USA TODAY US Edition

‘Colored Girls’ maps political journeys

- Charisse Jones

Is it serendipit­y when you cross paths with kindred spirits, divine interventi­on, or perhaps a bit of both?

It’s a question worth pondering in “For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Politics” (St. Martin’s Press, 357 pp., ★★★☆), which chronicles the bonds of friendship and activism that connect political veterans Donna Brazile, Yolanda Caraway, Leah Daughtry and Minyon Moore.

Written with Veronica Chambers, “For Colored Girls” (the title is a play on the theater piece by Ntozake Shange) is part history lesson, part political primer. It gives a behind-the-scenes glimpse of political battles from the presidenti­al campaigns of Jesse Jackson to the candidacy of Hillary Clinton, who in 2016 became the first female nominee of a major party.

What we learn from the book:

Budding political leaders need coaching.

Caraway, whose political involvemen­t began when she was a teenage volunteer for Bobby Kennedy’s Senate campaign, became the Democratic National Committee’s director of education and training in the 1980s. In that role, she organized workshops to prepare a new generation of politician­s.

One of her trainees was a Northweste­rn University student named Rahm Emanuel.

He “worried the hell out of me for student discounts on the training workshops,” said Caraway of Emanuel, the mayor of Chicago and former chief of staff for President Obama.

“He told me he could get a bunch of students to participat­e if I got them a discounted rate. I did, and he made good on his promise.”

Finding a place to retreat and reboot.

Moore, a former assistant to President Bill Clinton and former CEO of the Democratic National Committee, recounts rarefied retreats that connected African-American executives, artists and civil rights icons in a space where they could catch their breath, even as they planned the next battle.

At one of those gatherings, she was able to spend time with Coretta Scott King. “I loved to hear her pronounce my name,” she says. “Grace under pressure is probably not an adequate descriptio­n, but she picked up the torch and became our modern-day Esther in the Bible.”

Hillary Clinton’s loss was tough to take.

Each of the women had to deal with her disappoint­ment after Clinton’s loss to Donald Trump. Daughtry remembers being unable to rise from bed, but after receiving a written message from her father, the well-known minister Herbert Daughtry, she invited volunteers who’d worked with her to dinner.

She says that she had to hold on to the idea that a divine purpose remained. “I have to believe that,” she says, “or else the whole construct of my life falls apart.”

Brazile’s book frayed ties.

The quartet often supported and protected each other as they navigated the corridors of politics and power. But they acknowledg­e that Brazile’s decision to write her own book, 2017’s “Hacks“– a controvers­ial tell-all about her time as DNC chair during the Clinton campaign, which the friends had feared would conflict with “For Colored Girls” – caused a painful rupture.

“We acknowledg­e that our circle is frayed,” the women write. But with faith and “baby steps,” they say, they trust it will be restored.

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