she appeared in media pictures.”
Wrapping up, the four-time book author said has recently expanded into podcasts.