Democratic consultant Delmarie Cobb is a veteran--in 1996 she was the press secretary for the Democratic National Convention, and over the years she's managed campaigns and dispensed advice to a long list of local and national politicians, including Jesse Jackson, former Illinois gubernatorial candidates Roland Burris and Dawn Clark Netsch, and congressmen Jesse Jackson Jr. and Bobby Rush.
Over the last few months Cobb has been in an interesting and sometimes frustrating place. As an African-American from Barack Obama's hometown who supports Hillary Clinton, Cobb has been pulled into the national conversation on race, gender, and bare-knuckles campaigning. This afternoon she shared a few of her thoughts in an interview.
You’ve done a lot of work with local politicians and religious leaders. How representative of local black churches is Trinity? Is it really way outside the mainstream, as it’s been portrayed?
I don’t think it is. And Jeremiah Wright is very well respected and very learned. He can draw on foreign policy and make it relevant for today. What black preachers do is try to take social commentary and match it to biblical teachings.
Being a Hillary Clinton supporter, I don’t know why you have to tear down one person to be in favor of someone else. That’s the overall problem I have with this entire campaign. It’s not just been Jeremiah Wright—it’s with so many of Obama’s supporters. There’s the need to attack supporters of everyone else, and to make them into racists. You can’t sit up there and have a speech about having dialogue on race, and then when someone else brings up something about black and white, they’re a racist.
But Hillary Clinton also brought up Jeremiah Wright—and with him, it seems—race.
First of all, she didn’t say anything for awhile. Then she finally said something—in response to a question, she said, “He wouldn’t be my pastor.” What the Obama campaign has done is this: if I have a black candidate and I’m trying to get to the White House, and my biggest obstacle to getting to the White House is a white candidate with a good relationship with black voters, then I need to shut her down. And in effect the Obama campaign has shut the Clintons down. I think it’s horrible what’s been done in this campaign, quite frankly. There are so few white people who will stick their necks out for black people, and President Clinton stuck his neck out.
But the Clintons also have a reputation for doing anything they can to win.
Because that’s the way the media paints them. They’ve tried to paint them from the very beginning that they’re sneaky, conniving, will do anything to win. Coming from Chicago where politics is rough- and-tumble, I had two reporters call me about the 3 AM phone call ad. And they were trying to argue me down, saying the 3 AM commercial is negative. I said, “Well, that’s what you do in a political contest—she’s supposed to say, ‘I’m the best.’ What’s she supposed to do, say he’s the best?”
I hear a lot of people saying, “Hillary’s a bitch.” It seems really difficult for a female candidate to be aggressive and strong without getting that kind of reaction.
You’re right. The overall thinking is that it’s acceptable to call Hillary a bitch, but we wouldn’t dare use a racial slur about [Obama]. Even as a female consultant, I have male clients who are patronizing to me sometimes. When I did Dawn Clark Netsch’s campaign, I had an argument with [other consultants] over the motto they came up with: “Not just another pretty face.” And I was insulted.
It’s always difficult for a woman the higher up you go. And this is the ultimate. That’s the sad part—we’ve allowed Barack to run just as a candidate, and not a black candidate. Hillary has been a woman candidate the whole time, and she’s had to try to prove she’s not a bitch.
It seems to me that the church controversy is about Obama’s critics reminding voters he’s black.
Yes, that is what the conservatives are going to try to do. Hillary has actually pulled her punches; the Republicans won’t. If anyone thinks the party of Willie Horton and swift boats isn’t going to do this, they’re nuts. The Republicans have already shown us they don’t need black people to win.
How’d you think Obama handled the Wright flap? Would you have advised any differently?
No, he did what he needed to do [by giving the speech on race]. I always tell my candidates that the way to do it is Crisis Management 101—attack it, nip it in the bud. I only wish President Clinton had done the same thing when they tried to paint him as a racist—give a speech and say, “Look at what I’ve done for people.”
What [the media has] decided is that [Obama] is a new black person who doesn’t make race an issue. This is someone we can accept. But this is a fight in the black community—it’s between the black people who’ve been fighting their whole lives for civil rights and the people who’ve been the beneficiaries of that fight. When Barack said Jeremiah Wright was part of the old guard, that’s what he meant. But that diminishes and minimizes those people who did all the fighting, because the fighting hasn’t stopped. I mean, the news yesterday was about all of our high school dropouts. That’s not progress.




I should add an ad that was done against Harold Ford in Tennessee when he ran for senate in 2006. A white woman being suggestive was used against him and it worked. We don't have a second black man in the US Senate right now.
http://larrysinclair0926.wordpress.com/2008/04/01/...
Larry Sinclair says he received several phone calls and text messages from Donald Young shortly before he was murdered. He called Larry on behalf of Barack Obama and Rev. Wright. I think the family of Donald Young would like to know this new development.
She should concentrate on paying her outstanding debts.....
"What's Your Problem?
March 30, 2008
When Pat Dowell lost her bid for 3rd Ward alderman in 2003, Dan Donahue figured his chances of getting paid were slim.
Candidates, he said, often run large debts. When they lose, some simply don't pay.
So Donahue gave up his quest for the $5,771.03 he said Dowell owed him for producing a 14,000-piece direct-mail advertisement.
"It's usually once a [political] cycle that you get stiffed," Donahue said. "I thought I was cooked. If she never ran again, she'd never pay me."
But Dowell's political career was not over—and neither was Donahue's pursuit of the money. In 2007, Dowell ran again for 3rd Ward alderman, this time defeating incumbent Dorothy Tillman.
Dowells' campaign was flush with money. According to campaign disclosure forms, it raised $259,330 last year. Donahue reasoned there was more than enough in the coffers to pay him.
Because he had received the direct-mail job through a political consulting firm, The Publicity Works, he called there first. The owner, Delmarie Cobb, said Dowell hadn't paid her either, so she had no money to pay Donahue.
Donahue then called Dowell's aldermanic office, and said he was asked to fax over an invoice. He said he faxed Dowell's office twice, but did not get paid.
Before chalking up the loss as a cost of doing business, Donahue wrote What's Your Problem? for help.
"I don't want to cause the lady any embarrassment," Donahue said of Dowell. "But she should pay her bills."
The Problem Solver called Dowell's office and Cobb at Publicity Works. Both agreed Donahue hasn't been paid. They could not agree, however, on who should pay him.
Cobb said her office did $26,741.38 worth of work for Dowell's campaign in 2003, and subcontracted for an additional $10,645.26 of work, including Donahue's direct-mail piece.
After Dowell lost in 2003, Cobb said, none of those bills were paid.
When Dowell announced she was running again in 2006, Cobb approached her and asked for the outstanding debts to be paid, Cobb said.
Cobb said Dowell paid her the $26,741.38, but did not pay the other $10,645.26, which included Donahue's money. Cobb said Dowell was told at the time she still owed Donahue and other subcontractors, and that it was Dowell's responsibility to pay them.
Dowell's office gives a different version of events. The Problem Solver briefly spoke to Dowell, who then had spokesman Kevin Lampe call back.
Lampe said the money paid to Publicity Works in 2006 was a settlement, in which both sides agreed Dowell would pay the $26,741.38 but not the money owed the subcontractors. Lampe said it was Cobb's responsibility to pay Donahue and other subcontractors from the settlement amount.
"There was a negotiation, and there was a new price," Lampe said. "We paid that, and out of that [Cobb] is responsible for paying her own vendors."
Because the settlement agreement was oral, neither side could produce documents to prove their version. Cobb said Dowell knows she still owes Donahue and the other subcontractors their money.
"She's lying, and I don't have a problem saying she's lying," Cobb said of Dowell and her campaign. Complicating matters further is the fact that Donahue did not keep receipts for his expenditures on the direct-mail piece. He also does not have a signed contract for the work, with either Publicity Works or the Dowell campaign.
"If he can produce a contract between us, let's talk about that," Lampe said. "But he can't produce a contract. Can he produce a receipt from any of the expenses he claims to incur? He can't."
Still, Lampe acknowledged Donahue had produced the direct-mail piece, and he hadn't been paid. So on Wednesday, Lampe called Donahue and offered him $2,000 to settle the case.
Donahue declined.
"You either owe it to me or you don't," he said. "If you're claiming you don't owe me anything, don't pay me a dime."
Donahue said he made a mistake by not getting a written contract or keeping his receipts. Still, he believes Dowell is dodging her responsibility.
"They're going to hide behind semantics, but that's the business we're in," Donahue said.
Wasn't Sen. Obama an Illinois Senator representing some of the worst school districts in Illinois?
How did he bring people together to solve education issues? Or did he just tow the line of the teachers unions?
How about reminding people that Sen. Obama has not represented much of Illinois, especially his own wards throughout most of his political career rather than imagining that Republicans are somehow racist because quite a few Democrats don't like bizarre speech coming from Rev. Wright.
JBP
Too bad you forgot to ask her about Ferraro's knuckleheaded comments, Mick.
Wow. I wonder why.. isn't immigration "reeeeally" about race?
Isn't affirmative action racist?
Oh, that's right it's only racist if it is "people without color" (whites) if they say something..
Obama only addressed white racism.. why not black racism. After all he's had the spiritual advise of a black racist for 20 years.. oh there I go again.. being racist.
Go to www.fatheromalley.com
plenty of videos..
May God Bless,
Father O'Malley
it ain't nice to speak ill o the dead?
Just cause I'm dead now don't mean I can't sue you...and bill you for hours.
http://imby.wordpress.com/2007/12/23/death-of-ron-...