Who Is She?
Donna
Brazile
Brazile is the third of nine children born to
Lionel and Jean Brazile. Her father was a janitor and her mother
a domestic worker. "We grew up poor," she said, literally
on the wrong side of the tracks. After graduating from Louisiana
State University, Brazile took an offer from Coretta Scott King
to help organize the 20th anniversary of the historic March on
Washington. A year later, she joined Jesse Jackson's 1984
presidential campaign as an advance person.
IOP Fellow 2001 Donna Brazile welcomes students into her office
with the sign “The Diva Is In.” Passion is what drives
Brazile, a 20-year veteran of political campaigns, who during
the presidential election was Al Gore’s campaign manager. In her
weekly study group last spring, she encouraged students to
become more active in the political process.
“I’ve heard that giving birth is the best
experience possible,” she says. “I’ve had about 300 spiritual
births during the course of my life. I’ve encouraged about 300
people to run for office and get involved.”
As a fellow, she also taught students how a
multimillion-dollar presidential campaign is structured,
managed, and organized. The Gore campaign lost, claims Brazile,
“because we failed to educate voters, failed to remove
structural barriers, failed to have every ballot counted.”
Donna Brazile, a senior fellow at the Academy
of Leadership, University of Maryland, was recently appointed as
national chair of the Voting Rights Institute, the Democratic
Party's major initiative to promote and protect the right to
vote. The Voting Rights Institute was created in response to the
irregularities of the 2000 election and was headed initially by
former Atlanta mayor Maynard Jackson.
Brazile
served as the campaign manager for Al Gore's 2000 presidential
campaign, making her the first African American woman ever to
manage a presidential campaign. A veteran political organizer
and campaign manager, Brazile is an at-large member of the
Democratic National Committee and designed the Voter/Campaign
Assessment Program for the Democratic Congressional Campaign
Committee - a program that has been crucial in boosting black
turnout in key congressional districts. Brazile has served as
chief of staff to Eleanor Holmes Norton, the District of
Columbia's delegate to the U.S. House of Representatives, and as
host/producer of "A View From the Hill" on Radio One News in
Washington, D.C., and Baltimore, Maryland.
Donna Brazile, former campaign
manager for Gore 2000, gives Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton,
D-D.C., HRC's 2001 National Capital Area Leadership Award.
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In 1981, Brazile served as National Student
Coordinator for the Martin Luther King, Jr. Holiday Committee.
Later, she was appointed to serve as the National Mobilization
Director for the 20th anniversary commemoration of the 1963
historic March on Washington. In 1985, she served as regional
director for Hands Across America. She was the National
Coordinator for Housing Now in 1989. Brazile was also founder
and executive director of the National Political Congress of
Black Women.
Brazile is the recipient of numerous awards and honors,
including the prestigious Congressional Black Caucus Youth
Award, and the National Women's Student Leadership Award. She
was named one of Ebony Magazine's Outstanding Young Achievers,
and Washingtonian magazine named her one of the city's "100 most
powerful women." A native of New Orleans, Louisiana, Brazile
earned her undergraduate degree from Louisiana State University.
The 2000 Presidential Campaign
Prior to joining the Gore campaign, Brazile
was Chief of Staff and Press Secretary to Congresswoman Eleanor
Holmes Norton of the District of Columbia, where she helped
guide the District's budget and local legislation on Capitol
Hill.
The pairing of Gore and Brazile in the 2000
Presidential Campaign was a contrast in styles, pitting Gore,
the self-acknowledged "stiff," against Brazile, who is loose,
charismatic, chatty and vibrant. Gore speaks in cautious and
measured tones; Brazile is driven and brash, given to speaking
in a slew of four-letter words that do not stop in the presence
of the press.
"I don't know about him," she said of Gore, "but I
feel opposites attract and together we can make good music, if
he lets it happen."
Known as a talented field operative and grass-roots organizer,
the first black woman to head a major contender's presidential
campaign did not report to Gore directly but to forceful
campaign chairman Tony Coehlo. Friends of Brazile like Borosage
said she sought direct access to Gore. "She's tough,"
Borosage said. "I am sure one of the first things she asked
[after being appointed] is if she could report directly to
Gore." But Gore turned her down.
Brazile said she had no problems reporting to
Coehlo, and chastised members of the press corps for pushing the
issue of the Gore campaign organizational chart. "Why is it
men always want to know who you report to?" she said
The question has drawn attention, however,
because of lingering doubts about her "maturity" that date from
her notorious 1988 comment about whose bed Barbara Bush sleeps
in. She was working as a deputy field operator on Michael
Dukakis' presidential bid amid rumors that GOP nominee George
Bush was having an affair with a woman named Jennifer
Fitzgerald. The press was reluctant to publish the story. So she
said, "The American people have every right to know if
Barbara Bush will share that bed with him in the White House."
Her remarks were a major embarrassment for the Dukakis campaign
and Brazile was forced to resign. It may be for that reason that
Gore decided to take full advantage of her organizational skills
while distancing himself from her personally
Oddly enough, the last time Gore ran for
president, in 1987, Brazile made belittling remarks about him.
Serving as director of field operations for Richard Gephardt's
presidential campaign, she said, "Gore just hasn't captured
their imagination. You don't hear party chairmen going around
saying 'Gore, Gore, Gore.'"
It is still unclear whether in the Barbara Bush statement
Brazile was following orders or acting on her own. Friends
insist she made her comments only after discussing them with
superiors. Others have doubts. They say she was acting on her
own and cite this as evidence of her "immaturity."
For her part, Brazile wishes the whole matter would go away.
"That's all in the past," she said. "That was 10 years
ago. I've come a long way from that. Let's move on."
After being forced to leave the Dukakis campaign, Brazile called
her mother and headed home to Kenner, La., near New Orleans. A
Roman Catholic, she said she later did "penance" by
spending nine months in a Washington homeless shelter with
homeless advocate Mitch Snyder. She went on to run the
successful campaign of Eleanor Holmes Norton for the District of
Columbia's at-large seat in Congress, and served with Norton as
chief of staff before joining the Gore campaign.
Brazile belongs to an informal club of four black women who meet
periodically in Washington to exchange political views and chat
about strategy. One member of that club is Mignon Moore,
Brazile's closest friend and assistant for political affairs for
President Clinton. Moore said she gave Brazile one short piece
of advice: "Stay focused and do what you do best."
Source:
http://www.academy.umd.edu/aboutus/staff/DBrazile.htm
http://www.ksg.harvard.edu/ksgpress/bulletin/autumn2001/charles_profile.html
http://www.salon.com/news/feature/1999/10/11/brazile/
http://www.washingtoncitypaper.com/lips/bios/brazilebio.html
http://www.ksg.harvard.edu/wappp/students/bios/donnabrazile.html