Donna Brazile is one of the best known, most influential African American
women in modern American political life. She is Chair of the Democratic
National Committee's Voting Rights Institute (VRI), an organization established
in 2001 to help protect and promote the rights of all Americans to participate
in the political process. Brazile is the author of Cooking with Grease:
Stirring the Pots in American Politics, a memoir about her life in the
political arena, and co-author of What We Do Now, published by Melville House
in 2004.
Brazile, a well-versed Democratic political strategist, made history as the
first African American women to lead a major presidential campaign when she
served as Campaign Manager for Gore-Lieberman 2000.
Prior to joining the Gore campaign, Brazile was Chief of Staff and Press
Secretary to Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton of the District of Columbia
where she helped guide the District's budget and local legislation on Capitol
Hill. A veteran of numerous national and statewide campaigns, Brazile worked on
several presidential campaigns for Democratic candidates, including
Carter-Mondale in 1976 and 1980, Rev. Jesse Jackson's first historic bid for
the presidency in 1984, Mondale-Ferraro in 1984, U.S. Representative Dick
Gephardt in 1988, Dukakis-Bentsen in 1988, and Clinton-Gore in 1992 and 1996
and Gore-Lieberman 2000.
Brazile is a weekly contributor and political commentator for CNN, a
political consultant for ABC News, and a contributor to NPR's Political Corner.
She is also a columnist for Roll Call Newspaper, Ms. Magazine, and the author
of a syndicated column.
In addition to working at VRI, Brazile serves as an adjunct professor at
Georgetown University. She has served as a senior lecturer at the University of
Maryland, resident fellow at Harvard University's Institute of Politics and as
the Senator Wyona Lipman Chair at Rutgers University Center for American Women
in Politics
Brazile is the recipient of numerous awards and honors, including
Washingtonian Magazine's 100 Most Powerful Women in Washington, D.C., Essence
Magazine's 50 Most Powerful Women in America and the Congressional Black Caucus
Foundation's Award for Political Achievement.
Brazile, a native of New Orleans, Louisiana earned her undergraduate degree
from Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge in 1981 and was awarded an
Honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters from Louisiana State University in May
2005. Firmly grounded in her humble Louisiana roots, Brazile is a fierce
advocate for the poor and minorities. She currently serves on the Board of
Directors of the Louisiana Recovery Authority, the guiding agency charged with
addressing the state's recovery after Hurricane Katrina.
She is currently the Founder and Managing Director of Brazile and
Associates, a political consulting and grassroots advocacy firm based in the
District of Columbia.