Sheila Johnson, Susan Rice in Elle magazine's '10 powerful women in DC'

Influential African-Americans have the nation's capital by storm and are being recognized in the latest issue of Elle...

Luther Vandross was outed as gay after his death.

Influential African-Americans have the nation’s capital by storm and are being recognized in the latest issue of Elle magazine. The Huffington Post reports that Sheila Johnson and Susan Rice have been named alongside eight other D.C. power players on Elle’s “Capital Dames: 10 Powerful Women in DC” list.

From a political strategist to an award-winning journalist and an ambassador to the U.N., women have taken Washington, DC’s political scene by storm. Among them: African-American influentials Sheila Johnson and Susan Rice, who’ve been named alongside eight other DC power players on ELLE Magazine’s “Capital Dames: 10 Powerful Women in DC” list.

The roundup, featured in the April 2012 issue of the magazine, shines a light on women who are breaking barriers in Washington’s male-dominated political realm, including 63-year-old entrepreneur and philanthropist Sheila Johnson who keeps busy “connecting the dots…traveling to Haiti with Donna Karan, her favorite designer, to buy merchandise from artisans to sell in her hotels; having a stake in three pro sports teams (including the WNBA’s Washington Mystics, of which she’s the president); chairing the board of governors of Parsons The New School for Design; being a CARE global ambassador; and producing documentaries on AIDS and homelessness,” the magazine says.

Click here to read the rest of this story.

SHARE THIS ARTICLE