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Still, the all-male basketball games and golf outings have continued. Only one woman, domestic policy director Barnes, had been invited to play a round with the president around the time of the November dinner. The women-only dinners have continued, too -- just not with the president. Spearheaded by Jarrett, the women meet monthly for one of the most high-powered dinners in the nation's capital. Christina Romer, one of the president's top economic advisers, deputy chief of staff Mona Sutphen, and Carol Browner, head of the White House office on energy and climate change, are among those with a seat at the table. The senior official said the dinners have created a support network of women within the White House, giving the women an opportunity to create the kind of bonds many of the male advisers formed with each other during the campaign. Jarrett, whom several women credited with taking a special interest in the women on the staff, dismisses the notion of a White House boys club. Using the president's sports outings to support that idea, she said, is an artificial measure of who has real influence in the White House. "The fact that Nancy-Ann is handling the president's single most important domestic issue is more important than whether she plays basketball," she said. Jarrett said the president has told her that he's ready to hold another dinner with the senior women on his staff if there are issues that need to be addressed. At the end of each dinner, she asks the women if that's something she should arrange. "They always tell me, 'No, we're fine,'" she said.
[Associated
Press;
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