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Marion Barry Gears Up For Another Campaign: 'They Can't Touch Me Politically' (PHOTOS)

Marion Barry

BEN NUCKOLS   01/ 5/12 02:01 PM ET   AP

WASHINGTON — As HBO considers making a movie about Marion Barry with Eddie Murphy in the title role, the real Barry is doing something that comes naturally: running for re-election in the nation's capital.

Barry, the former four-term District of Columbia mayor whose legacy will always be tainted by his 1990 arrest after being caught on video smoking crack cocaine, now plays the role of elder statesman on the D.C. Council, where he represents a poor, predominantly black ward.

At 75, Barry walks stiffly and slowly, having survived prostate cancer, a kidney transplant and a gunshot wound when Hanafi Muslims attacked city hall in 1977. But the man once dubbed the city's "Mayor for Life" says he has more influence than in more than a decade and fully intends to seek a third straight council term this year, even if the prospect makes some wince.

He goes so far as to predict a winning margin of at least 70 percent in the April Democratic primary in Ward 8, the neighborhood east of the Anacostia River where he remains popular.

"I have more white support than people say I do, but I don't worry about that," Barry said, referring to his ward. "That's what frustrates some of these white people out here. They get frustrated, all worked up. They can't do a damn thing to me or about me. Isn't that funny?"

While Barry is quick to dismiss his critics and boast that he's won 10 of 11 election contests, there is one subject he won't discuss: the possible Spike Lee film about Barry that could star Murphy.

Barry's only comment on a project that could largely define his legacy for a younger generation came in the form of a Tweet addressed to Lee: "Please DM me." "DM" stands for a direct message that other users can't see.

And so it goes with Barry, the Mississippi native and former 1960s civil rights activist who is a walking embodiment of Washington's complicated legacy of self-rule.

He's the most quotable and least politically correct of the 13 councilmembers, quick to call out his colleagues and unafraid to play the race card. During council hearings, he can seem distracted and disengaged – more interested in reminding people about his four terms as mayor than dealing with the issue at hand.

But he remains a player in district government.

While Barry initially supported former Mayor Adrian Fenty, he quickly turned on him, accusing him of ignoring Ward 8 to pursue projects in wealthier parts of the city. Barry is much closer, though, to Mayor Vincent Gray and Council Chairman Kwame Brown, who also hail from east of the Anacostia River, long a dividing line between the city's haves and have-nots.

Barry and Gray have known each other for three decades and worked together frequently. And Barry said he considers himself a mentor of sorts to Brown.

Asked about his clout, Barry said: "I've got more now than I've had since 1995, before the control board came in."

Barry was referring to his fourth and final term as mayor, when Congress seized control of city government following years of poor fiscal stewardship, much of it under Barry. He stepped down after that term ended but staged a comeback in 2004, winning the Ward 8 council seat. He was re-elected in 2008.

Councilmember Jack Evans said Barry "has more opportunity to make his voice heard" with Gray in office. At least so far, that hasn't translated into notable legislative accomplishments. While Evans considers Barry a friend and agrees with him on some issues, Evans said much of the legislation Barry introduces "is very costly, and as a consequence there's no way to pay for most of it, and it does not get passed for that reason alone."

Barry is quick to offer advice to Gray and Brown.

"He's somebody who's got a lot of experience," Gray said. "If he's going to talk to me about something, I'm going to listen, but at the end of the day, I'm going to make my own decisions."

Brown is more blunt about the limitations of Barry's influence. He has occasionally distanced himself from Barry's public statements and feuded with him on the council dais.

"Everyone wants to automatically – because I'm young and black – assume that I'm just Marion Barry," Brown said.

Last week, Brown sent Barry a letter warning him that he may have violated the council's code of conduct by using government resources to issue a news release criticizing Natalie Williams, one of his opponents.

Barry said he understands the political considerations that factor into city leaders' treatment of him. Barry served six months in prison for cocaine possession following his 1990 arrest, and controversy continues to dog him.

In 2006, he was sentenced to probation for failing to file tax returns for several years, and he still hasn't paid all the debts and penalties he owes. Last month, the IRS filed a lien against him for $3,200 in unpaid 2010 taxes. Barry makes $125,000 a year as a councilmember, and unlike some of his colleagues, he has no outside income.

In 2009, he was arrested for stalking a former girlfriend. The charges were dropped but drew attention to a $15,000 city contract he had steered to the woman. The following year, the council – then led by Gray – censured Barry and stripped him of his committee assignments. City ethics officials ultimately concluded Barry hadn't broken any rules.

Barry's time in exile lasted less than a year. After Brown became council chairman in January 2011, he tapped Barry as chairman of the Committee on Aging and Community Affairs. Barry now sits on five other committees – as many as any councilmember.

Meanwhile, current city leaders have faced ethical questions of their own.

On Thursday, D.C. Councilman Harry Thomas Jr. was charged with stealing more than $350,000 in government funds and filing false tax returns. His attorney didn't immediately return a call seeking comment.

Federal investigators are also looking at alleged campaign improprieties involving Gray and Brown. Barry has cautioned against any rush to judgment and argued before Thomas was charged that the controversies swirling around district politics are largely media-driven.

"In America, you're innocent until proven guilty," Barry said.

Barry has also suggested that black officials are scrutinized more heavily than their white counterparts are, and he blamed three white councilmembers for deepening the racial divide by asking Thomas to resign.

If Barry is viewed as a pariah in some parts of the city, many of his constituents see him differently: as a champion of the underprivileged who used city government to put district residents back to work.

"He empowered African-Americans," said Vincent Hopkins, 48, an insurance salesman who lives in a gated community in Barry's district.

Former councilmember Sandy Allen was defeated by Barry in 2004, but worked on his 2008 re-election bid and is now his campaign manager.

"Marion is one of the greatest politicians that I have ever known," Allen said. Ward 8 voters have forgiven his many foibles, she said, because "they feel that he is one of them. ... He has not gotten so far above them that he does not understand their plight."

There is some discontent with Barry in Ward 8, but it has yet to coalesce around a single candidate. Several are challenging him in the April Democratic primary. Barry's opponents say the ward needs a councilmember who will bring more energy to the job.

"The same problems people had before he came to the city, they still have ... jobs, housing, the same problems," said Sandra Seegars, a longtime community activist who's running against Barry. "Ward 8 has not really improved."

Barry doesn't seem worried about his chances. And he enjoys needling his critics, including The Washington Post, which endorsed Barry's first three successful campaigns for mayor but wrote in 1994 that it wished it could have the third one back. The paper has extensively reported on his missteps.

"They can't touch me politically," Barry said of his critics. "The more they jump on me, the stronger I get."

___

Follow Ben Nuckols on Twitter at . http://twitter.com/APBenNuckols

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Ward 8 D.C. Councilmember Marion Barry makes spirited remarks during a DC Vote news conference to oppose the "Second Amendment Enforcement Act" which would strip D.C. of local control over its gun laws on May 4, 2010 at the Wilson Building.
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WASHINGTON — As HBO considers making a movie about Marion Barry with Eddie Murphy in the title role, the real Barry is doing something that comes naturally: running for re-election in the nation...
WASHINGTON — As HBO considers making a movie about Marion Barry with Eddie Murphy in the title role, the real Barry is doing something that comes naturally: running for re-election in the nation...
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04:06 PM on 01/17/2012
My friends and I over in Virginia have always gotten a big kick out of MB....never a dull moment when he is involved...keep voting him in D.C. we need the entertainment...
11:46 PM on 01/08/2012
Herman Cain should play Barry. They look like they wear the same size hat
11:38 PM on 01/08/2012
So out of all the millions of people in DC you couldn't find anyone but a crack-head to be mayor?!? That's insane
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alexandra23
04:13 PM on 01/09/2012
You're half right. There are not "millions" of people in DC. The population is approximately 580,000. But, I do agree with you regarding that "crack-head," remark.
11:25 PM on 01/08/2012
Crack Head! Bunch of idiots in DC voted for him
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AFRose
09:37 PM on 01/08/2012
M. Barry may have many faults, but he's a great politician and deal maker. He's one of the people that made the million man march happen. There's a reason why his constituents support him, I wouldn't underestimate him. As funny as he may seem, he's not a joke. I think it's a mistake letting Eddie Murphy play him. I also think there are far more respectable directors than Spike Lee to direct.
11:30 PM on 01/08/2012
AFRose: RU F'n kidding?!? I think there are AND HAVE BEEN more respectable people to be major
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AFRose
11:49 PM on 01/08/2012
I'm sure there are those more respectable (in your opinion), but that doesn't change the fact that many in Washington DC and across the country still have a respect and admiration for Mr. Barry. This is what happens when the so called "main stream" decides to neglect a portion of the society. That neglected portion will gravitate to the person paying them the most attention....in this case Mr. Barry. If you know anything about Washington DC, then you know Barry's biggest suppoters were DC's most neglected.
08:00 PM on 01/06/2012
If you're not from a place like Southeast (as I am as you can tell from my screen name) I think it's difficult to understand the fidelity the community holds towards Barry. Southeast was always a punching bag for Capitol Hill politicians, and a punch line for the media. It was a cautionary tale..."Don't do this or I'll send you to Southeast!" When you live in a community that is almost universally feared and reviled, it's intoxicating when someone of Barry's stature comes along and treats people there with respect. And it's doubly intoxicating when the folks who have heaped scorn on your community (eg, white Republicans on Capitol Hill, the Washington Post, etc.) hated the fact that Barry was a militant, progressive, unashamedly black politician BUT HE STILL WON. He was like Superman.

People in Ward 8 don't vote for Barry because of who he is. They vote for him because of who he was. They are very protective of the person he used to be, and are deeply saddened that he has succumbed to his demons.
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alexandra23
02:39 AM on 01/07/2012
There are eight wards in DC, not just one or two. The city went into bankruptcy under Barry because he did not seem to understand that he was mayor of an *entire* city. He catered to wards 6, 7 and 8 because he knew that the people in those wards were the most vulnerable and appreciative of his attention, he ignored the rest of the city and his fiscal responsibilities to the entire city. Barry repaid certain wards loyalty by hiring almost 50,000 employees mainly from those wards in a city that only needs 25,000 city employees at most. Barry gave city jobs for votes. He was self-serving in all he did for those wards.

What you don't seem to get is that his responsibilities as mayor of the nation's capital were ignored and the city became undone. The bankrupting of the city under Barry's watch was the reason that Anthony Williams was named by the Congress as Comptroller for the District to get the city's finances back in order. One of the first orders of business was to get rid of all those excess employees, and then to get a handle on what was being done with the city's revenues.
12:07 PM on 01/07/2012
DC thrived under his first two terms. 14th street transformed from a red light district to a place filled with beautiful hotels and fancy office buildings. Downtown boomed. When the rest of the country suffered under a deep recession, DC was actually doing well. By the late 80s Barry was using drugs and his cronies were stealing. And yes, he padded the payrolls in order to win votes. I will never claim otherwise. But for two terms DC government was being talked about as a model for urban government and it killed Barry's detractors in Congress. They hated it. It was clear that they wanted him to fail. Well, they got their wish and from what I can see, DC was not better off for it.....One more thing. Had the federal government not meddled in DC politics, wasting millions of dollars on entrapment schemes, setting up the control board, etc; democracy would have taken care of Marion Barry. He was tanking in the polls at the time he was caught using crack. The voters would have thrown him out in the next election. But because he was (accurately) portrayed as a victim of a white cabal, he became a hero at the point where he would otherwise have been a villain. It was another example of white conservatives not trusting black people to what was good for them. And now we have created this co-dependent monstrosity.
12:13 PM on 01/07/2012
One last point, Congress imposed the Control Board on DC as a means of CAUSING DC's bankruptcy, not preventing it. For Barry's last eight years in office, Congress DID NOT RAISE ITS ALLOTMENT TO DC BY A SINGLE PENNY! When a city has no ability to tax ala DC, and is dependent upon federal subsidies, by freezing that subsidy, bankruptcy is inevitable. Because the local press, and most especially the Washington Post, was fine to watch this fiscal disaster run its course as long as it led to Barry's ouster, it was rarely mentioned in the local press. But it was no coincidence that as soon as Sharon Pratt Dixon came to office the allotment was increased substantially. These are the facts that were well understood in the black community, and not understood at all in the white community because the media that served them were happy to splash each of Barry's mistresses on the front page, but averse to pointing out that Congress was giving him a run for his money in race to see who could ruin the city first.
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Sam Damon
Do or do not, there is no try.
06:30 PM on 01/06/2012
Eddie Murphy would be the perfect MB for a movie. I hope Spike Lee steps up on this one.
11:48 PM on 01/08/2012
Not really. Who wants to see a movie about a crack head mayor!!!
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AFRose
11:53 PM on 01/08/2012
No way. Eddie Murphy & Spike Lee. I wouldn't spend a dime to see the movie.
03:28 PM on 01/06/2012
The problem with Marion has always been the ones who keep electing him.
03:27 PM on 01/06/2012
When I was a kid growing up in Southeast DC, Marion Barry was like a living god. People forget all of the wonderful things he did before drugs and the lure of power brought him down. He is a shell of his former self. It is sad to see.
01:48 PM on 01/06/2012
No shame. So sad. Why people vote for this travesty i'll never know.
03:29 PM on 01/06/2012
Marion Barry was a hero in the 60s and 70s. Old folks remember all of the courageous stands he took back then and have passed on their veneration for him to their children and grandchildren. Barry became nationally renowned as he was sinking into drug addiction in the 80s and 90s. But before that he was truly heroic. He is a shell of his former self.
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alexandra23
07:38 PM on 01/06/2012
I do understand what you're saying regarding certain wards in the city looking to Barry as a hero, because before he came along those wards were virtually ignored by the local politicians and the rest of the city. But, that said, Barry is still like the cow that gives a bucket of milk and then kicks it over. He did some good for certain previously ignored sections of the city, but then he disgraced himself and his constituents by using crack cocaine. How can anyone be considered a leader and someone for their children to look up to when that same person is committing horrible crimes? What sort of an example is that for the young? He was mayor of the nation's capital and caught on video tape using crack with a prostitute. Just unbelievable and completely unacceptable.
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geddy lee is a god
Real musicians use instruments, not auto-tunes
11:49 AM on 01/06/2012
"I have more white support than people say I do, but I don't worry about that," Barry said, referring to his ward. "That's what frustrates some of these white people out here. They get frustrated, all worked up. They can't do a damn thing to me or about me. Isn't that funny?"

Soooo, he's staying in political office and running for re-election to tick off white people? Ok...
09:46 AM on 01/06/2012
Reminds me of the Chris Rock routine where the guy tells the kid, "You can't amount to anything if you smoke cocaine." Kid replys, "I can be mayor!"
09:06 AM on 01/06/2012
Where you belong Mr. Barry is behind bars.
09:00 AM on 01/06/2012
Pretty good gig for a guy who has plead guilty to a misdemeanor for not paying taxes and has had issues paying his Federal taxes since 1999
08:37 AM on 01/06/2012
Marion put the pipe down !