Peter Edelman

Peter Edelman
Born (1938-01-09) January 9, 1938
Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States
Education Harvard, A.B.
Harvard Law School, LL.B.
Spouse(s) Marian Wright Edelman

Peter B. Edelman (born January 9, 1938) is a lawyer, policy maker, and law professor at Georgetown University Law Center, specializing in the fields of poverty, welfare, juvenile justice, and constitutional law. He worked for Senator Robert F. Kennedy, and for the Clinton Administration, where he resigned to protest Clinton's signing the welfare reform legislation. Edelman grew up in Minneapolis, Minnesota. His father worked as a lawyer and his mother worked as a homemaker. Edelman is married to Marian Wright Edelman, president and founder of the Children's Defense Fund.

Education

Edelman received his A.B. in 1958 from Harvard College and LL.B. degree from Harvard Law School. Edelman served as a law clerk to Judge Henry Friendly on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit and then as a law clerk for United States Supreme Court Justice Arthur J. Goldberg.

Early career

He also worked in the U.S. Department of Justice as Special Assistant to Assistant Attorney General John Douglas. Edelman worked as a Legislative Assistant to Senator Robert F. Kennedy from 1964 to 1968, accompanying Kennedy to his meeting with labor leader Cesar Chavez. Edelman also met his wife while in Mississippi with Kennedy to prepare for reauthorization of the Economic Opportunity Act of 1964.[1] Following Kennedy's assassination, Edelman spent brief periods working as deputy director for the Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Center for Human Rights, issues director for Arthur Goldberg's New York gubernatorial campaign, and vice president of the University of Massachusetts from 1972 to 1975.

Edelman became director of the New York State Division for Youth in 1975, joined Foley & Lardner as partner in 1979, and served as Issues Director for Senator Edward Kennedy's Presidential campaign in 1980. In 1981, he helped found Parents United in the District of Columbia to empower parents to advocate for educational quality in DC's public schools. Edelman has taught at Georgetown since 1982.

Work in the Clinton administration

Edelman took a leave of absence during President Clinton's first term to serve as Counselor to HHS Secretary Donna Shalala and then as Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation.

Edelman resigned from the Clinton administration in protest of Clinton signing the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Act.[2] According to Edelman, the 1996 welfare reform law destroyed the safety net. It increased poverty, lowered income for single mothers, put people from welfare into homeless shelters, and left states free to eliminate welfare entirely. It moved mothers and children from welfare to work, but many of them aren't making enough to survive. Many of them were pushed off welfare rolls because they didn't show up for an appointment, when they had no transportation to get to the appointment, or weren't informed about the appointment, said Edelman.[3][4]

In late 1994, Clinton considered nominating Edelman to a seat on the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit that had become vacant with the decision by Abner Mikva to retire from the bench on September 19, 1994, to become White House counsel. However, Clinton feared a difficult confirmation battle—particularly given publicly stated opposition to Edelman's nomination by U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee member Orrin Hatch—and he backed off, later successfully nominating Merrick Garland to the seat. In 1995, Clinton mulled nominating Edelman to the federal district court in Washington D.C., but in August 1995, he abandoned that possibility as well.[5] The withdrawal came even despite Hatch's stated support for Edelman's nomination. "District court judges don't make policy as much as the judges on the circuit courts do," Hatch told The New York Times. "He's very liberal, but he's also an extremely fine man and I told the White House that I would support him for the district court."[5][6]

Recent work

Edelman has been an Associate Dean of the Georgetown University Law Center. Edelman was the president of the board of New Israel Fund June 2005 – June 2008,[7] and is a board member of the Center for Community Change, the Public Welfare Foundation, Americans for Peace Now, the Center for Law and Social Policy, the American Constitution Society, among other nonprofit organizations. He currently serves as chair of the seventeen-member Access to Justice Commission for the District of Columbia, a panel studying ways to provide access to civil legal representation for those who cannot afford it.

In 2012, Edelman wrote that poverty has not improved since 1973. There are four reasons: low-wage jobs, single-parent households, the near-disappearance of cash assistance (welfare) for low-income mothers and children, and discrimination by race and gender. In the mid-90s more than two-thirds of children in poor families received welfare, but now only 27 percent do. Six million people have no income other than food stamps. Food stamps provide an income at a third of the poverty line, close to $6,300 for a family of three.[8]

The broad solution, he wrote, is more jobs that pay decent wages. This will require a full-employment policy and a bigger investment in 21st-century education and skill development.[8]

We need to make the rich pay their fair share of running the country, raise the minimum wage, provide health care and a decent safety net, he wrote. But "realistically," the immediate challenge is preventing Republicans from destroying Social Security, Medicare and other social insurance programs, and giving more tax breaks to the people at the top.[8]

The politics of change would require people in the middle to see their own economic self-interest, and elect people who are aligned with them and those with lower incomes, he wrote. "As long as people in the middle identify more with people on the top than with those on the bottom, we are doomed." Campaign financing makes things worse. But "people power wins sometimes," as it did in the Progressive Era and the Great Depression.[8]

Honors

Selected bibliography

Books

Book Chapters

Journal Articles

See also

References

External links

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