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Breaking barriers.


Cooking with Grease

Stirring the Pots in American Politics

Donna Brazile Donna Brazile (born December 15, 1959) is an American author, educator, and political activist and strategist affiliated with the Democratic Party. She was the first African-American to direct a major presidential campaign.  

Simon & Schuster Simon & Schuster

U.S. publishing company. It was founded in 1924 by Richard L. Simon (1899–1960) and M. Lincoln Schuster (1897–1970), whose initial project, the original crossword-puzzle book, was a best-seller.
, $23, 322 pp.

Some people grow up wanting to be firemen. Some want to be doctors, or astronauts, or lawyers, or journalists, or even president of the United States The head of the Executive Branch, one of the three branches of the federal government.

The U.S. Constitution sets relatively strict requirements about who may serve as president and for how long.
. Donna Brazile is the only person I've ever heard of who grew up wanting to be the campaign manager for a presidential candidate.

Not only did she want it; she did it. And not only did she do it, but in the minds and hearts of many, she did it victoriously. There is no disputing that Brazile's Democratic ticket of Al Gore Noun 1. Al Gore - Vice President of the United States under Bill Clinton (born in 1948)
Albert Gore Jr., Gore
 and Joe Lieberman Joseph Isadore "Joe" Lieberman (born February 24, 1942) is an American politician from Connecticut. Lieberman was first elected to the United States Senate in 1988, and was elected to his fourth term on November 7, 2006. In the 2000 U.S.  won the popular vote in 2000. It lost the Electoral College electoral college, in U.S. government, the body of electors that chooses the president and vice president. The Constitution, in Article 2, Section 1, provides: "Each State shall appoint, in such Manner as the Legislature thereof may direct, a Number of Electors,  vote--and thus the presidency--by virtue of a 5-4 vote of the U.S. Supreme Court, a decision that gave Florida's bent, folded, spindled, and mutilated mu·ti·late  
tr.v. mu·ti·lat·ed, mu·ti·lat·ing, mu·ti·lates
1. To deprive of a limb or an essential part; cripple.

2. To disfigure by damaging irreparably: mutilate a statue.
 election to George W. Bush and Dick Cheney. A great many Americans have never made peace with that result. They still declare that George W. Bush "isn't my president" and vow they'll run him out of the White House in November.

Bitter though the defeat was, Brazile has chosen not to get mad, but to get even. She persuaded the Democratic National Committee to create--and she now directs--a Voting Rights Voting rights

The right to vote on matters that are put to a vote of security holders. For example the right to vote for directors.


voting rights

The type of voting and the amount of control held by the owners of a class of stock.
 Institute, whose purpose is to educate poor and minority voters--the ones who were intimidated out of their franchise in Florida in 2000--to know and assert their rights.

"I never blamed George W. Bush for the outcome of the election in Florida," Brazile writes. "I did not spend one day hating him or anyone around him. They got out their vote, so did we. The problem is their voters understood their rights. In 2000 we did not teach our voters their rights. We have since then and will never forget the bitter and tragic lessons of Florida."

Cooking with Grease is about the lessons of Brazile's own quite remarkable life, which began on December 15, 1959, in Charity Hospital in New Orleans New Orleans (ôr`lēənz –lənz, ôrlēnz`), city (2006 pop. 187,525), coextensive with Orleans parish, SE La., between the Mississippi River and Lake Pontchartrain, 107 mi (172 km) by water from the river mouth; founded . She was the third of an eventual nine children in the black Catholic family of Lionel and Jean Brazile of Kenner, Louisiana Kenner is a suburb of New Orleans that has a population of 70,517 (census 2000). The city is part of Jefferson Parish, Louisiana. History
In 1855, Kenner was founded by Minor Kenner on land that consisted of three plantation properties that had been purchased by the
, a suburb of New Orleans. Lionel was a Korean War Korean War, conflict between Communist and non-Communist forces in Korea from June 25, 1950, to July 27, 1953. At the end of World War II, Korea was divided at the 38th parallel into Soviet (North Korean) and U.S. (South Korean) zones of occupation.  veteran who made his living as a construction worker until an accident left him unable to do it any longer. He then became a short-order cook, often working one or two other jobs. Jean, Brazile's mother, was a domestic worker for a wealthy white family in New Orleans. Wealth was never a concern for the Braziles; making ends meet often was.

"Poverty," Brazile writes, "affected nearly every part of my childhood, even my mother's attitudes about playtime. As soon as she came home from work, she forced all of us inside the house.... She made it clear that we could not 'afford to get sick.'" The family had no extra money for doctor bills.

When sickness did strike, Donna and her siblings were treated with one of their grandmother's home remedies. "Grandma"--Lionel's mother--lived with the family and became Donna's best friend and counselor. She taught her all those life lessons that come with age and that wise old heads used to impart to young ones in the course of daily living--before we all became separate atoms spinning in our own orbits, distant from one another.

One of the most important of Grandma's lessons to the young Donna was to be comfortable and at peace in her own dark skin. Donna was darker than all but one of her siblings, and her other grandmother--"Jean's mama"--always made much ado about this. But Grandma "told me it was natural to be dark and reminded me that many of her thirteen children, including my father, were dark. I chose to listen to Grandma instead of Jean's mama."

Donna and the other Brazile children attended public schools in Kenner, which meant, in the early years of her education anyway, attending segregated schools. In 1971, however, as Donna was entering seventh grade, the "push for equality moved into the Jefferson Parish Public Schools Jefferson Parish Public Schools is a school district based in unincorporated Marrero in Jefferson Parish, Louisiana. The district operates all public schools in Jefferson Parish. Schools
K-12 schools
  • Grand Isle School http://www.jppss.k12.la.
."

Brazile's judgment about busing is interesting now, in view of the discussions going on among black civil-rights movement veterans and others in this fiftieth anniversary year of the Supreme Court's Brown v. Board of Education Brown v. Board of Education (of Topeka)

(1954) U.S. Supreme Court case in which the court ruled unanimously that racial segregation in public schools violated the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
 decision. "Busing," she writes, "was one of the worst public-policy decisions ever made. We [black children] were bused past schools within walking distance of our homes, miles away into neighborhoods where we weren't welcomed, weren't liked, and often were inaccessible by public transportation." Elsewhere, she writes, "There was a lot of confusion about busing in the black community of Kenner, and it wasn't welcomed as a remedy for generations of segregation in the separate-and-unequal school systems. We loved our local schools. They were located in our neighborhoods. The teachers knew our parents and they lived in the community."

There have been times in the last fifty years when Brazile would have been drummed out of the ranks of polite black society for saying such things. Indeed, some local officials of the NAACP NAACP
 in full National Association for the Advancement of Colored People

Oldest and largest U.S. civil rights organization. It was founded in 1909 to secure political, educational, social, and economic equality for African Americans; W.E.B. Du Bois and Ida B.
 were driven out of the organization for daring to suggest that blacks were not so psychologically needy as the Brown decision depicted them and might be giving up too much to achieve integration. The fact is that many black children were derailed educationally by being uprooted from familiar surroundings and thrust into hostile ones. Not Brazile. After a period during which she lost her straight As, she found her footing and began to enjoy the success for which she seemed destined des·tine  
tr.v. des·tined, des·tin·ing, des·tines
1. To determine beforehand; preordain: a foolish scheme destined to fail; a film destined to become a classic.

2.
 from the beginning.

She graduated from Grace King High School, an all-girls public school where she thrived academically and socially, becoming close for the first time with one of her older sisters and making her first close white friend, who remains a friend to this day.

Brazile had become immersed in politics even while in grade school, helping a black community activist campaign for improved recreation facilities for black children in Kenner. Once initiated into the art of political organizing, she was hooked. She carried that enthusiasm with her to Lousiana State University, where she broke down racial barriers social and political and made friendships that have stood her in good stead in politics ever since.

After college, Brazile headed straight for Washington, D.C., where, she was convinced, the action was. The latter half of Cooking with Grease recounts her progress up the ladder of Democratic political organizing--first in the 1984 Jesse Jackson Noun 1. Jesse Jackson - United States civil rights leader who led a national campaign against racial discrimination and ran for presidential nomination (born in 1941)
Jesse Louis Jackson, Jackson
 presidential campaign and culminating in the Gore-Lieberman race of 2000.

What is most remarkable about Brazile, at least as she depicts herself, is the fundamental decency that she brings to what looks to have become a cutthroat enterprise. It is that decency that allows her to say she harbors no ill will toward George W. Bush.

Frankly, and with all due respect to Brazile, the difference between her campaign's voters and those of the Bush campaign was not that his knew their rights and hers didn't. The difference was that his campaign, through his brother the governor and the Republican Party power structure in Florida, controlled the system, including access to the polls. No amount of knowledge of one's voting rights will trump such control and the will to use it.

Come voting time this November, I hope that if Donna Brazile is serious about winning, she'll have not just an educated corps of voters, but a batch of election lawyers who are mean as junkyard dogs.

Don Wycliff, a frequent Commonweal com·mon·weal  
n.
1. The public good or welfare.

2. Archaic A commonwealth or republic.

Noun 1.
 contributor, is public editor of the Chicago Tribune Chicago Tribune

Daily newspaper published in Chicago. The Tribune is one of the leading U.S. newspapers and long has been the dominant voice of the Midwest. Founded in 1847, it was bought in 1855 by six partners, including Joseph Medill (1823–99), who made the paper
.
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Title Annotation:Books
Author:Wycliff, Don
Publication:Commonweal
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Aug 13, 2004
Words:1258
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