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Congressional hiring practices are investigated after the Fort Worth Star Telegram reports that it had proof that hiring requests for members of Congress were explicitly discriminatory.
1974 (Aug 19)
The Joint Committee on Congressional Operations, which handles hiring requests for members of Congress, began an investigation to determine whether one senator and nineteen congressmen were duped or actually had been practicing racial or religious discrimination in seeking staff personnel. The Fort Worth Star Telegram reported on August 18, 1974, that it had obtained copies of the hiring forms with varying discriminatory requests from Senator William Scott from Virginia and members of the House of Representatives. Senator Lee Metcalf from Montana, chairman of the Joint Committee, said that some of the request forms contained such notations as “no minorities," "white only,” “no Catholics,” or “no Blacks.” While most of the congressmen disclaimed responsibility for the biased forms, Senator Metcalf said it was “possible that (discriminatory) limitations expressed were those of the staff persons placing the request or a misunderstanding by the office staff.”
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.