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Playing poker
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hum: About the debate negotiations...
Sastry: We started negotiating. Clinton really wanted a
sit-down debate. Clinton is good with that. He moves his hands
around, never stops talking, and hogs time. I said I want three
podiums. The Tsongas guy was waiting and didn't say anything.
The TV people asked whether we should allow questions between
the candidates. I just smiled. The Clinton people said no way.
He was still struggling with Gennifer Flowers, and the S&L
scandal was about to happen. Clinton was the front runner, but
his people felt he would be very vulnerable. The Tsongas guy saw
that and showed some inclination to supporting questions between
candidates. We didn't care, Jerry doesn't give a damn about the
format. He doesn't like slick and professional, he just likes
to go in and talk.
So I decided to play games with the thing,
I had no preference. I didn't say anything, I just smiled. Stephanopoulos
looked at me and said, "Look at the Brown guy, they will
go to any length to ask an embarrassing question to Clinton."
Right away the Tsongas guy said they wanted questions, and it
depends on the Brown guy. I said we might want them. If the Tsongas
guy supports three podiums I'd definitely support having questions.
So he said sure, and it was two-to-one for podiums. The Tsongas
guy said we want questions also, and I said sure.
The Clinton guy went through the roof. He wanted to withdraw from
the debate. The TV guy said can we have it without questions.
The Tsongas guy said no way. I said my preference for questions
wasn't that strong. I said there's one way I could be persuaded,
if I could get the middle podium for Jerry instead of tossing
a coin or picking cards. The Clinton campaign said fine, vote
against questions, we'll vote for the middle podium for Jerry.
Jerry got the middle podium, which is always an advantage because
you're standing in between two guys and it looks like you're being
given importance. When you talk, both men look at you from both
sides, and you have a potential for hogging the camera. I also
wanted him to be next to Bill Clinton, we'd be going after him
hard.
We drew cards for opening and closing statements. We won the first
opening statement and traded it for the last closing statement.
I knew the closing statement was better for Jerry. He's emotional,
and his labor and corruption issues would have a resounding effect.
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Clinton goes ballistic
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hum: Wasn't this the debate where Brown and Clinton
got into a brawl?
Sastry: Yeah, the fight was over a Washington Post article.
The TV executives sent us a fax saying there'll be no props allowed
in the studio. When I showed up for the walk-through I said we're
going to pull out of the debate unless we have props. This was
a total bluff, we had no intention of stepping out of the debate.
They knew the ratings would dive if we did. The Clinton and Tsongas
people said sure, why not, because every other debate so far had
allowed props.
On the debate day, Jerry Brown walked in there. Suddenly he raised
a newspaper article and said, "Ralph Nader told me something
last night that shocked me. Your wife funneled state money into
her law firm, and you were involved in the Madison Savings &
Loan and Whitewater. I think you're putting one over on the American
public. You have a big a electability problem. It's right here
in tomorrow's Washington Post."
Bill Clinton went ballistic. He said Jerry didn't belong on the
same platform. They started yelling at each other so harshly that
the Secret Service got up. Bill was pissed off and created the
most dramatic moment of the presidential primary season. Tsongas
dropped out five days later cause he got no press out of that
debate. The cameras zoomed in on Jerry and Clinton. Tsongas was
completely ignored.
This year the same TV station called when Kathleen Brown won the
primary. They left a message, "This is ABC calling from Illinois.
We still think Jerry was the best candidate, and we think you
were the coolest and calmest negotiator. If there's anything we
can do to help Kathleen, call us up." They all remembered
that all this Whitewater stuff started at that debate, and they
sent me a copy of the video. I was really proud of that message.
I'll never forget it for the rest of my life.
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Greasing the machine
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hum: What was the campaign trail like?
Sastry: You meet movie actors and famous politician. It's
rare that everyday people get to meet celebrities in an informal
atmosphere where business has to be done. Since we were representing
Jerry Brown, they knew we would not mob them or bother them or
ask them to come to a party or abuse their phone number. Matthew
Modine took me and a friend out to dinner. I went to a lesbian
bar with Whoopi Goldberg. Public Enemy came and did a benefit
for Jerry Brown.
I've been a fan of Public Enemy for a long time. Flavor Flave
came with his son and said, "Hey, can I introduce my son
to Jerry Brown?" Kim Basinger and the B-52's did a benefit
for us with MTV hosting it. We had a hamburger together at a bar
on top of the club and talked. The B-52's were backstage talking
to us. They asked us to send them pins and bumper stickers for
Jerry Brown. I met Kevin Costner and Whitney Houston. They came
to a rally we were doing while they were filming The Bodyguard.
It was very informal, not the big rush you have when everyone's
reaching for them, grabbing. I became numb to the excitement of
it, it became normal.
hum: So who really runs this country?
Sastry: You might think there are no connections between
the rock stars, the conservative businessmen, the movie stars,
and the politicians, but at 9:30 p.m. cocktail receptions behind
closed doors they're all moving in the same circles. There's no
separation between them. They all represent the top one percent
of the wealth and ownership and power in this country. However
diverse Public Enemy, Kim Basinger, Ross Perot, Jerry Brown, Matthew
Modine, and Walter Shorenstein might seem, you can see them all
at a cocktail reception for a political fund-raiser. The money
is the lubricant that greases the machine.
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From Andhra to N.W.A.
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hum: Have you ever met Jesse Jackson?
Sastry: Yes, I did. Jesse Jackson was the first person
I really idolized in American politics. I put him on a high pedestal.
Suddenly I was traveling with him. We went to the site where
Martin Luther King was assassinated, where Jackson was standing
next to him in Memphis. Jackson took us there. Everything became
matter-of-fact after that. If it had happened a couple of years
ago I'd be stuttering in my speech.
hum: Who are your other role models?
Sastry: My grandfather is one of my greatest inspirations.
He was the most famous criminal lawyer in Andhra Pradesh during
his time, and a leader in the Andhra Communist Party. He was
fearless. He'd have his supporters sing fiery bhajans and folk
songs, angry kinds about oppression. I liken them to the inner-city
hard-core rap I used to listen to, NWA, Public Enemy. In Daly
City it's a middle to lower-class area near my schools. Most of
my friends were Filipino or black. I've always identified with
the lower class, not the rich.
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SA's in politics
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hum: Do you feel you've faced bias in the political
community due to your ethnicity?
Sastry: I'm sure being a minority has hurt me, but it hasn't
confronted me directly. There's no stigma attached to our skin
color like with African Americans. I don't think it'll be hard
for the Indian community to infiltrate the political community.
You need articulateness, persistence, confidence, and intelligence.
They'll get good work out of you if you're capable. I predict
lots of Indians will go into opposition research, computer types,
people who are very quick, intelligent, and resourceful. Indians
have been known for those qualities. Campaigns need people like
that
hum: What advice would you give to other SAA political
hopefuls?
Sastry: If you're not in the right networks, you won't
get the top jobs in campaigns. You won't get campaign manager
or right below that where you're running operations, but you will
research issues.
You should start out volunteering and make as many connections
as you can. Otherwise it's almost impossible to get a paid job
in a responsible position unless you've networked for a long time.
As campaigns become more high tech, they are looking for intelligent
university students to do research. Indians can be represented
as much as they want to. Like Wall Street, they'll take us because
we're good.
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