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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."
[Associated
Press;
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