Yvette Clarke
De Blasio 'Very Emotional' Over Endorsements From Clarke, Velazquez
Yesterday afternoon at City Hall, Congresswomen Yvette Clarke and Nydia Velazquez announced jointly that they are endorsing Bill de Blasio for Brooklyn borough president.
These early endorsements follow announcements of support for de Blasio from UNITE-HERE and The NY Hotel Trades Council. Combined with the campaign's announcement yesterday of having raised "nearly $1 million dollars" ("$177,454 this filing period and $621,891 this cycle"), de Blasio is looking a bit like a foregone thing. (It's unclear at this point exactly who else is running.
The endorsements were announced on the City Hall steps, with about 25 or so supporters standing behind the congresswomen and de Blasio, squinting into the sun and holding "For Brooklyn '09'" signs. read more »
At Clarke Forum, Simcha Felder Need Not Apply
The Democratic club home to Representative Yvette Clarke and her mother, Una Clarke, a former City Council member, will hear presentations tonight from State Senator Kevin Parker and one of the Democrats trying to unseat him, City Councilman Kendall Stewart.
Una Clarke said the presentations will be made to the executive committee of the club and are not open to the press. She also said the third Democrat in the race, City Councilman Simcha Felder, has not asked to speak to the club. Felder announced his candidacy for the seat only a few weeks ago, and Clarke says, "There is still a lot of unknown about him in the community.”
When asked which candidate she was leaning towards, Clarke replied, “I am not leaning -- I am standing straight until I get a level playing field and figure out what exactly is happening.”
Clarke said she thinks this primary shares some similarities with the 2006 Democratic primary in Brooklyn's 11th Congressional district-- the contest won by her daughter -- when there was considerable speculation that the district’s African-American voters would be divided among the three black candidates, giving the only white candidate a victory. Clarke thinks Felder poses a threat if he “gets a solid vote in his community, and the other votes are split in many ways.”
Paterson to Obama: I'll Campaign With You
David Paterson spoke with Barack Obama around 2 p.m., he told reporters in Midtown during the New York State Democratic Party’s meeting.
“He asked me how the first two and a half months were going," Paterson said. "And I told him it might have even been more difficult than your campaign.” read more »
Unity, New York Style, at a Pro-Obama Rally
Here's a brief moment of disunity at a unity rally in support of Barack Obama on the steps of City Hall this afternoon.
Representative Ed Towns was answering a question about the fact that Christine Quinn and other City Council members weren't there, and then, well, State Senator Bill Perkins and Representative Yvette Clarke kind of got in each other's way.
New York Congress Members Endorse Obama; Rangel To Attend Announcement
Representatives Greg Meeks, Yvette Clarke and Ed Towns put out a joint statement just now endorsing Barack Obama for the Democratic nomination.
They are planning a 1 p.m. press conference at City Hall on Friday. There's another press conference happening in D.C. at 1 p.m. today.
All of them they previously endorsed home-state Senator Hillary Clinton, although Obama won their districts on the February 5 primary.
According to an aide for Meeks, Charlie Rangel, Bill Thompson, Helen Marshall, Malcolm Smith and Adolfo Carrion, Jr. will also be there.
Here’s the statement: read more »
Clarke Doesn't Expect 'Unintended Consequences' From Supporting Clinton
Unlike David Paterson, Representative Yvette Clarke of Brooklyn is staying on message for the Clinton campaign, and just told me she thinks it’s a little early to write off Hillary Clinton’s presidential bid. read more »
New York's 2008 Congressional Earmarks
Citizens Against Government Waste published its annual list of congressional earmarks (they actually call it the Congressional Pig Book list).
Of course, what one person calls wasteful spending, another person calls bringing home the bacon, and now that Democrats are in the majority, New York was supposed to be getting more federal money.
The state made out with a good portion, particularly in the Catskills, where Maurice Hinchey brought in $43.7 million.
Here is a list of what some members from New York, and a few from elsewhere, brought their districts, according to the list. (It's in numbers of millions): read more »
Crowd Cheers As Paterson Is Sworn In
David Paterson was just sworn in as governor here in the Assembly chambers on the third floor of the Capitol building in Albany, to cheers of "David! David!"
Paterson acknowledged distinguished guests, including his "good friend" Joe Bruno.
Rangel on the Role of Superdelegates
Charlie Rangel, a major supporter of Hillary Clinton, is joining Chuck Schumer and a growing number of superdelegates who think the Democratic nominee should reflect the popular vote, not the will of the superdelegates.
Yvette Clarke Raises Money
A reader sent along this invitation to a fund-raising event for freshman Congresswoman Yvette Clarke, taking place later this month.
As far as I know, no one has publicly said they will run against her. Has anyone has any rumor of a challenge?
In Pro-Obama Brooklyn, Clinton Supporter Predicts Victory
Barack Obama has relatively strong support from local elected officials in and around the 11th congressional district in Brooklyn, the heart of his support in New York City.
But the district's newly-elected Congresswoman Yvette Clarke supports Hillary Clinton, read more »
Hillary's Special Appearance Before the Congressional Black Caucus
Rebecca Sinderbrand sends in this dispatch from Washington:
Hillary Clinton received a polite reception at the Congressional Black Caucus's Annual Legislative Conference – with most members in attendance applauding and joining in the obligatory standing ovation – but she didn't quite capture the crowd; a few grim-faced members of the audience pointedly refused to rise or cheer.
The senator has been a regular attendee at the conference for years, but her appearance at today's forum – the only stand-alone invite offered to any of the 2008 candidates – has been a source of controversy among many of the politicians and activists who've gathered here in Washington. That's because the CBC's own regulations technically limit participation in these kinds of policy discussions to the 43 current members of the caucus.
The Clinton invite broke with that practice, and critics have taken aim at what they view as the politicization of the caucus, which has traditionally taken a nonpartisan approach during the campaign season. (Clinton actually has a slight edge over Barack Obama in support from current CBC members, although the overwhelming majority are officially undecided.)
More after the jump. read more »
Clarke Gets Over Wolfson, Endorses Hillary
Yvette Clarke is about to endorse Hillary Clinton for president today, according to a campaign aide, signaling that the last New York Democratic congress member has put aside what she admitted was a grudge against a Clinton adviser.
Howard Wolfson, a close aide to Hillary Clinton, served as an adviser to one of the candidates Clarke faced in a contentious congressional primary last year. After winning, Clarke balked at endorsing Clinton for president.
In a television interview, Clarke told NBC that, “I think that that needs to be addressed in order for the community to feel like that something like that would not occur again.”
Yvette's Legislative Agenda TK
In January, New York sent four freshmen to congress. So far, they have authored a total of 23 bills.
Nine came from Michael Arcuri upstate. Another nine came from John Hall in the Hudson Valley. And the last five came from Kirsten Gillibrand from Glens Falls.
Yvette Clarke of Brooklyn, so far, has not authored any. (After a reader pointed this out to me, I checked it on Library of Congress web site.) I emailed Clarke's office to ask if that was accurate. A spokesperson from Clarke's office, Vanessa Milara, emailed to say, “Yes that site is accurate. She has not introduced legislation, however she has co-sponsored a variety of legislation."
Eugene2007.com, With Yvette Clarke, Sanford Rubenstein, Jean-Claude Van Damme
I missed this at first, but shortly after the culmination of Mathieu Eugene's tortuous ascent to the City Council, he went up with a web site to promote a re-election campaign that will represent his third run for the same office in the space of a year.
The picture here of Eugene with Rep. Yvette Clarke and her mother, Una, is from Eugene2007.com, which was created on May 3rd. That's just a few days after, as his biography puts it, he "made history when he won two special elections to become the first Haitian-born elected official in the state of New York." read more »
Source: Hillary Meets with Holdout Clarke
A knowledgeable source tells me Hillary Clinton met yesterday with the only Democratic Congress member from New York who hasn’t endorsed her yet: Yvette Clarke.
The two had a “heart to heart,” according to my source. The meeting comes shortly after Clinton’s closet Democratic challenger, Barack Obama, picked up the endorsement of state Senator Bill Perkins of Harlem, and as other local elected officials are thinking of endorsing him also.
Clarke’s reason for holding out on Clinton, as far as anyone knows, are more parochial than ideological. In an interview a few weeks ago with NBC, Clarke confirmed that part of the reason she didn’t want to endorse Clinton was because Clinton adviser Howard Wolfson worked against Clarke in her four-way Democratic primary for Congress.
I'm waiting for calls back from the offices of Clarke and Clinton.
Clarke Holds a Wolfson Grudge
She hasn't endorsed yet, in part, because Hillary spokesman and advisor Howard Wolfson worked on the Congressional campaign of David Yassky, who was one of Clarke's opponents in last year's four-way primary.
Here is NBC's transcript of Clarke's interview this morning with John Noel:
JOHN NOEL: The fact that her political consultant worked for your opponent in the congressional race, does that play into this at all? YVETTE CLARKE: Of course that raises a big flag, you know, puts up an antenna because again that was an issue that the community was very ill at ease with. And we've had some conversations about it to be quite honest with you. And I think that that needs to be addressed in order for the community to feel like that something like that would not occur again.
UPDATE: Wolfson responds:
"My work for David Yassky was based on a decade of friendship with him. I have enormous respect for Congresswoman Clarke and look forward to supporting her re-election."
-- Azi PaybarahThe Clarke Interview
In case you somehow forgot, she who won a brutal four-way Democratic primary last year, and who more recently made headlines as the only New York Democratic congress member to not endorse Hillary Clinton.
The interview will be streamed live around 10:30 a.m. over here.
-- Azi PaybarahEugene vs. Sharpe, Again
The second-place finisher, Jennifer James, is expected to make a statement about the race later today.
There are grumblings that other candidates from that first race may jump into this special, special election.
Candidates have until March 21 to file petitions in order to appear on the ballot.
-- Azi PaybarahWeiner, Always With the Campaigning
Lobbyist, Fund-raiser, Mother
Here's an email from former Council member Una Clarke, now a registered lobbyist, about an April 1st event to raise money for a bipartisan non-profit group that supports women in government.
Women Celebrating Women with Congresswoman Yvette D. Clarke Sunday, April 1st, 2007 Greetings My Dear Friend and Supporter!
We have been extremely busy of late, and have come to a concensus to postpone this great annual celebration to April 1, when we will have a great Brunch/Dinner at the usual venue - The Ramada Plaza at JFK Airport.
Reserve your tickets and your journal advertisements We have this year an extraordinary line-up of honorees, as we continue the tradition of honoring those women who have been drivers in the community. Time is still of the essence, and you need to reserve as soon as possible for your tables, as well as your journal ads. Please send an email to kittyclarke with "WCW RSVP" or "journal ad" in the subjecty line.
Reminder of the guest costs read more »
* General Admission is $100. * Gold Contributor: $150 * Diamond Supporter: $250
Missing Member
Here's a view of the City Council, where Speaker Christine Quinn is discussing a package of legislation aimed at improving safety at night clubs.
Note the empty desk behind her. That's where Yvette Clarke used to sit and, presumably, where Mathieu Eugene would have been sitting if he had been sworn in. He and Vinny Ignizio, who also won a Council Seat during the February 20 special election, have yet to take the oath of office.
For whatever reason, the results of their elections still haven't been certified by the city's Board of Elections.
-- Azi PaybarahResidency Matters, Except When It Doesn't
[UPDATE: Eugene's campaign manager called to say that neither newly elected Council member was sworn in today because the outcomes were not certified by the city's Board of Elections.]
A reader reminds of a certain irony in the fact that Eugene's strongest supporter in this race, former Council member and current Representative Yvette Clarke, lambasted her opponent last year for moving three blocks into the district a year before the race started.
Eugene's campaign manager, Joe Placide, told me yesterday that his candidate is still looking signed a lease February 1 for an apartment.
Jennifer James and the News
Here's what the News said:
"A local political activist, lifelong Flatbush resident and daughter of Caribbean immigrants, she has broad support in a diverse district. Also welcome is a promise to donate any "lulu" pay beyond her salary to charity."
Last year, the News endorsed Yvette Clarke for Congress, while the New York Times backed David Yassky.
In the Council race this year, the Times is backing Jesse Hamilton, an attorney and Democratic district leader. Clarke is backing another candidate, Mathieu Eugene.
-- Azi PaybarahAsk the Council Candidates
It'll air tonight between 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. on Time Warner channel 56, and on CableVision channel 69 in Brooklyn.
The candidates in the race are Mathieu Eugene, Jesse Hamilton, Wellington Sharpe, Jennifer James, Moe Razvi, Harry Schiffman, Zenobia McNally, Joel Toney, Karlene Gordon, and Leithland Tulloch.
What should we ask them?
-- Azi PaybarahYvette on Iraq
On the campaign trail, Clarke's message about the war was this:
"Imagine a Congress that was half female, allowing our children to be sent to war, in harm's way without an extremely good reason."
-- Azi PaybarahTimes for Hamilton
The Times was careful to explain that ethnic politics had nothing to do with their decision, writing:
"While we like anything that might help increase voter participation -- ethnic and cultural pride included -- there are more important considerations here than the origins of the candidates."
It seemed more than a little reminiscent of the careful explanation of their endorsement of David Yassky in the race-influenced Congressional primary won by Clarke last year. ("There are many, many intelligent, hard-working and high-achieving young African-Americans in central Brooklyn who once considered careers in politics and then moved on when the party machine proved unenthusiastic or downright antagonistic. That failure of leadership is reflected in the current race. The residents of the 11th District deserve the best representation possible.")
Of course, it was the Daily News -- a highly influential paper in this part of Brooklyn -- which, coincidentally or not, endorsed the eventual winner in that Congressional race. So it will be interesting to see if they come up with something here that will trump Hamilton's Times coup.
-- Azi PaybarahJames and Clarke
Here's a mailer for Jennifer James, one of the candidates running in the upcoming special election for Yvette Clarke's council seat in Brooklyn.
James, who used to serve as Clarke's finance director, makes prominent mention of her former boss's name, though without implying any endorsement. (Both Yvette and her mother -- former Council member Una Clarke -- are supporting another candidate in the race.)
-- Azi PaybarahElection Time in Brooklyn
Here are a couple of visible reminders (from this morning) of the upcoming special election for the Yvette Clarke council seat.
While this race has gotten relatively little attention -- compared with, say, the $5 million special Senate election in Nassau this week -- it has, at least, prompted a number of influential figures within the party to take a rooting interest.
Clarke, who gave up the seat when she was elected to congress, is backing Dr. Mathieu Eugene; Councilman Lew Fidler, Rock Hackshaw and other notable Brooklyn operatives are backing Wellington Sharpe; the formidable Kevin Wardally, of Bill Lynch Associates, has contributed money to Jennifer James.
Eleven more days.
-- Azi PaybarahLambda Endorses McNally for Clarke Seat
To qualify for the club's endorsement, candidates were asked to fill out a questionnaire explaining their stances on LGBT issues and attend last night's meeting in Brooklyn. The fact that not all of them did was a factor in their final decision, the source said.
-- Azi PaybarahProfiling a Candidate
From a piece on Clarke in The Hill:
Clarke isn't your typical half-lost, conservatively dressed freshman. More runway than House floor, upon arriving at lunch she unwraps a thick, multicolored scarf and removes a long, pretty beige overcoat to reveal an animal-print Gianni Versace suit -- a mid-thigh-length skirt accompanied by a short blazer. A beige fur cap covers a sleek new hairdo. "Now that my hair's so short I can feel the breeze," she says, explaining that she recently removed her hair weave. She says people in Congress have been doing double-takes at her fur cap. She doesn't care. She stands tall in black wedged heels.
Now I ask you, if the election had turned out differently, would anyone be writing this way about Chris Owens or David Yassky?
-- Azi PaybarahLining Up for the Council
For the record, there appear to be 13 names down to run for the Yvette Clarke seat.
The filing deadline was yesterday.
-- Azi PaybarahOne Less for the Clarke Seat
A reader forwards this email from Geoffrey Davis, the brother of slain Councilman James Davis:
-- Azi PaybarahGreetings Friend,
After exploring the idea of running for City Council's 2007 special election. We (The James E. Davis political Club) decided not to run, but continue to build better community relationships while providing Educational, Cultural, Political and Social programs. The James E. Davis Political club will interview candidates and make a collective decision on who we will endorse. Thank you dearly for your prayers, support and words of wisdom. your friend in the struggle,
Geoffrey A. Davis, MS
The Haitian Candidate
Ferdinand (Freddy) Zizi was endorsed by Haitian-American leaders, according to a press release sent to me around 4 a.m. the other day.
"Freddy Zizi was selected among six talented, highly educated and qualified candidates that included: Georges Boursiquot, Mathieu Eugene, Rita Joseph, Yves Rene, Emmanuel Roy, and our choice for this race, Ferdinand "Freddy" Zizi. The vote to select Freddy Zizi was carried in a most democratic and fair process. The Haitian-American Council Steering Committee is confident that Mr. Ferdinand (Freddy) Zizi has all the qualities and necessary skills to effectively represent the interests of the 40th Council District community at the New York City Council, and to continue building on the legacies of the Clarkes."
The formal announcement is expected in Brooklyn tomorrow around 4 p.m.
-- Azi PaybarahClarke's Committee
One Council staffer sent word that calls were being made in Brooklyn asking members there who would like that chairmanship, which is to say it's not kind of wide-open selection process that we're seeing elsewhere.
-- Azi PaybarahPetitioning Begins
Today is the first day of petitioning for candidates looking to run for the City Council seats vacated by Yvette Clarke of Brooklyn, who is now in congress, and Andrew Lanza, who won a seat in the state Senate.
Because these are special elections, there are no primaries and candidates must run on party lines they create.
Hopefully, it will become clear pretty quickly how many of the army of candidates who are supposedly running for these seats are actually serious.
-- Azi PaybarahThe Clarke Family
The Candidates in Brooklyn
Candidates still actively jockeying for position, according to the reader, include:
Jesse Hamilton, whose poster you can see here;
Ferdinand Zizi, who won support from the Haitian American Steering Committee, and is registering his political committee now;
Zenobia McNally, who ran against Yvette in 2005, but is the only person in the race who ran district-wide so far;
Dr. Mathieu Eugene, who heads a sports non-profit in the district for a number of years and has wide name recognition in the Haitian community.
But the reader says that four other candidates who were until recently planning on making a run have since dropped out because they didn't get the support of the Haitian American Steering Committee.
Anything we're missing?
-- Azi PaybarahReplacing Yvette
According to the encyclopedic Jerry Skurnik and a City Council source, the Mayor will call the special election within 3 days of the vacancy occurring (January 1). Then, the election is held within 30 or 60 days.
There are no run-offs, and it's a non-partisan race. Candidates have 10 days to petition and they follow rules as if they are creating your own party.
The race could have as many as six or seven candidates, some of whom I mentioned here.
Yesterday, two more candidates emerged. Jesse Hamilton and Zenobia McNally spoke to the Central Brooklyn Independent Democrats club where one attendee asked them about the Atlantic Yards [corrected].
According to Daily Gotham, when Hamilton was "asked about Atlantic Yards he gave a somewhat vague answer," and "Zenobia did seem too wary of directly criticizing Ratner's plan." -- Azi PaybarahClarke's New Friends
Another clue about how big a role Anthony Weiner played in helping Yvette Clarke establish her Washington connections: this picture was taken a few days after the primary and is the only photo of the soon-to-be congresswoman with statewide stars Hillary Clinton and Chuck Schumer.
While Clarke is laying low for the moment, expect pictures like this to start popping when she gets around to campaigning for the general election against an actual Republican.
By the way, is that a cell phone Chuck is holding? The man never stops! read more »
-- Azi PaybarahHumble Fundraising
"We raised $380,000. But we now have some $30,000 in outstanding obligations. Having been "unemployed" for over a year while campaigning, I am not in a position to meet these obligations on my own and I am asking for your assistance one final time. Fundraising during a campaign is a humbling experience; doing so after the election is even more so."
He goes on to say:
We must remember that our increasing dependence upon money to activate the electorate is a most insidious disease. It leads sensible people to lose their sense when deciding who to support for public office. It leads good people -- individuals as well as well-meaning organizations -- to violate the law. If we do not pursue significant campaign finance reform from the top on down, then the alienation of our people from the political process will reach a point of no return.
Full text after the jump. read more »
--Azi PaybarahDon't Call It a Comeback
Now that Yvette is bound for Washington, might Una run for her old seat?
"ABSOLUTELY NOT!" emailed an aide close to Yvette.
-- Azi PaybarahUnion Muscle in Brooklyn
It was unions. 1199/SEIU, 32BJ, and UNITE Here, to name a few.
In the 11th, unions seem to have out-soldiered the anti-Antlantic Yards contingent -- at least judging by the final result -- by pulling enough voters out to send Yvette Clarke to Washington. Next door, the unions seemed to stay away from Rep. Ed Towns, who cast votes in favor of CAFTA (a union no-no), and with Republicans on a bankruptcy bill. Towns won, of course, but with less than half the vote.
It's worth keeping an eye out to see what role the unions play in the race to fill Clarke's City Council seat.
-- Azi PaybarahAfter Yvette
But in the race to fill her soon-to-be-vacated seat City Council seat, so far, women candidates are scarce.
One knowledgeable reader suggested the following as a list of possible contenders to take her place:
-- Wellington Sharpe, who has run for numerous offices and was kicked off the ballot in his race against Assemblyman Nick Perry
-- Moses "Musa" Moore, who just lost his re-election as District Leader and is a close ally of Clarence Norman and Carl Andrews
-- Dr. Mathieu Eugene, who heads an after-school program in the center of the district and is a member of Community Board 14 and is said to have support among the area's Haitian community
-- Samuel Nicolas, a lawyer and cousin of police brutality victim Abner Louima
Any others?
-- Azi PaybarahIMterview: Micah Lasher
In an attempt to revive the IMterview tradition, I reached out to one of the consultants there, Micah Lasher.
azipaybarah: how do you feel this morning?
micahlasher: Tired, satisfied, relieved.
azipaybarah: you guys helped kavanagh and yvette
azipaybarah: what's your secret?
micahlasher: secret is picking winners
azipaybarah: what's common among them?
micahlasher: kidding aside, i think when you work for folks who you want to win, first, that usually says something about their intrinsic qualities as a candidate -- which translates into votes, and second, when you really want them to win, really want it in your bones, it's a lot easier you really bust your ass and fight for it
micahlasher: and that's how we felt about both yvette and brian
micahlasher: i was putting up posters for brian kavanagh at 4:30am yesterday....that's a lot easier to do when it's something you really want to see happen
azipaybarah: do pros like you have to be true believers?
micahlasher: not always
micahlasher: but it helps read more »
More IMterview after the jump.
-- Azi PaybarahThe Primaries and 2009
Christine Quinn and Bill Thompson backed Andrew Cuomo. But with a 20-point victory, who takes credit for that?
In Brooklyn, Thompson backed losing candidate Carl Andrews in the 11th congressional district. Quinn stayed neutral there. Anthony Weiner and Betsy Gotbaum backed the winner, Yvette Clarke. Gotbaum was among a hundred women endorsing Clarke, while Weiner brought the John Murtha endorsement.
Adolfo Carrion seems to have stayed out of the major races, but did back John Sabini, who squeaked out a win.
What the significance of any of this is in terms of chits to be redeemed at a later date, well, you tell us.
-- Azi PaybarahSpitzer, Clinton, Cuomo
We're signing off for now. Here's what we have so far:
Eliot Spitzer got more than 80% of the vote and by 10:20, Suozzi sent word he will indeed "endorse" Spitzer.
Hillary Clinton's got more 80% of the vote in her race.
In the close race, Andrew Cuomo beat Mark Green 53-32%. John Spencer beat KT McFarland 60-40%.
In Brooklyn, David Yassky and Yvette Clarke are neck and neck, but a source reports Yassky's best districts already came in.
Next door, Ed Towns seems to have held off Charles Barron, with Roger Green playing spoiler.
Marty Connor held off Ken Diamondstone, 53-47%. Brian Kavanagh is on his way to ousting Sylvia Friedman. Noach Dear is leading incumbent Kevin Parker. Hakeem Jeffries held off Bill Batson. Ada Smith is behind challenger Shirley Huntely [updated] read more »
John Sabini looks like he held off Hiram Monserrate in a really close race.
And pictured above is Sean Patrick Maloney, who lost, but is smiling about something at his victory party. -- Azi PaybarahClarke vs. NYT
Here is an image of that piece of campaign lit from an old ally of Yvette Clarke that Ben wrote about, explaining why Clarke didn't get the endorsement of the New York Times -- and David Yassky did -- in the 11th Congressional district primary.
"Beats us," it reads. "But the grapevine says the Times clearly wants to perpetuate the plantation system in Brooklyn by helping to elect 'a neo-massa.' "
Subtle. read more »
-- Azi PaybarahMail from Yvette, Carl, David and Chris
After the jump. read more »








