[On September 28th, 2002 the great Patsy Mink passed away. So this week I’ll AmericanStudy Mink and four other Asian American leaders, past and present!]
On three
signature achievements across Mink’s truly
groundbreaking career in Congress
and government (which included seeking the Democratic
nomination for President in 1972!):
1)
Educational Progress: After her historic
election to Congress in 1964, it would have been understandable if Mink took a
while to get her bearings; but instead she immediately began work on vital new
legislation that truly reshaped federal education policy. That included two
laws introduced in 1965 (her first year in office): the Early Childhood Education
Act, which Mink herself introduced to Congress and became the first federal
legislation to cover that crucial pre-school period; and the Elementary
and Secondary Education Act, on which Mink was an important co-sponsor and
which made sure that educational progress would be included in the broader
Great Society reforms and policies. Indeed, those laws represent some of the
most enduring legacies of the Great Society programs, and bear the strong
imprint of this first-time, first-year Congresswoman.
2)
Title IX: They’re probably not the most
enduring and influential law that Mink co-authored, however. That title would
have to go to the Title IX
Amendment of the Higher Education Act, the 1972 bill which prohibited
sex-based discrimination in any federally funded education program and thus
guaranteed equal protection and support for women’s athletics (among other
areas, but with athletics a particular point of emphasis). As we celebrate the
50th anniversary of this hugely important law, one that in 2002 was officially
renamed the Patsy
T. Mink Equal Opportunity in Education Act, we’ve been able to truly chart just
how consistently and how much it has helped girls and women participate in
and achieve (both in and beyond the world of sports). It’s one of the single
most influential federal achievements of the last half-century, and it
literally and figuratively has Mink’s name all over it.
3)
Environmental Stewardship: Education and women’s
rights were thus two foundational and consistent issues on which Mink focused
in her 24 total years
in Congress (split between 1965-77 and 1990-2002). But as a representative from Hawai’i,
Mink was also acutely aware of environmental issues related to the world’s
oceans; and after leaving Congress for the first time in 1977, she had the
chance to work directly on such issues as Jimmy Carter’s Assistant
Secretary of State for Oceans and International Environmental and Scientific
Affairs (a newly created role that Mink was the first to hold). While she
only held that position for a brief time, she thus helped inaugurate a federal,
Cabinet-level emphasis on not only those specific issues, but also a broader
sense of the multiple layers to environmental conversation, stewardship, and
activism. As with all of these achievements, the best way to honor Mink’s
passing and her life alike will be to carry on those fights.
Next
leader tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What
do you think? Other Asian American lives or stories you’d highlight?
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