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Davis To Clinton: Stay Out Of Chicago Politics

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Danny Davis

U.S. Rep. Danny Davis, a candidate for mayor of Chicago, sits down with CBS 2 Chief Correspondent Jay Levine, to discuss his bid for mayor. (Credit: CBS)

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CHICAGO (AP) – Congressman Danny Davis has a message for former President Bill Clinton: Don’t take sides in the Chicago mayor’s race — or else.

Davis, a longtime friend of Clinton, warned the ex-president on Tuesday that he could jeopardize his “long and fruitful relationship” with the black community if he campaigns for former White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel instead of one of the two leading black candidates running — Davis or former Sen. Carol Moseley Braun.

The warning highlights the stakes in what is gearing up to be a contentious race for mayor in the nation’s third-largest city.

About a dozen people have made it on to the ballot to replace retiring Mayor Richard M. Daley, who is bowing out after more than 20 years in office, giving candidates their first real shot at Chicago’s top job for the first time in two decades.

In a news release, Davis, a Democrat from Chicago’s West Side, said Clinton’s relationship with the black community may be “fractured and perhaps even broken” if he comes to town to stump for Emanuel, who moved back to Chicago this fall to run for mayor and is leading in the polls.

Davis later told The Associated Press that he intended the news release to be a personal appeal to Clinton, friend to friend.

“You just wouldn’t want your friends to be campaigning against you,” Davis said with a laugh. “I’ve enjoyed a great friendship and relationship and have a tremendous amount of affinity for both the Clintons … and I’d like to keep it that way.”

“I want him to be neutral,” Davis said of the former president.

Emanuel’s campaign recently announced that Clinton was going to head a campaign event in January, but no date or time has been announced. Campaign spokesman Ben LaBolt declined to comment on Davis’ statement, and messages left with Clinton’s foundation weren’t immediately returned on Tuesday.

Blacks make up 35 percent of Chicago’s population, a key voting bloc that has the potential to doom or elevate a candidate. A recent Chicago Tribune/WGN poll showed Davis leading Emanuel among black voters, but just barely. Davis was backed by 21 percent of black voters, Emanuel was backed by 19 percent, but 30 percent were undecided. The poll showed Emanuel leading with 30 percent among all voters surveyed.

Emanuel held various positions in Clinton’s administration, including senior policy adviser, director of special projects and political director. Davis also has known Clinton for years, and political consultant Delmarie Cobb said Davis was among the first black leaders to support Clinton’s presidential campaign before he had widespread name recognition.

“I can see where Danny Davis would be very upset,” Cobb said.

Braun, the race’s other leading black candidate, joined the U.S. Senate the same year Clinton became president, and he was always supportive of her, Cobb said. Clinton appointed Braun as ambassador to New Zealand after she lost her Senate re-election bid.

Messages left for Braun’s campaign weren’t immediately returned.

Clinton — who Nobel Prize winner Toni Morrison once dubbed the country’s first black president — still enjoys a great deal of support among black voters, and Davis said part of his concern is about Clinton’s impact on the mayor’s race.

“I think he certainly has some sway and power,” Davis said. “He’s still a tremendous draw.”

But Cobb wasn’t convinced that Clinton’s popularity would translate into votes. She and other black leaders want Clinton to stay on the sidelines because “a president shouldn’t inject himself in a local mayoral race. He’s an international figure.”

“This is not something he should be a part of, especially when he has no direct ties to Chicago,” Cobb said. “He is bigger than this.”

While Davis said his message to Clinton was meant to be a friendly appeal, the tone of his statement was more direct, suggesting that the former president would lose black support if he campaigned for Emanuel.

“The African-American community has enjoyed a long and fruitful relationship with the Clintons, however it appears as though some of that relationship maybe fractured and perhaps even broken should former President Clinton come to town and participate overtly in efforts to thwart the legitimate political aspirations of Chicago’s Black community,” the statement said.

Cobb echoed that sentiment, saying that if Clinton visits Chicago for Emanuel, “it would appear that the president was supporting a white man over Hispanic and African-American and women candidates, and I’m sure that’s not . . . the perception the president wants to project.”

(© Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

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  • David Duke

    davis shut your trap and get back in your cage. R A C I S T.

  • Sunshine

    Hello….. Mr Davis you DO NOT represent the black community.Let us speak for ourselves .,,Thank you

  • Transtplant to Chicago

    Oh get real… like Danny Davis speaks for the Black community as a whole.

    The VAST majority of Black people outside of Chicago have NEVER heard of him!!!

    And I’d wager that the vast majority of Black people living in Chicago couldn’t care less about this guy or his ridiculous comment.

  • Mike

    Typicla rac ial politics by someone who can’t win on his own merits.

  • gee-reg

    This is still a free country is it not ? Just think what the news would say if a white man told a black not to come to Chicago, Every news media in and around Chicago would be calling the white man a racist. But since it is a black telling a white man not to come to Chicago it is normal. Typical liberal Chicago news.

  • streamwoodbill

    Oooohhh, me scared. Don’t be threatening the former President! Who are you to claim to represent the spirit of the community. Arrogant, eh? If the former President want to campaign for rahm then that just states that he values his candidacy and that he has merit. The community will vote for whomever they want to and don’t need you, Mr. Davis to boss anybody around. You have to win first!. Concentrate on garnering the votes from your crook pall, Carol Braun. Now we have Obama and CLinton supporting Rahm. I say that is a mark of a potential winner.

  • jacob

    if he wanted the message to be personal and friend to friend, he wouldn’t have put it in a news release.

  • Barack

    Davis is a racist piece of $hit. And Braun and Meeks are even a bigger joke. After the mayor election, those three should have a black election with the 35% of the population and crown themselves the biggest racist black person of Chicago. We would have to throw Jesse Jackson into that race as well……..it only a matter of time until we hear his thoughts.

  • Joe Public

    He is afraid that Clinton endorsing Emmanuel will take away from what he believes is his entitlement to the minority voters. I think his racist and entitlement attitude are condescending to minority voters who want the best candidate for the job.

  • Average Guy

    Sounds like wrangling from an old man, who listens?

  • Average Guy

    A racist believes that racial differences fabricate an inherent superiority of their race. Racial discrimination typically points out quantitative characteristic differences between different groups of people, although anyone may be discriminated against on an ethnic or cultural basis. African-American cannot be racist they are the minority in America. I remember how Richard J. Daley treated the African-American community from the 1950’s to his death as Mayor. African-American lived in segregated, under-serviced communities. The schools were poorly kept, African-American men were being abused by the police and there was no-place for their families to live. African-Americans were confined to a few areas of the city that were commonly referred to as slums. The question is when? When are we, American’s going to stop hurting ourselves. How dare you call African-Americans racist, you are an American also. I would not call Danny Davis a good candidate for the Mayor of Chicago and, I would not call him a racist.

    • LOTD

      Question for you – when are the afro-americans going to stop hurting themselves??? Sounds to me that you’re blaming the white man for their plight. Just how well have they done with ALL the hand outs they’ve been given?? Obama has done amazing things for race relations in this country hasn’t he??? You can give them the world and they still wouldn’t be happy!!! PERIOD! They continue to prey on their own, bilk the system, and destroy whatever is bestowed upon them.

  • Philip J. Wayne

    DANNY DAVIS NEEDS TO KEEP HIS MOUTH CLOSED…..BILL CLINTON IS A FORMER EMPLOYER OF RAHM EMMANUEL AND HE RECOMMENDS HIS FORMER EMPLOYER FOR MAYOR….THERE IS NOTHING WRONG WITH THIS…MR. DAVIS….WE DON’T WANT YOU, CAROLE MOSTLY FRAUD OR CHICO MARX AS OUR NEXT MAYOR….WE WANT A SMART PERSON…WHICH EMMANUEL IS.

  • Philip J. Wayne

    HAVE YOU WATCHED THE NEWS THE LAST COUPLE YEARS… OUR TAX DOLLARS ARE GOING DOWN THE DRAIN BECAUSE OF BLACK ON BLACK CRIME….DO ALL OF US A FAVOR AND POINT TO THE CAUSE OF THE CRIME AS YOURSELVES….NO INTEGRITY….NO SENSE OF RIGHT AND WRONG…NO CONSCIENCE…….NO MORALE STANDARDS……THE REST OF CHICAGO AND THE MAYORS PAST AND PRESENT ARE NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR YOUR FAILURE TO SERVE GOD AND COUNTRY.

    • LOTD

      AMEN!!!

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