Tag: Politics

  • VP vetters for McCain and Obama have had similar career paths (Muckety)

    Another sign that the Democratic presidential nomination process is over even though it’s not over: Sen. Barack Obama has chosen someone to head his vice-presidential search committee.

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    James A. Johnson, a Washington insider who’s done this sort of thing before, will size up possible running mates for Obama.

    On the other side, Arthur B. Culvahouse Jr., an equally powerful inside-the-Beltway kind of guy, will coordinate the V.P. search for Sen. John McCain, the putative Republican nominee.

    Writing in Sunday’s Week in Review section of The New York Times, Jill Abramson says it’s not surprising that Obama and McCain have asked old Washington hands to take on this task even though they’re running as Washington outsiders.

    “Vetting is an extremely tricky and specialized Washington art form,” Abramson writes.

    She points out the head of the search has to organize a group whose members grill the possible candidates.

    They’ve got to “ferret out skeletons in closets, comb through finances and voting records, and try to anticipate problems that could ignite controversy in the news media.”

    Dick Cheney did this for then-Gov. George W. Bush in 2000 and settled upon himself as the vice presidential nominee.

    It would seem unlikely that either Johnson or Culvahouse would follow his example, as neither has run for elective office and each seems more comfortable behind the scenes.

    Johnson directed the vice-presidential search in 1984 for Walter Mondale, who chose Rep. Geraldine Ferraro as his running mate, and again in 2004 for John Kerry, who selected Sen. Joseph Lieberman.

    Culvahouse hasn’t headed up a vice-presidential screening, but he’s been an adviser to presidents since he was White House counsel to Ronald Reagan.

    Though they are from different political parties, Johnson, 64, and Culvahouse, 59, have quite similar career paths.

    As a younger man, each worked for a powerful Washington insider. That connection led to bigger and better things inside and outside of government.

    Johnson’s mentor and patron was Mondale, the Democratic senator from Minnesota who went on to be vice president under Jimmy Carter.

    After working for Mondale, Johnson went on to head Fannie Mae, the Federal National Mortgage Company. He was making $6 million to $7 million a year when he left the company in 1998.

    Johnson’s now on the board of Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and is vice chairman of Perseus LLC, the merchant bank and private equity fund.

    Culvahouse, a native of Tennesee, was a protege of Sen. Howard Baker of Tennesee, the former Senate majority leader.

    He served as Baker’s chief legislative assistant and counsel in the senate. And soon after Baker became Reagan’s chief of staff in 1987, Culvahouse became White House counsel.

    Culvahouse is now chair of O’Melveny & Meyers LLP, a Los Angeles law firm with offices in cities throughout the world, including Washington.

    Its partners have been involved in Democratic, as well as Republican, politics.

    Warren Christopher, the former secretary of state, is a senior partner in the firm. He headed the 2000 Florida recount effort for Democratic presidential candidate Al Gore. Ron Klain, then a partner at O’Melveny & Meyers, was general counsel to the Democratic recount effort.

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  • Ted Kennedy surgery followed broad research into medical options

    Once again, Dr. Lawrence C. Horowitz is providing counsel to the Kennedy family as it confronts a medical crisis.

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    Sen. Edward M. Kennedy announced that he is having surgery today at Duke University Medical Center for his brain tumor. He will then undergo chemotherapy and radiation treatment.

    Edward M. Kennedy
    Edward M. Kennedy

    The decision followed a massive research effort led by Horowitz, a former Kennedy aide who has advised the family for more than 20 years.

    As the Boston Globe reports today, Horowitz helped the family find innovative treatments for Edward M. Kennedy Jr. when he was diagnosed with a dangerous bone cancer in his right leg. He treated Patrick Kennedy when the 12-year-old suffered an asthma attack on a airline flight. And he devised diets for Ted Kennedy when he considered a presidential run in 1984.

    Kennedy’s decision to have surgery followed an analysis by Horowitz and other former staffers, which included discussions with experts at the National Institutes of Health, the Food and Drug Administration, hospitals and pharmaceutical companies.

    “My role is to reach out to everybody everywhere – Mass. General, Brigham, anywhere across the country,” Horowitz told the Globe.

    Horowitz, a graduate of Yale Medical School, was staff director of the Senate Subcommittee on Health, chaired by Kennedy, from 1977 to 1981. He later served as Kennedy’s chief of staff.

    He is the author of Taking Charge of Your Medical Fate, about researching and assessing health care options.

    In issuing his statement this morning, Kennedy didn’t miss the opportunity to campaign for his favorite presidential candidate: “After completing treatment, I look forward to returning to the United States Senate and to doing everything I can to help elect Barack Obama as our next president,” he said.

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  • Chicago’s black business leaders play major role in Obama’s rise

    Oprah Winfrey lives here. Michael Jordan keeps a penthouse on the lake. Jesse Jackson Jr. and Sr. are both here. And of course, there’s Barack Obama.

    To a degree unlike any other city in America, Chicago is identified with its black elite. Locals joke that you can find more black millionaires per square foot at the Chicago Urban League’s annual dinner than you can anywhere in the world.

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    The windy city is home not just to Jackson’s Rainbow/PUSH Coalition and Chess Records, where Muddy Waters, Chuck Berry and Howlin’ Wolf recorded hits, but also to Winfrey’s wildly successful Harpo Productions, and to “Ebony” and “Jet,” the flagships of Johnson Publishing Company, the world’s largest African-American-owned firm.

    The city has its share of black poverty, to be sure. But it is also headquarters to Seaway National Bank, the Midwest’s largest black-owned bank, and a slew of flourishing African-American-owned financial and consulting firms, including John W. Rogers Jr.’s Ariel Capital, manager of some of the nation’s largest pension funds; Loop Capital, a fast-growing investment banking firm co-founded by James Reynold Jr.; and Burrell Communications Group, where founder Tom Burrell snagged accounts with Pepsi Cola and McDonald’s and revolutionized the portrayal of blacks in advertising.

    It is no coincidence that Chicago has also spawned three of the four black presidential candidates in U.S. history – Jesse Jackson Sr., Carol Moseley Braun and now Barack Obama. Politics, after all, requires money – lots of it.

    Obama’s ties to Chicago’s black elite go back to his earliest days in Hyde Park, an integrated neighborhood that is home to the University of Chicago, the Chicago Theological Seminary and affluent as well as struggling residents.

    Only two years after his crushing 2000 defeat to Bobby Rush, a charismatic South Side congressman who had once led the Illinois Black Panthers, Obama asked his friend and neighbor, Martin Nesbitt, to invite a group of African-American professionals to his home for brunch.

    Nesbitt, a vice president of the Pritzker Realty Group and president of a parking management company, was a true believer in his friend’s political future. Yet even he was stunned when Obama told the group he wanted to mount a run for U.S. Senate, according to David Mandell’s account in “Obama: From Promise to Power.”

    “I literally fell off the couch,” Nesbitt said. “And we all started laughing – and he said, ‘No, really, I am gonna run for the U.S. Senate.”

    Robert Blackwell Jr., owner of an IT consulting company, told the Washington Post it would have been natural to hesitate. “But Barack has almost devout followers who are people of action, and they rallied behind him,” he said.

    “Barack has almost devout followers who are people of action, and
    they rallied behind him.”

    ~ Robert Blackwell Jr.

    Blackwell already had strong business, as well as personal connections to Obama. From early 2001 to April, 2002, according to the Los Angeles Times, he had paid Obama an $8,000-a-month retainer to give advice to his firm, Electronic Knowledge Interchange. A few months after receiving his final payment from EKI, Obama sent a letter on state Senate letterhead urging Illinois officials to provide a $50,000 tourism promotion grant to another Blackwell company, Killerspin.

    Another early participant was Valerie Jarrett, a veteran of Chicago politics and former chair of the Chicago Stock Exchange and the Chicago Transit authority. “You saw his resilience,” she told US News. “He has the intestinal fortitude to take a punch – and losing to Congressman Rush was a very hard punch.” Jarrett would become the finance chair of the 2004 campaign.

    It is a measure of Obama’s self-confidence – and the trust placed in him by members of his inner circle – that he convinced them to open their wallets again. That group provided the political seed money for his successful 2004 race that enabled him to launch a campaign which built broader financial and political support later on.

    Rogers of Ariel Capital gave $11,000. Quintin E. Primo III, who made a fortune financing commercial real-estate deals, gave $18,000. Louis A. Holland, a founding partner of Holland Capital, his wife and two of his partners, gave $35,000. Jordan, the basketball superstar (who was not at that brunch) gave $10,000.

    And those same individuals would step up again when Obama declared his candidacy for the Democratic nomination for president.

    Black Chicagoans like to point out that their city has always led the nation in black political leaders.

    The city’s first settler was a fur trader of African and French descent – Jean Baptiste Pointe du Sable who established a trading post at the mouth of the Chicago river in the 1770s and who was called “Black Chief” by the Potawatomi Indians.

    Fugitive slaves and freedmen established the city’s first black community in the 1840s. But it wasn’t until the Great Migration that began around the time of World War I, when hundreds of thousands of blacks from Mississippi, Alabama, Arkansas and Tennessee rode up on the Illinois Central Railroad that African-Americans began transforming Chicago politically, economically and culturally.

    Ironically, most of the new arrivals who were seeking escape from the Jim Crow laws were confined to a narrow “Black Belt” of overcrowded apartment buildings on the South Side. But in the 1930s and 1940s, the area – dubbed Bronzeville or the Black Metropolis by community boosters – became a cultural and economic magnet.

    The late John H. Johnson, who came from Arkansas in 1933, said that to southern blacks like him, Chicago was “what Mecca was to the Moslems and what Jerusalem was to the Jews: a place of magic and mirrors and dreams.”

    In the early 1940s, Johnson began publishing “The Negro Digest,” the prototype for “Ebony,” and would go on to become the first African-American to appear on the Forbes 400 list.

    In those same years, an African-American founded the first black insurance company in the North; Robert S. Abbott’s Chicago Defender became the nation’s most widely read black newspaper; William L. Dawson became America’s most powerful black politician and writers like Richard Wright, Gwendolyn Brooks and William Attaway rivaled those of the Harlem Renaissance.

    Still, it would take African Americans several generations to begin to leverage their political muscle in a city largely controlled by white ethnics.

    Edward McClelland wrote in Salon that Chicago became the political capital of black America precisely because the city was so segregated for so long. He quoted a saying once popular among blacks: “In the South, the white man doesn’t care how close you get, as long as you don’t get too high; in the North, he doesn’t care how high you get, as long as you don’t get too close.”

    The impact of Harold Washington’s 1983 election as mayor, by a coalition of black, Hispanic and good-government types, was seismic. In his memoir, Dreams From My Father,” Obama recounted finding the mayor’s picture on the wall of a barber shop shortly after moving to the city. “Before Harold,” he quotes him, “seemed like we’d always be second-class citizens.”

    Washington’s example fueled the political aspirations of others, including Jesse Jackson Sr. and Jr., Carol Moseley Braun, James Meeks and Bobby Rush on the national level, and a host of others at the state and local level. Washington had received help from the black businessmen of his time, among them, John Johnson and Edward G. Gardner, the founder of Soft Sheen Products.

    More than 30 years after his death, Chicago is home to more black-owned businesses than any other city, according to the Chicago Urban League. And increasingly, its most affluent leaders are contributing to a slew of civic causes, including political campaigns.

    “It’s taken a long time for black business people to accumulate enough wealth to be able to give it away,” Jarrett told Chicago Business.

    Obama’s campaign for the Democratic nomination has drawn support from almost every demographic in the city. But his original backers among black business leaders are still pumping too: Rogers, Blackwell and Frank Clark, president of Commonwealth Edison, have each raised more than $200,000, according to campaign finance records.

    Also among the rainmakers is Desiree Rogers, the president of Peoples Gas and North Shore Gas, who hosted a $1,000-a-person fundraiser in her Gold Coast home last January, and Mellody Hobson, president of Ariel Capital and a frequent financial commentator on ABC’s Good Morning America, who has raised at least $50,000, according to campaign reports.

    But by far the largest fund-raising prowess by a black entrepreneur from Chicago took place not in that city, but in Montecito, Calif., where talk-show doyenne Winfrey threw a celebrity-studded gala which netted more than $3 million. The Chicago Tribune reported that as stars like Whoopi Goldberg and Chris Rock rubbed elbows at her estate with members of the Chicago crowd, Winfrey told her guests: “When you have been called, no one can stand in the way of destiny.”

  • Obama expected to appear at DNC fund-raiser in Manhattan

    The price of admission is steep: $28,500 a person.

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    But New Yorkers willing to contribute that to the Democratic National Committee can expect to rub elbows with likely nominee Barack Obama the day after the final Democratic primaries in Montana and South Dakota – and also peek inside one of the city’s more exclusive apartment buildings.

    Next Wednesday’s event at 820 Park Avenue is being hosted by prominent Democratic fund-raisers Jane Hartley and her husband, Ralph Schlosstein, both of whom worked for Jimmy Carter’s White House. Schlosstein recently stepped down as president of Blackrock, Inc., the asset management company. Hartley had been the CEO of the G7 Group, a political and economic research firm.

    Both are active in a variety of political and philanthropic causes, and have lived for many years in the iconic building with whole-floor apartments originally erected by a Hearst magnate in the 1920s.

    The checks written by about 100 attendees will support a new entity – the Democratic White House Victory Fund – formed by the DNC several weeks ago, in agreement with Obama and New York Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, to support the party’s eventual nominee as well as the DNC, according to a press statement.

    “While this is a close primary, at the end of the day both of our candidates understand that this election is about the future of our country,” said Democratic National Committee Chairman Howard Dean. “In signing this agreement, Senator Clinton and Senator Obama are demonstrating their commitment to unifying our party and ensuring that we have the resources needed to win the White House, no matter who the nominee is.”

    After the long and protracted primary contest, the theme of the fund-raiser—slated one day after the final primary – is also unity

    But with days to go to the event, the topic remains such a delicate one that sources at the DNC declined to speak on the record about the lineup, saying only that it was their “understanding” that Obama would be the headliner.

  • Two Republican dynasties are married in Crawford, Texas

    The private wedding yesterday of First Daughter Jenna Bush and Henry Hager in Crawford, Texas, brought together two Republican families.

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    The Bush family – President Bush, his father President Bush, etc. – is extraordinarily well known, of course.

    The Hager name does not constitute a national brand, but in Virginia the family is well-connected and well-known.

    Henry Hager’s father, John H. Hager, 71, was an executive with the American Tobacco Company, as was his father, Virgil Hager.

    John Hager is also a former lieutenant governor of Virginia and a former director of homeland security in Virginia. He’s now the chair of the Virginia Republican Party.

    Beyond that, he has been an advocate and spokesman for people with disabilities since he contracted a near fatal case of polio in 1973 when he was 34.

    Hager, who uses a wheelchair and competes in wheelchair races, lost a promotion with American Tobacco when he went through months of treatment for his illness.

    “I had gone to the top and got knocked down to the bottom,” Hager told a Purdue University alumni publication.

    But after his rehabilitation, Hager returned to the company and worked his way back up the corporate ladder

    In 2004, he was appointed the assistant secretary, office of special education and rehabilitative services in the U.S. Department of Education. He served in that position until August 2007.

    Jenna Bush, 26, and Henry Hager, 30, met in 2004 when both were working to get her father re-elected. Hager proposed in August 2007 on Cadillac Mountain in Maine’s Acadia National Park.

    She recalled being awakened at 4 a.m. by Hager so they could catch the sunrise at the spot where the morning light first hits the United States.

    “I did not want to go hiking at 4 in the morning,” she told ABC News. “It was freezing. But we got up, and we hiked in the dark for an hour and a half, and then when we got towards the top, with the sunrise, he asked me.”

    A graduate of Wake Forest University, Hager will receive his MBA from the University of Virginia’s Darden School of Business later this month.

    He’s a former aide to presidential advisor Karl Rove. He also was an economic policy aide to Carlos Guiterrez, the U.S. Secretary of Commerce.

    After the honeymoon – the destination hasn’t been disclosed – Hager will begin a job with Constellation Energy, a power supplier.

    The couple will live in Baltimore, where Jenna Bush plans on returning to teaching.

    A graduate of the University of Texas, she has taught in a charter school in Washington. She also served an internship in Latin America for the United Nations Children’s Fund.

    She’s the author of Ana’s Story: A Journey of Hope. It chronicles the life of a teen single mother with AIDS in Panama. Jenna Bush and her mother, Laura, are the authors of the recently published children’s book, Read All About It!

    Jenna Bush selected her twin sister, Barbara Bush, to be maid of honor at her wedding.

  • Silicon Valley startup mentality boosted Obama’s campaign (Muckety.com)

    Think of Sen. Barack Obama of Illinois as an Internet startup that began small and then took off, suggests Joshua Green in the June issue of Atlantic magazine.

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    “He had great buzz, a compelling pitch, and no money to back it up,” writes Green of the relatively unknown candidate who entered the race early in 2007 and now seems to have it all but sewn up.

    “He wasn’t anybody’s obvious bet to succeed, not least because the market for a Democratic nominee already had its Microsoft.”

    But the Silicon Valley venture capitalists were impressed by Obama’s enthusiasm and newness, and with their help and Internet savvy, Obama eventually out-performed the fund-raising efforts of his main opponent, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York.

    The difference between the two campaigns was apparent this week, after Obama scored a convincing primary win in North Carolina and Clinton came through with a narrow victory in Indiana.

    The Obama campaign emerged with millions of dollars on hand. It raised $134 million in the first quarter of this year, $240 million since the campaign started. And it has plenty of cash on hand for the remaining primaries.

    In contrast, even though it has raised $195 million overall, the Clinton campaign is almost running on empty. Clinton loaned her campaign $6.4 million recently, adding to an earlier loan of $5 million.

    Green details how Obama’s fundraisers created a money machine that connected to an untapped army of small contributors but still reached out to monied people with monied friends.

    Their first correct move was making a sustained effort to recruit Silicon Valley entrepreneurs and venture capitalists.

    “In a colossal error in judgment, the Clinton campaign never made a serious approach (in Silicon Valley) assuming that Obama would fade and that money and cutting-edge technology couldn’t possibly factor into what was expected to be an easy race,” Green writes.

    Obama’s relative youth and inexperience was not a negative in the minds of the California venture capitalists.

    “No one in Silicon Valley sits here and thinks, ‘You need massive inside-the-Beltway experience,’” said Obama supporter John Roos, CEO of Wilson Sonsini Goodrich and Rosati, a Palo Alto firm that advises startups and venture capital firms. “Sergey and Larry were in their early 20s when they started Google.”

    From the start, the venture capitalists did for Obama what they would do for any start-up; they hit up their friends for money.

    Mark P. Gorenberg, managing director of Hummer Winblad Venture Partners and a fundraiser for John Kerry in 2004 and for Democratic Congressional candidates in 2006, early on committed to bring in $250,000 for Obama.

    Like Gorenberg, Steven J. Spinner, an entrepreneur and CEO of Sports Potential Inc., also became a member of Obama’s national finance committee and pledged to raise $250,000. “I’m a startup guy,” he told Green. “We take measured bets. … If you’ve got the right plan and the right leadership, the game can be won. That’s how I looked at Obama.”

    But Green stresses that in addition to money, the Silicon Valley connection carried with it “the technology and the ethos” that propelled Obama into the lead.

    The campaign has used key Internet tools to reach hundreds of thousands of small donors. Social networking sites have been especially important to the effort.

    My.BarackObama.com connects Obama supporters, not only raising funds, but also creating a vast community of sorts. Similar and larger groups have formed on MySpace and Facebook.com.

    “The social-networking model provided Obama with something that insurgents before him … always lacked, a means of capturing excitement and translating it into money,” Green concludes.