iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Augusta National: Virginia Rometty, New CEO At IBM, Revives Debate About Female Members

Posted: 03/30/2012 12:31 am Updated: 04/ 6/2012 3:07 pm

August Virginia Rommetty Ibm
Patrons wait at the clubhouse before a practice round for the 2008 Masters golf tournament at the Augusta National Golf Club in Augusta, Ga., Monday, April 7, 2008. The Masters tournament begins on Thursday, April 10. (AP Photo/Rob Carr)

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. -- The appointment of a new chief executive at IBM has revived the debate over Augusta National's all-male membership just one week before the Masters.

IBM hired Virginia Rometty as its CEO this year, which could mean a break in recent tradition if Augusta sticks to its history of never having a woman as one of its roughly 300 members.

The last four CEOs of IBM all belonged to the club. However, a woman has never worn an Augusta green jacket since it opened in 1933.

"I think they're both in a bind," Martha Burk said Thursday evening from Washington.

It was Burk who led an unsuccessful campaign 10 years ago for Augusta to admit a female member, demanding that four companies drop their television sponsorship because of the discrimination. Hootie Johnson, club chairman at the time, said Augusta would not be pressured to take a female member "at the point of a bayonet."

"IBM is in a bigger bind than the club," Burk said. "The club trashed their image years ago. IBM is a corporation. They ought to care about the brand, and they ought to care about what people think. And if they're not careful, they might undermine their new CEO."

Augusta National declined comment, keeping with its policy of not discussing membership.

Billy Payne, who ran the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta, took over as club chairman in 2006. He said that day the home of the Masters "has no specific timetable" for admitting women. The question was raised at the 2007 and 2010 Masters, and both times, he said membership issues were private.

Rometty succeeds Sam Palmisano at IBM, which runs the Masters' website from the bottom floor of the media center. According to a list published by USA Today in 2002, the previous three CEOs also were members - Louis Gertsner, John Akers and John Opel.

Johnson wound up doing away with television sponsorship for two years to keep the Masters' corporate partners out of the fray.

Burk doesn't believe it should be that simple this time.

"What IBM needs to do is draw a line in the sand - `We're either going to pull our sponsorship and membership and any ancillary activities we support with the tournament, or the club is going to have to honor our CEO the way they have in the past,'" Burk said. "There's no papering over it. They just need to step up and do the right thing.

"They need to not pull that argument that they support the tournament and not the club," she said. "That does not fool anybody, and they could undermine their new CEO."

Burk said she would not be surprised if IBM pressured Rometty to say she doesn't want to be a member.

IBM has not commented publicly, and did not immediately return a phone call Thursday night.

"Really, I don't think it's her responsibility," Burk said. "It's the board of directors. They need to take action here. They don't need to put that on her. They need to say, `This is wrong. We thought the club was on the verge of making changes several years ago, and we regretfully end our sponsorship to maintain her credibility and the company brand.' "

The debate returns just in time for one of the most anticipated Masters in years. Tiger Woods finally returned to winning last week at Bay Hill and is considered one of the favorites, along with U.S. Open champion Rory McIlroy. Eight of the top 20 players in the world ranking have won heading into the first major of the year, a list that includes world No. 1 Luke Donald and Phil Mickelson.

Now comes a sensitive issue that dogged the tournament a decade ago, and might not go away easily.

Augusta National does not ban women. They can play the golf course, but no woman has worn an Augusta green jacket, a status symbol in business and golf.

Rometty is said to play golf sparingly. Her greater passion is scuba diving.

The new CEO has been named to Fortune magazine's "50 Most Powerful Women in Business" for the last seven years, and was at No. 7 a year ago. She started with IBM in 1981.

"We have a face, we have a resume, we have a title and we have a credible reason to do it that doesn't involve Martha Burk," she said.

Burk said she is no longer chair of the National Council of Women's Organizations. She had planned to step down until the first flap with the Masters began in the summer of 2002. Now, she said she runs the Corporate Accountability Project for the council, a project born from her battle with Augusta.

FOLLOW SPORTS

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. -- The appointment of a new chief executive at IBM has revived the debate over Augusta National's all-male membership just one week before the Masters. IBM hired Virginia Rometty...
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. -- The appointment of a new chief executive at IBM has revived the debate over Augusta National's all-male membership just one week before the Masters. IBM hired Virginia Rometty...
Filed by Chris Greenberg  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 692
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (17 total)
02:23 PM on 04/04/2012
Here we go again with this 'equality' issue.

Women have female-only gyms and social clubs that men can't join but when men try to keep something for themselves the women jump all over it. Why? Why can men not have their own space and run it their way? Why is that an issue for women? We don't want to join their gyms, we just go 'Oh, ok, we'll find another gym'. There are enough massively wealthy women in the world they can build their own club. There are also plenty of other clubs that do allow women, prestigious ones, why can't they go join them? Me are more relaxed and behave differently when we are among ourselves, when we don't have disapproving looks and comments from ladies in the room. Men also understand that what happens in private in a mens club stays there, women don't. We leave women to their own devices why can't they leave us to ours?

Equality is not one sex having to do everything the other does, it's accepting and embracing our differences. If one sex stops the other from having those places where we are different then there is no equality, it's just bullying.
06:02 PM on 04/03/2012
The article says she hardly plays golf at all, so why would she need a membership at one of the most difficult golf courses in the world? So she can go hack up the pristine fairways of Augusta?

But that's not even the issue. The issue is that it is a private golf club and they can make whatever rules they want. How is it any more discriminatory for a woman to not be a member than for me to not be a member? I'm a man. But I'm not rich or famous and so will never be invited to be a member there. That's a form of discrimination isn't it? If the golf club has only 300 members, then it sounds like they are discriminating against a whole lot of different people who would like to be members there, not just women. It's just that the rest of us just accept that is a part of life and we move on.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
media1
10:31 AM on 04/03/2012
Who cares?
Go Tiger
11:25 PM on 04/02/2012
We were a stronger country before all this political correctness, integration, and woman's lib. I say leave the country club alone.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Quotidien
03:47 PM on 04/02/2012
Please stop treating this like it's a Supreme Court appointment.

This is an old-boys network golf course and country club. That's it.
Francois G
(S)trolling... don't feed me...
08:32 AM on 04/02/2012
So this is the piece of information the HP makes headlines with...

Not a single word about Hunter Mahan's win at the SHO. Lame !
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
loco48
TRUTH trumps ideology!
08:17 AM on 04/02/2012
The deep south! it was not to long ago that Augusta would not let black PGA players on the course. The arguement that there are women only clubs so AN should be an all mens club don't wash. I played golf 25 years all over the country and I never saw an all women 's golf club. Just a bunch of bigoted neanderthals living in the 19th century before the country was ruined by giving women the right to vote!
11:24 PM on 04/01/2012
What amazes me is that IBM takes years to substantively answer EEO antidiscrimination complaints, footdrags wherever it can. Then, having the CEO in Augusta National is an issue? The company is great at being ambivalent when it comes to its support of civil rights.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Symphysodon
02:20 PM on 04/01/2012
There are countless clubs that are open only to women. Why is a private men's club a problem? Could this be yet another example of women wanting to have their cake and eat it too?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rfinkels
07:50 PM on 04/01/2012
Ok, I'll bite. I challenge you to name a single women-only club that is so central to the brokering of powering the business community.......if you can meet the challenge, I will concede your point.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bajos
Take it to the limit...
11:45 PM on 04/01/2012
Curves and other women's health clubs are never challenged.
12:44 PM on 04/01/2012
Who knew a club for insanely rich old men would be run by a**holes?
lurkinman
Clear thinking is best served non-partisan
12:07 PM on 04/01/2012
Why would IBM lose anything by dropping their membership at Augusta or Masters' sponsorship?

It's not like there aren't any other places where big-shot execs can hang out, and I'll be darned if I could name one single sponsor of the Masters, or any golf tournement.
George Picard
Send lawyers, guns and money
11:37 AM on 04/01/2012
For all the people posting here, Augusta is male only in membership, that does not mean that woman are not allowed there.

Women have dinner there, they drink there, the go to partys there, and gulp woman even play golf there, even if there are no womens tees.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Laurie Prather
Helping Ted Nugent meet his destiny, vote by vote
12:52 PM on 04/01/2012
Wonderful, and we can all be happy barefoot, pregnant and in the kitchen.
George Picard
Send lawyers, guns and money
02:43 PM on 04/01/2012
Wow, you go from woman not being members at Augusta to that level.

I guess you see the world in black and white, nothing in between.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
La Elle
I might be deaf but I'm not dumb
11:03 AM on 04/01/2012
Why any woman would want to belong to a misogynist organization is beyond me.
George Picard
Send lawyers, guns and money
11:31 AM on 04/01/2012
Let me ask you, do you think Bill Gates is a misogynist? He is a member there.

By the way they have woman there all the time, they just are not memebers.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
La Elle
I might be deaf but I'm not dumb
04:15 PM on 04/01/2012
. The AN is practically in my backyard-8 miles away as the crow flies. Considering Gates is quite the philanthropist and rather liberal, I have no idea why he chooses to belong to a club that forbids the membership of women. It's rather disappointing. My feeling is that if they aren't misogynist, and there are women who work and visit at the AN, why not allow women to become members? I've not heard one logical answer.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Samuel Bun
Guess which hand it's in.
10:08 AM on 04/01/2012
I am not sure that Augusta National has the money for the installation of facility's that would be required for a female member. There is a lot to consider when it comes to men who want to be with men, are they going to have to put pants on when watching golf? Will Bud and chips be replaced with wine and those little sandwich's, I need a lot of those to fill up. I doubt they have a swear jar. I don't think she would look good in green, will they have to change that, and what if shoulder pads come back into fashion, constant alts to a jacket to stay in tune with the ever changing moods of Paris. IBM could always sneak her in the back door in a cake, (saw it in a movie) after she pops out there is legal grounds I think its called squatters rights.
George Picard
Send lawyers, guns and money
10:44 AM on 04/01/2012
Um, woman go to Augusta all the time, they have even played golf there, they eat there, they have drinks there, they are just not members of the club.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
loco48
TRUTH trumps ideology!
08:24 AM on 04/02/2012
give one logical reasonable reason why women should not be members there? Instead of saying that women are allowed inside, what reason other than a discriminatory rule by fat old white men saying they can't have women there.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Laurie Prather
Helping Ted Nugent meet his destiny, vote by vote
12:55 PM on 04/01/2012
And who would want to be a member of a society where teeth are optional?
08:52 AM on 04/01/2012
Dont force Augusta change the rule.

I am surprised there is no campaign in the facebook or twitter to go after the big companies who are supporting Augusta. It worked for Rush Limbaugh... It should work for Augusta too
George Picard
Send lawyers, guns and money
09:13 AM on 04/01/2012
They did it years ago, it failed.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Laurie Prather
Helping Ted Nugent meet his destiny, vote by vote
12:54 PM on 04/01/2012
Dude, in case you didn't notice, Rush is going, going, gone.