Tag: nelson mandela
What Did Billionaire Donor Get Out Of His Relationship With The Clintons? An Education, He Says

What Did Billionaire Donor Get Out Of His Relationship With The Clintons? An Education, He Says

By Evan Halper, Tribune Washington Bureau (TNS)

WASHINGTON — Befriending Bill and Hillary Clinton — and giving them access to his private 757 jet — gave Ron Burkle more insight into world affairs than any graduate program might have.

At one point the billionaire businessman was on half of all the trips the former president made abroad. Burkle says he met 47 world leaders in 47 countries. There was a private meeting Clinton held with Nelson Mandela that went on for hours; Burkle was in the room.

Burkle, who never finished college, says he found the travel so enlightening that he structured his son’s schooling around it, arranging for a private tutor to join them on the jet so his child could join the international trips with Clinton.

“I’m not a political junkie,” Burkle said. “I’m not trying to become an ambassador or be in the middle of every election every cycle. … A lot of people are in it because they want to go to the parties or be on the Kennedy Center Board. It is not about that for me.”

Burkle talked about the experiences during an expansive interview with the Los Angeles Times this week, in which he also expressed ambivalence about Hillary Clinton’s candidacy, reflected on his now-dissolved $15 million business partnership with Bill Clinton and explained why he is cohosting a fundraiser for Republican presidential candidate John Kasich.

The trips became a springboard for the billionaire jetsetter to put his own mark on international affairs. UCLA is home to the Burkle Center for International Relations, now prominent on the circuit of world leaders and diplomats visiting Los Angeles.

The investor talks about politics as a kind of entryway to more interesting people and pursuits.

In the case of Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., his enthusiasm for her career led him into a friendship with her husband, Richard Blum, a fellow billionaire who also has a taste for adventure and international exploration.

“I just think her husband is a fascinating and complex guy,” Burkle said. “He spends time with the Dalai Lama. He has a foundation in the Himalayas. … He and I just became friends.”

Burkle, who is perhaps the world’s most successful supermarket magnate, says he began working in his dad’s store at an early age and spent his life singularly focused on working and investing until well into his 30s.

“I wasn’t curious about anything but work and making money,” he said. “Then I got curious about art. I got curious about politics and international relations.”

Like most big donors, he says there was nothing transactional at all about his plunge into high-stakes political giving. And as is typically the case, such protestations are met with skepticism. The close political relationships have been undeniably good for his business.

Burkle has boosted the careers of politicians who went on to control pension funds that invest massive amounts with his firm, Yucaipa. He’s had a former president on his payroll, ostensibly able to open doors nobody else can.

When Burkle did not want embarrassing details in his divorce records available to the public, California lawmakers and a governor, Arnold Schwarzenegger, to whom he had been donating generously passed a state law allowing him to seal them.

Burkle insisted the legislation was not crafted at his behest, but it became known in Sacramento as the “Burkle bill” nonetheless.

Now, his value to Democratic politics lies not just in his checkbook — but also in his house.

The property known as Greenacres, once owned by silent film star Harold Lloyd, is host to some three dozen fundraising events each year, often for Democrats or progressive causes.

Burkle estimates more than $200 million has been raised there for candidates and nonprofits since he moved in in the 1990s.

Even fellow high-rollers in Hollywood, who grumble that Burkle never stepped up to write multimillion dollar checks to super PACs the way other liberal billionaires have, lament that Hillary Clinton does not currently have access to the fundraising machine that is Greenacres.

“I bought a house that has its own life, independent of me,” Burkle said.

He became enamored with the property when he attended a fundraiser there. The event, he recalls, was very much an introduction to life on the high-stakes political fundraising circuit, particularly in Los Angeles.

“The first time I went to a fundraiser there, the tickets were $1,000 and $5,000,” he said. “I asked, ‘What’s the difference?’ They said, ‘Parking.’”

Burkle’s ambivalence about Hillary Clinton’s candidacy is puzzling to other Democratic power players.

The Clintons are known to value loyalty. And Burkle may ultimately test whether he can step back in the inner circle after stepping so far out of it. He’s raising money for Kasich but leaving open the possibility that he will rejoin the Clintons soon enough.

©2016 Tribune Co. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Photo: Former U.S. President Bill Clinton addresses a campaign rally for his wife, Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, in Nashua, New Hampshire January 4, 2016. REUTERS/Brian Snyder 

 

South Africans Vote, Some Under Heavy Security

South Africans Vote, Some Under Heavy Security

By Robyn Dixon, Los Angeles Times

BEKKERSDAL, South Africa — Hundreds of police and soldiers enforced calm Wednesday as voters lined up in this trash-strewn township southwest of Johannesburg where angry gas-bomb throwing mobs have rioted repeatedly in recent months over lack of government services.

South Africans went to the polls Wednesday to cast ballots in the fifth national election since the first democratic vote brought former President Nelson Mandela to power in 1994 — and the first since the death of the liberation struggle hero in December.

Voters will choose candidates for the national parliament and provincial legislatures. In South Africa, the president is then elected by the lower house of parliament, while provincial premiers are elected by provincial legislatures.

With the African National Congress expected to garner its usual large parliamentary majority, its leader, Jacob Zuma, is considered certain to continue as the nation’s president.

Voters, many of them swathed in blankets on a chilly, misty morning, lined up before polling stations opened at 7 a.m. More than 25 million South Africans were registered to vote.

Bekkersdal has been tense in recent months, with violent, rolling protests. Angry residents stoned a team from the governing ANC campaigning in the area in March, then accused police of retaliating by firing live ammunition against them.

ANC voters in Bekkersdal who turned out early to vote Wednesday said they were relieved at the heavy police and army presence. There was unrest in the township on the eve of the vote, with mobs blocking roads, burning tires and torching two Independent Electoral Commission tents, set up as temporary polling stations.

“We’re really calling on everyone to be calm,” said state Security Minister Siyabonga Cwele, visiting Bekkersdal early Wednesday. “As you can see, there are many people in the queue and people are really keen to vote, even here in Bekkersdal,” he said. “We are calling for peace and quiet and to allow people to vote.”

Nokulunga Xolwana, 34, said she was relieved that police and soldiers were on hand to ensure voters could get to the polls safely.

“People are fighting other people. It’s good to have the army and police here,” she said.

But Neliswe Nkopane, 28, holding a toddler on her hip, said the heavy security presence in Bekkersdal left a bad taste in her mouth.

“It’s not nice, man,” she said. “We are being treated like we’re criminals whereas the criminals are out gallivanting around. There was going to be a peaceful election in Bekkersdal, without the army and police. Now it’s like we are going back to the apartheid era when soldiers were everywhere.”

Zuma and other party leaders cast their votes early Wednesday.

The president predicted good results for the government, which won nearly two-thirds of the vote in the last election, and said voting was the most important thing for citizens to do in a democracy.

“Throughout the country the voting must be as peaceful as it is supposed to be,” Zuma said. “I’m very happy, and I think the results will be very good.”

Opposition leader Helen Zille of the Democratic Alliance said she hoped her party would increase its share of the vote in all provinces.

“I hope the DA will grow in every single province,” she said. “And I hope that we will take one big step closer to being the national government.”

Julius Malema of the Economic Freedom Fighters, a radical new left-wing party that calls for nationalization of land and banks, stood in line with ordinary voters, waiting to cast his ballot.

“There’s no need for us to be jumping the queues. We belong to these people, and therefore if they queue, we must queue, and we must remind ourselves of past histories,” he said, adding that he was running to win. “When you get into a boxing ring, you do not fight to be No. 2. You fight to win.”

Xolwana complained that Bekkersdal was filthy, with raw sewage in the streets, no electricity in her shack and rubbish strewn around.

“This place is dirty, and there’s no electricity and the roads is not good. The streets are dirty,” she said. Despite her unhappiness with government services, she planned to vote for the ANC because she said it had brought some improvements to people’s lives.

Nkopane, however, was uncertain about how she would vote, saying she planned to make up her mind at the last moment. She was weighing voting for one of the opposition parties.

“I’m hoping there’ll be change,” she said, adding that the ANC government “helped me, but it’s not enough. When you see them in their big suits and big cars, they can do better.”

South African television reported that the ANC hired 17,000 commuter taxis to ferry its supporters to the polls, in a bid to maximize its vote.

Photo: CJ Glynn via Flickr