Valerie Jarrett's calling toward a life of public service led her to a key role in the Obama White House鈥攁nd she urged 瓜子TV students to follow their "quiet voice"
In 1987, after several years of corporate law practice, Valerie Jarrett realized she had no passion for the work. Consequently, she took a leap of faith and went to work for Harold Washington, Chicago鈥檚 first Black mayor鈥攅ven though friends told her she was crazy to give up the big salary and the office with a view of Lake Michigan.
But she knew she wanted to be part of something bigger鈥攁 life of public service that could make a real difference in people鈥檚 lives. 鈥淚 decided to follow the quiet voice inside of me,鈥 the senior adviser to President Barack Obama 鈥83 as part of Occidental鈥檚 . 鈥淚 urge all of you to do that鈥攊t鈥檚 OK to push against the current. That鈥檚 what I did and it changed my life.鈥
More than 560 Occidental students, alumni, faculty, and staff attended virtually as President Harry J. Elam, Jr. interviewed Jarrett鈥攃urrently president of the Barack Obama Foundation鈥攁bout her career in public service, her key role in two terms at the Obama White House, and her views on the future of American democracy. Sara El-Amine 鈥07, national director of Obama鈥檚 2012 reelection campaign and co-chair of the Scholars program, introduced Elam and fielded questions submitted by the 瓜子TV community.
Prior to the webinar, Jarrett met with Obama Scholars and Fellows, answering their questions about her career, her decision to entire public service, and how her family history shaped her political commitments and values. 鈥淰alerie has had a truly extraordinary career in public service,鈥 says Ryan Preston-Roedder, Obama Scholars faculty adviser and associate professor of philosophy. 鈥淏eing able to meet and talk to Valerie, and to hear her insights and advice, was really an incredible opportunity for our students.鈥
Jarrett expressed a sense of optimism about the Biden administration, pointing to the president鈥檚 four decades of experience in the Senate, eight as vice president, and a team that includes many people who have worked with him and each other before. That enables him to hit the ground running in a way the first Obama administration could not, she said.
The challenges facing the nation鈥檚 46th president are many: the toxicity of current discourse, the fact that elected officials often don鈥檛 agree on basic facts, and the reality that many Americans are disenchanted with their institutions.鈥淏ut if anyone is prepared for this moment, it鈥檚 President Biden,鈥 she said.
鈥淚t鈥檚 OK to push against the current. That鈥檚 what I did and it changed my life.鈥
Central to shaping her vision of public service was her experience working in the Chicago mayor鈥檚 office, first for Washington and then for Richard Daley, Jarrett said. In her high-profile roles, people recognized her everywhere and were not shy about voicing their complaints. "They would come up to me, you know, scream at me鈥攊t didn鈥檛 matter if my daughter was there鈥攁nd it forced me to listen in in a very active way, to engage and to not be afraid or intimidated by people who were angry with the government, and to try to earn their trust and look at my responsibility through the lens of, is this going to improve their lives?"
It was that experience on the ground, and the stories that she heard, that guided her policy recommendations in the White House. That鈥檚 one of the failings she saw in Washington, she added: 鈥淧eople are so afraid of losing their jobs that they won鈥檛 do their jobs. They are putting short-term considerations ahead of what鈥檚 good for the country. And I found it incredibly frustrating that they would be willing to put a short-term political interest ahead of what鈥檚 good for our country.鈥
Chicago was also where she first met Michelle Robinson, whom she hired away from a private law firm to work for the city, and Michelle鈥檚 then-fianc茅, Barack Obama. Jarrett and Obama bonded over their unusual childhoods, Obama having spent some of his formative years in Indonesia and Jarrett having been born and spent her first five years in Iran, where her father鈥攁 Black physician stymied by discrimination in the United States鈥攔an a hospital for children in Shiraz.
鈥淲e realized we had learned the same lessons about how much young people have in common, regardless of artificial things like language and geography, and how we should look at the United States in the global context and not in isolation,鈥 she said.
Impressed, she thought that Obama had the potential to become the mayor of Chicago, not imagining that bigger things were in store. 鈥淲hat struck me 30 years ago stands true today: He has a moral compass that only knows one direction,鈥 she said in answer to a question from Elam about why she believed in him. 鈥淗e is authentically committed to being a force for good. That is, unfortunately, a rarity among people who seek office today.鈥
After the climactic 2010 House vote to approve the Affordable Care Act, Jarrett recalled, she and Obama were standing on the White House balcony overlooking the South Lawn when she asked him how he would compare passage of the new health care act with winning the presidency two years earlier. 鈥淗e said, 鈥榁alerie, there鈥檚 no comparison. The election was simply the means to do something really important for the American people, and that鈥檚 what we did today.鈥欌