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Wyclef Jean To Run For President Of Haiti

AP/Huffington Post   First Posted: 8/3/10 Updated: 5/25/11

Wyclef

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) -- Singer Wyclef Jean plans to run for president of earthquake-ravaged Haiti and will announce his candidacy in the coming days, a former parliament leader and the entertainer's brother said Tuesday.

[UPDATE: Jean told Time he'll announce his candidacy close to the Saturday deadline, possibly Thursday night on "Larry King Live."

Jean told Tim Padgett of Time "I knew I'd have to take the next step" after he spent days delivering Haitian corpses to morgues. That experience, Jean said, "finished the journey from my basket in the bulrushes to standing in front of the burning bush."]

Former Chamber of Deputies leader Pierre Eric Jean-Jacques told The Associated Press the Haiti-born hip hop artist and former Fugees frontman will run as part of his coalition in the Nov. 28 election.

After AP first reported the story, Jean's brother, Samuel Jean, confirmed that the singer would announce his intentions in a televised interview from Haiti on Thursday after filing required documents with the electoral council.

"We all believe he meets the constitutional requirements and he can do it," the brother said by phone from his consulting office in Los Angeles.

Jean's spokeswoman, Cindy Tanenbaum, confirmed that the entertainer planned an announcement Thursday but said she did not know specifics. She added that Jean was preparing a political communications team.

Dozens of candidates are expected to compete for the presidency in the Nov. 28 contest, among them Jean's uncle Raymond Joseph, who is Haiti's ambassador in Washington. Other likely candidates include former prime ministers, mayors and another popular Haitian musician, Michel "Sweet Micky" Martelly.

Controversy already surrounds the election as opponents accuse President Rene Preval of stacking the deck for an as-yet-unamed candidate of his recently formed Unity party. He has ignored calls from U.S. senators and others to reform the eight-member, presidentially approved electoral council ahead of the vote and ensure the participation of all parties.

The Organization of American States pledged support last week as the electoral council struggles to deal with the loss of thousands of polling places and a wrecked voter registry. The election will chose a president, 10 senators and 89 members of parliament's lower house.

Jean-Jacques, who will be seeking to return to the currently dissolved Chamber of Deputies in the election, said Jean will be a candidate for a new coalition that calls itself Ansanm Nou Fo, which translates as "together we are strong" in Creole.

"Yes, we have an agreement (with Jean). But he's the one who has to announce it first," Jean-Jacques told AP, declining to elaborate on their political plans.

The singer's brother did not confirm with which party the singer would be running.

Candidates for the Nov. 28 election must declare by Saturday.

The possibility remained that Jean could change his mind or be declared ineligible to run. He must prove to the electoral council that he has resided in Haiti for five consecutive years, own property in the country and have no other citizenship but Haitian.

Past officials have disqualified some candidates on technicalities while allowing others with apparent ineligibilities to seek office.

Jean was born outside Port-au-Prince but left as a child and grew up in Brooklyn.

The brother said that unlike much of the family, Jean has never held a U.S. passport. Advisers believe Jean's residency requirement will be waived because he has been a presidentially appointed Haitian goodwill ambassador, excusing his infrequent time in Haiti over the last several years.

Jean was the frontman for The Fugees before going solo. He is known for such hit singles as "We Trying to Stay Alive" and "Gone Till November." With the Fugees, he recorded the Grammy-winning, multiplatinum-selling album "The Score."

He is popular in Haiti for his music and for his work through his charity Yele Haiti, which raised more than $9 million after the Jan. 12 earthquake killed a government-estimated 300,000 people, displaced more than 2 million and knocked down most of the government ministries in the capital.

The organization was widely criticized for alleged financial irregularities after the quake, when scrutiny revealed that it had paid Jean to perform at fundraising events and bought advertising air time from a television station he co-owns, among other suspected improprieties.

Yele hired a new accounting firm after the allegations surfaced.

Rumors have swirled for years that Jean would run for president. The singer has always been careful not to rule out a run for the office and recorded a song titled "If I Was President," although its references to war and billion-dollar spending seem to allude to the U.S. rather than Haiti.

In recent weeks Jean's Twitter feed has been awash with original and re-tweeted demands for transparent elections, proposals for reducing Haiti's chronic poverty and calls to defend camps of the estimated 1.6 million people made homeless by the quake from forced eviction.

Jean's political profile is unknown. Living overseas he has avoided many of the alliances and sometimes bloody rivalries that define Haitian politics. He cuts a strikingly different profile than the generals, technocrats and priest who have led it in recent years, speaking little French and Haitian Creole with a Diaspora accent.

He has said he voted for President Rene Preval in 2006, a year before the two-term president made him an ambassador. Preval is barred by the constitution from running again.

Reaction to Jean's possible candidacy has been divided as Haitians debate the pluses and minuses of his inexperience.

"I will give him my vote. All these people who have been in Haiti haven't done anything for us," said Jean Leuis, a 22-year-old bread vendor.

Bosejour Leconte, a 34-year-old phone card seller who has been living in a tent since the earthquake, thought otherwise.

"I don't think he has the qualifications to be president. I'd rather vote for someone that has political experience," he said.

Jean-Jacques and other politicians, including a senator from ousted President Jean-Bertrand Aristide's Fanmi Lavalas party – which is not expected to be allowed to participate in the election – formed the Ansanm Nou Fo coalition ahead of February elections that were canceled because of the earthquake.

Haiti's next president will face an enormous task. Presidents have only rarely completed a constitutional five-year term -- most in history have been overthrown, assassinated, declared themselves "president-for-life" or some combination of the three.

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dante1987
09:27 PM on 08/06/2010
He says he "cant work a 9 to 5" (gone til november) but now wants to be a president.
04:58 PM on 08/05/2010
Seize the moment son; as long as your goal is to help the people of Haiti and not yourself; you'll get your just reward. Good luck in your endeavors.
12:00 PM on 08/05/2010
This is completely crazy! It would be like having an actor for president; or why not a body builder for governor. How would ever vote for someone like that?
03:23 AM on 08/05/2010
Twenty years ago, twenty centuries ago, at the beginning of an electoral period just like this one, I was literally swept by a wave of optimism, passion, and enthusiasm­. In hindsight, the state of the Haitian affairs is worse today than twenty years earlier. The messiah cracked along with a potentiall­y powerful movement that nobody took the time to build. A lot of lives, energy, enthusiasm­, time, and money were squandered­. Both the leader and his followers bear the responsibi­lity of this resounding failure. We did not realize that a lone man, no matter well-inten­tioned, could not withstand the emotional, physical, and psychologi­cal weight of the divergent, even conflictin­g aspiration­s, and dreams of an entire nation. The focus should not be on one man but on a sound and thorough proposal for a new society as well as the human, material, financial, managerial­, and organizati­onal resources needed to carry this proposal out.

My concern is the messianic tone of Wyclef Jean's message, echoed and amplified by the western press. I am convinced that straighten­ing Haiti requires more managerial and political skills than it takes to run other countries. One effective leader can only gather people who possess those skills, coordinate their action, keep on inspiring them, and continuous­ly scout for other leaders to hand the torch to. ENOUGH OF THE OLD RHETORIC!!­! The NEW GENERATION needs to use NEW TOOLS, NEW STRATEGIES­, AND NEW MESSAGES if it is to succeed. HAITI NEEDS A NEW CANVASS TO DRAW ITS DESTINY
11:44 PM on 08/04/2010
Wyclef for President
http://www­.wycleffor­presidents­hirt.com
09:26 PM on 08/04/2010
And he'll probably win, too.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
georgieboyme
06:12 PM on 08/05/2010
Indeed; the majority of the Haitian electorate these days are illiterate (or barely) and mostly unable to make a decision based on educated facts. They will vote for him because "he sounds goooood."
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DebofMD
Lisbeth Salander is my hero.
09:22 PM on 08/04/2010
I don't know how I feel about this...I don't totally trust Wycelf. But he'll win, I'm sure.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
georgieboyme
06:14 PM on 08/05/2010
In this case, it's not even about "trust." It is simply that the man is not qualified to run a boutique, let alone a nation.
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Bankerrkt
He's making things worse.
09:03 PM on 08/04/2010
YAWN
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
goosie29
LIVE AND LET DIE
10:09 PM on 08/05/2010
Cover your mouth
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mariusvinchi
Saint Lucia is looking better and better every day
08:51 PM on 08/04/2010
With his cache in Haiti, he will be a lock. Especially with all the work he does thru his NGO in Haiti..
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
georgieboyme
08:27 PM on 08/04/2010
This is insane; another ignorant fool as president-­-that's all Haiti needs. He may be a good musician, but the man can't even put two coherent sentences together and now Americans are gonna back him as the next Haitian president, because they know they can easily manipulate him. If his heart is really in the right place, then he needs to do the right thing for the country and let someone with some political and intellectu­al savvy lead Haiti out of the darkness.
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StraferX
The Lord is my Shepherd
03:32 PM on 08/05/2010
Very well said. I would love to see him leave this country as he is a corrupt tool but the people of haiti deserve better.
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06:48 PM on 08/04/2010
[Wyclef (speaking)­:]
Guys, you have to be more gangster, more blood
more gun talk, more people dying, more hardcore
Enough, come on, I'm not feeling it man
More, more, man (I got you)
Alright, come with it [gunshot]

"Street Jeopardy"

Umm..OK
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AquaBoogy
"The Revolution Is Being Televised!"
06:45 PM on 08/04/2010
I think he deserves a fair shot. Everyone, especially Americans, are caught up in the crazy fascinatio­n that only the rich and privileged should run for elected office. Americans seem to think that the ordinary man is not powerful or smart enough to be a leader. At least he has the courage to attempt to run for the office unlike so many lazy Americans who just sit back and get walked over year after year by their own elected elite.. People, especially republican­s, wake up and stop being led around like sheep...
06:13 PM on 08/04/2010
His 1st official act should be to change the country's name to "The Funky Republic of Haiti"
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06:32 PM on 08/04/2010
Why "Funky", friend?
07:17 PM on 08/04/2010
You do know who Wycleaf Jean is ..... don't you? And I'm not your friend, buddy.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
RichardWalden
President & CEO, Operation USA,a Los Angeles-based
04:20 PM on 08/04/2010
Clef, Think again, please!. You are the most visible Haitian on earth; whoever runs Haiti rolls over when you need something done for Yele Haiti, your "movement"­. The only thing being President of Haiti gives you is access to money, which is not healthy given your recent history handling large amounts of donated cash. I think the March 31, 2010 United Nations "donors conference­" which raised short and long term pledges of up to $9.9 billion, much of which has yet to arrive in Haiti, will almost certainly fail at meeting its goal if you are President. Believe me, I get that President Preval and many who came before him are tone deaf but a government "sing-a-lo­ng" is not your thing any more than taking Placido Domingo's place at the Opera. Sing to your own tune but keep it private, mon ami.
02:44 PM on 08/04/2010
Oh please NO!