Create a free Diverse: Issues In Higher Education account to continue reading

News Corp. Forms Diversity Council After Cartoon

News Corp. has agreed to form an external diversity council after meeting with civil rights groups about a New York Post cartoon that critics said likened President Barack Obama to a dead chimpanzee.

The company will form a “diversity community council” in New York City that will meet with senior company executives twice a year, NAACP President and CEO Benjamin Todd Jealous said Wednesday. It also will include a statement of commitment to diversity in its annual report.

News Corp. Chairman Rupert Murdoch published an apology in the Post soon after the cartoon appeared in February, but pressure for further action continued. Jealous called the cartoon an “invitation for assassination” and urged a boycott of the paper and the firing of the editor and cartoonist. The Rev. Al Sharpton asked the Federal Communications Commission to review policies allowing News Corp. to control multiple media outlets in the same market.

Representatives from the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, Sharpton’s National Action Network, the National Urban League and 100 Black Men of America met with News Corp. executives on May 19.

Those groups will be represented on the new committee, said News Corp. spokesman Jack Horner. The membership was still being finalized, but Horner said it would also include organizations such as the Hispanic Federation, Alianza Dominicana and the New York Gauchos, which offers after-school programs and is best known for its top-flight youth basketball teams. Sharpton, a longtime adversary of the New York Post, will not be on the panel, Horner said.

Similar diversity advisory boards already exist in Chicago and Los Angeles, Horner said.

“This is an expansion of what we’ve had elsewhere,” he said. “The key is we’re always responding and learning from our communities.”

A New Track: Fostering Diversity and Equity in Athletics
American sport has always served as a platform for resistance and has been measured and critiqued by how it responds in critical moments of racial and social crises.
Read More
A New Track: Fostering Diversity and Equity in Athletics