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FORD
05-04-2005, 03:56 PM
The Chairman's Colorful Cabinet
Howard Dean is bringing minorities to the top of the minority party. That's rarer than you might think.

By Jamal Simmons
Web Exclusive: 05.03.05


Question: What do Branch Rickey, Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, and Howard Dean have in common?

Answer: Each of them made a decision to break the color barrier by picking African Americans for key spots on their teams. Rickey, of course, signed Jackie Robinson to the Dodgers. Clinton appointed Ron Brown as the first African American to head the Commerce Department and Franklin Raines as the first black Office of Management and Budget Director (among others). Bush has followed in that tradition by naming African Americans as national-security adviser and twice as secretary of state -- Condoleezza Rice, Colin Powell, and Rice again, respectively.

And Dean?

Dean recently joined this notable list when he brought Cornell Belcher on as the first African American to serve as polling director for the Democratic National Committee (DNC).

Not sure hiring Belcher is as significant as recruiting Robinson, Brown, Raines, Powell, or Rice? Well, consider this: There are five indispensable people in any campaign organization -- the campaign manager, who vets all decisions; the finance director, who figures out how to pay for the enterprise; and the media adviser, the research director, and the pollster, who decide what the campaign will talk about, what its vulnerabilities are, and how to defend against them. Political director and field director are also key positions, but it is the “Indispensable Five” who typically gather to make most of the major decisions of any campaign organization. Inexplicably, despite the necessity of African American support for Democratic victories, almost none of these senior decision-makers are ever black.

Political observers are familiar with Donna Brazile, who served as Al Gore’s 2000 presidential campaign manager. Yet it is quite difficult to name another African American who has served as a campaign manager for a major Democratic candidate for president, governor or senator, other than Craig Kirby, who managed Peter Deutch’s primary campaign for the Senate in Florida last year. Kirby is now also working with Dean at the DNC.

African American major fund-raisers are also rare. The few that come to mind are Tina Flournoy, who was finance director for Gore in 2000 and is now another Dean DNC adviser; David Mercer and Wayne Marshall, who were senior finance officials at the DNC in previous years; and Vera Baker, who was finance director for Barack Obama’s Senate race.

It’s even harder to find an African American owner, partner, or associate in a mainstream political advertising agency, though there are a handful of ad agencies with black principals that do ads targeted for African Americans candidates and committees.

Meanwhile, locating an African American research director is tougher than finding weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. There are none.

As for pollsters, there are three with national bona fides -- Silas Lee, of Silas Lee & Associates; Ron Lester, of Lester & Associates; and Cornell Belcher, president of Brilliant Corners Research. Of the three, only Belcher has previously done mainstream polling for a major national party organization or campaign, serving on the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee. While other pollsters will do work for the DNC, Dean deserves credit for putting Belcher front and center.

As a fierce supporter of Donnie Fowler -- who campaigned for DNC chairman promising to end the reign of the “Aristocracy of Consultants,” include people of diverse backgrounds at the decision-making table, and give greater funding and assistance to the state parties -- I have been pleasantly surprised at the Dean chairmanship so far. Dean has shaken up the consultant pool, increased diversity, funded state parties, and is searching for messages to appeal to more voters. There are now African Americans and Hispanics throughout the DNC building, including Karen Finney, the party’s first African American communications director.

Other Democrats should follow Dean’s lead and begin an internal effort to do what we have been asking private corporations to do for years: diversify senior management. That means we should recruit, train, and hire more black campaign managers, fund-raisers, researchers, ad-makers, and pollsters. It also means African American campaign staffers have to continue to work at gaining the skills to perform the jobs of the “Indispensable Five.” A team with diverse backgrounds and ideas will only help our party reconnect with the American people.

Dean and Belcher are making an effort at reconnecting the party with the voters by launching a project to find the issues and messages that resonate with Bush voters. After losing the presidency (twice?) and six consecutive congressional elections, this is the most important thing for Democrats to figure out. Democrats want to protect the nation from terrorists. We want to help working people, their families, and businesses compete (and win) in the global economy. And we want to help parents who are raising children in an over-sexualized and hyper-violent culture. We must find a message that will convince voters that we can be trusted to do these things. Hopefully, the diverse team that Dean is assembling at the DNC will have better luck finding that message than Democrats have had in the recent past.

Jamal Simmons was traveling press secretary for the 2003-2004 presidential campaigns of General Wesley Clark and Senator Bob Graham.

FORD
05-04-2005, 03:57 PM
Yes, Warham, this means you can retire the dumb hotel jokes now ;)

DrMaddVibe
05-04-2005, 04:25 PM
yesah massah!

McCarrens
05-04-2005, 05:18 PM
We'll retire the hotel jokes as soon as all the liberal bitches stop thinking of Rice and Powell as "Uncle Toms."

McCarrens
05-04-2005, 05:26 PM
Originally posted by FORD
Question: What do Branch Rickey, Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, and Howard Dean have in common?

Answer: Each of them made a decision to break the color barrier by picking African Americans for key spots on their teams. Rickey, of course, signed Jackie Robinson to the Dodgers. Clinton appointed Ron Brown as the first African American to head the Commerce Department and Franklin Raines as the first black Office of Management and Budget Director (among others). Bush has followed in that tradition by naming African Americans as national-security adviser and twice as secretary of state -- Condoleezza Rice, Colin Powell, and Rice again, respectively.

And Dean?

Well, Dean's party is starting to realize that he is a buffonic moron who is causing people to run from the party. They made him do something to get some positive attention. So he did the only smart thing he could think of -- he copied the Republicans and appointed minorities to a high postion.

The only difference is when the Pepublicans do it, they don't make a big deal out of it. They want people to be judged on their talent and skill, not their skin color.

But the Democrats do.

When the Republicans appoint minorites the Dems cry out racist remark after racist remark.

When the Dems appoint minorities they make a huge deal out of it, trying to once again show people that no, they are not the same party that wanted to keep slavery alive.

But people still remember.

Give it a few weeks. Dean will do somthing else to make everyone remember how racist he and his party is.:confused:

Ally_Kat
05-04-2005, 05:43 PM
Cornell Belcher – Cornell Belcher is the founder and President of Brilliant Corners Research and Strategies and functions as the principal strategist on all of the firm’s projects. Belcher is experienced at campaign politics and has over a decade of expertise in quantitative and qualitative research, message development and product and behavioral insight. Belcher has built Brilliant Corners into an established brand that organizations and companies seek out for its unique perspective and creative approach.

http://www.democrats.org/aa/news/printable/200503040002.html

BigBadBrian
05-05-2005, 02:17 PM
Originally posted by McCarrens
We'll retire the hotel jokes as soon as all the liberal bitches stop thinking of Rice and Powell as "Uncle Toms."

Exactly.

BigBadBrian
05-05-2005, 02:17 PM
Originally posted by FORD
Yes, Warham, this means you can retire the dumb hotel jokes now ;)

Nope. Not gonna do it. :gulp:

FORD
05-05-2005, 03:08 PM
Whatever, racists :rolleyes:

Warham
05-05-2005, 03:20 PM
Bush has more minorities in his cabinet than any President in history, so I don't know how you can call him or his party racists.

Who made the joke about finding blacks working in the hotel?

If you would, we can take this discussion all the way back to the Civil Rights Act, and which party supported it more.

DrMaddVibe
05-05-2005, 03:36 PM
Originally posted by FORD
Whatever, racists :rolleyes:

Yeah...riiii-ght!

Just echoing your boy's sentiments.

He's the racist.

You denying it is funny as hell!

DrMaddVibe
05-06-2005, 06:54 AM
Originally posted by Warham
Bush has more minorities in his cabinet than any President in history, so I don't know how you can call him or his party racists.

Who made the joke about finding blacks working in the hotel?

If you would, we can take this discussion all the way back to the Civil Rights Act, and which party supported it more.

OR....

We could take it all the way to the CIVIL WAR!!!!

BOO-YEAH!!!! Racist apologetics!

The more you stick up for him ford, the more you'll sink with him!

Nickdfresh
05-06-2005, 07:36 AM
Sink sort of like the President's and the Republican's approval ratings.

Warham
05-06-2005, 03:51 PM
Bill Clinton's approval ratings were below 50% as well during his presidency.

FORD
05-06-2005, 09:33 PM
Originally posted by Warham
Bill Clinton's approval ratings were below 50% as well during his presidency.

Not for very long. :)