Back when Michelle Obama was campaigning alongside her husband, Barack Obama, in his quest to become the nation’s first African-American president, she spoke to Mika Brzezinski about the importance of leaders in the black community taking enormous risks to benefit the next generation.
“I think that for the black community, we have to shake off our fear because change doesn’t happen without risk taking,” Michelle Obama told Brzezinski during a 2007 interview.
“You know, Rosa Parks wasn’t supposed to stay on, sit on that bus. Martin Luther King wasn’t supposed to speak out. I mean, we have a whole history of people who have taken risks far greater than anything that we’re doing,” Obama said in the never-before-seen footage, which Know Your Value and “Morning Joe” released this week in honor of Black History Month.
Then, referencing her husband’s campaign, Obama went on to tell Brzezinski, “This is nothing compared to the history we come from. So our view is, we’re doing exactly what we were told to do by our leaders, by our elders — that you get the best education you can get, that you work hard, that you bring that education back and that you give back and that you push, you push the next generation to be better. That’s what we’re doing.”
Brzezinski and Obama were discussing Barack Obama’s historic bid for the White House, at a moment when polls showed him trailing his Democratic rival, Hillary Clinton, among African-Americans.
“That’s not gonna hold,” Obama predicted. “I’m completely confident.” She was right: Barack Obama ultimately won the support of 96 percent of black voters on Election Day, and black voter turnout rose two percentage points nationally over the last presidential election. But during Brzezinski’s interview, they discussed the factors that were at that moment holding black voters back from getting behind the then-candidate.









