TAMPA--Theres something disarming about Valerie Jarrett that dulled the knife I was determined to use to cut to the bone of an issue the Obama administration would rather I ignore.Shes soft-spoken, quick to smile and deflects criticism of her boss--the president--with the disapproving glance of a schoolteacher who is disappointed by a students lack of knowledge.
I got that look from Mrs. Jarrett when I asked her a question thats been bugging me ever since President Barack Obama backtracked on his harsh criticism of the Cambridge, Mass., cops who had arrested Harvard University Prof. Henry Louis Gates Jr.
Asked about the arrest during a July news conference, President Obama said the cops acted stupidly.
This has been ratcheting up, and I, obviously, helped to contribute ratcheting it up, the president said a few days later.
The president said he didnt mean to malign the Cambridge Police Department or Sgt. James Crowley, the arresting officer.
I could have calibrated those words differently, he said.
So, when I got the chance to interview Mrs. Jarrett while she was at the National Association of Black Journalists convention last week, I wanted to know whether the president has reconsidered something he said during an earlier news conference this year.
In March, ABC News correspondent Ann Compton asked President Obama whether the issue of race comes up when he has policy discussions with his economic advisors.
I think that the last 64 days has been dominated by me trying to figure out how were going to fix the economy, and that affects black, brown and white, the president answered.
But a rising tide recovery plan wont be enough to fix the economic problems of Blacks whose unemployment is much higher, and family income is far lower, than that of whites.
So, I asked Mrs. Jarrett if the president had rethought his answer.
Pointing to the speech he gave at the NAACP convention in July, she said the president made it very clear that, if you look at the disparities in unemployment, health care and education--all these issues that are his top priorities--they are the areas in which there is suffering disproportionately in the Black community.
Everyone is aware that the issues we are tackling in the economy are disproportionately hurting Blacks, she added.
I wish that had been the presidents answer.
Failing that, I wish hed gone into the press room a couple of days later--as he did in the Gates case--and tweaked his response.
He didnt, and that worries me.
Too many Blacks--especially Black journalists--are reluctant to ask tough questions about what the Obama administration is doing to improve the lives of Blacks.
They fear it will embarrass the president, or give his political enemies something to use against him.
I worry that not raising these questions--or not getting good answers when we do--will do even greater damage.
Black voters turned out in record numbers to put President Obama in the White House.
Like any other members of a winning coalition, Blacks expect, and deserve, to reap some benefits of the victory they helped make possible.
That, I think, was the point of the question Miss Compton asked the president, and it was certainly the thrust of the one I put to Jarrett.
While her deft handling of my question was disarming, I would like to have heard the president speak those words.