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Wyclef Jean, president of Haiti? He’s officially running now.

4 August 2010 Comments: 0

By Stephen Kur­czy, Chris­t­ian Sci­ence Monitor

Wyclef Jean on Tues­day announced his bid to run for pres­i­dent of Haiti in the country’s Nov. 28 elec­tion. Ana­lysts say Wyclef Jean is in a strong posi­tion to become Haiti pres­i­dent after René Préval.

Hait­ian musi­cian Wyclef Jean, right, gives a pack of goods to a woman at a camp for peo­ple dis­placed by the Jan­u­ary earth­quake in Port-au-Prince, June 15. Wyclef announced on Tues­day he is offi­cially run­ning for pres­i­dent of Haiti. Alexan­dre Meneghini/AP

Hip hop star Wyclef Jean (widely known sim­ply as Wyclef) will run for pres­i­dent of Haiti, accord­ing to reports. The announce­ment sets the stage for an inter­fam­ily elec­tion bat­tle between Wyclef and his uncle, a for­mer ambas­sador to the United States.

Ana­lysts are pre­dict­ing that Wyclef could par­lay his star power and enor­mous pop­u­lar­ity with the nation’s youth into a solid elec­toral vic­tory. Even more valu­able than being a three-time Grammy Award-winning musi­cian, though, says Eduardo Gamarra of Florida Inter­na­tional Uni­ver­sity, is Wyclef’s cash reserves.

He’s a very, very strong can­di­date,” the polit­i­cal sci­ence pro­fes­sor says. “Espe­cially when nobody else has the resources.”

Wyclef told TIME mag­a­zine and CNN on Tues­day that he will cam­paign in the Nov. 28 elec­tion. The Asso­ci­ated Press ver­i­fied the announce­ment with Hait­ian polit­i­cal heavy­weight Pierre Eric Jean-Jacques.

Mr. Jean-Jacques, as the for­mer leader of the country’s Cham­ber of Deputies (the lower house of Haiti’s par­lia­ment), is some­thing akin to for­mer House major­ity leader Newt Gin­grich, though not ide­o­log­i­cally. He now heads the one-year-old coali­tion party Ensem­ble Nous Faut (We Must Do It Together) that is putting for­ward Wyclef as its pres­i­den­tial can­di­date. The elec­tion law requires every can­di­date to reg­is­ter with a polit­i­cal party.

Rel­a­tive rivalry?

Wyclef, who was appointed Haiti’s ambassador-at-large in 2007, has long hinted that he might run for pres­i­dent. In a sur­pris­ing devel­op­ment, how­ever, last week his uncle, Ray­mond Joseph, announced his can­di­dacy in an inter­view with the Mon­i­tor, brush­ing aside any heated com­pe­ti­tion between relatives.

We are fam­ily. And we won’t allow pol­i­tics to divide,” says Mr. Joseph, who resigned as ambas­sador on Aug. 1 to begin his pres­i­den­tial campaign.

Wyclef is seen by many as the stronger can­di­date. But while the singer is pop­u­lar in Haiti, espe­cially among the young, many Haitians have told the Mon­i­tor that Wyclef might do bet­ter to stick with music.

It’s dif­fi­cult for Haitians to have any faith in the elec­tion, we are so used to politi­cians tak­ing advan­tage of us,” Anise Ulysse, a 27-year-old who shrugged at the prospect of the singer run­ning, told the Mon­i­tor last week. She said she will not vote for any­one. “The peo­ple liv­ing on the streets have other things to think about.”

Can he really run?

It also remains in ques­tion whether Wyclef is eli­gi­ble to run for pres­i­dent (see related arti­cle). The Hait­ian Con­sti­tu­tion requires a pres­i­dent to have lived in the coun­try for five con­sec­u­tive years pre­vi­ous to the elec­tion and have always held Hait­ian cit­i­zen­ship. Wyclef was born in Haiti, but moved to the US at age 9.

In this video inter­view with TIME mag­a­zine, Wyclef admits that his eli­gi­bil­ity will be chal­lenged. “They’re about to attack me in the next two weeks.… They think they’re going to get me with the dual cit­i­zen­ship thing. But I have a Hait­ian pass­port with a green card.”

Yet such a dis­pute may also prove a polit­i­cal ben­e­fit to Wyclef. More than 500,000 Haitian-born peo­ple are believed to live in the US alone, and TIME mag­a­zine argues that Wyclef could well bridge the divide between Haiti’s domes­tic pop­u­la­tion and diaspora.

It’s tempt­ing to dis­miss this as flaky per­for­mance art, a pub­lic­ity stunt from the same guy who just a few years ago recorded a num­ber called “Pres­i­dent” that included the refrain “If I was Pres­i­dent.” But Jean’s chances as well as his motives seem solid. And there are good rea­sons for Haitians – and the US-led inter­na­tional donor com­mu­nity, which is bankrolling Haiti’s long slog to the 21st cen­tury – to take this par­tic­u­lar hip-hop politi­cian seri­ously. Pop-culture celebrity hardly dis­qual­i­fies you from high office today. (The last time I looked, an action hero was still run­ning Cal­i­for­nia.) And in Haiti, where half the pop­u­la­tion of about 9 mil­lion is under age 25, it’s an asset as golden as a rapper’s chains. Amid Haiti’s gray postquake rub­ble, Jean is far more pop­u­lar with that young cohort than their chron­i­cally cor­rupt and inept main­stream politi­cians are, and he’ll likely gal­va­nize youth par­tic­i­pa­tion in the election.

Read the full arti­cle at TIME magazine.

Run­ning on a dias­pora agenda is not going to gain him votes domes­ti­cally,” coun­ters Pro­fes­sor Gamarra, adding that much remains to be seen about Wyclef’s polit­i­cal and man­age­r­ial skills. “If I was look­ing at it as a Hait­ian voter, I would look at it as: Who can guide me out of this crisis?”

http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Global-News/2010/0804/Wyclef-Jean-president-of-Haiti-He-s-officially-running-now

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