November 9, 2008
She speaks for Rahm
Charleston native works for Obama's chief of staff
Page 2 of 2
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"Basically all the stories about him are true," she said. But here's one many might not know.

Feinberg, who lives in Northwest Washington, was mugged at gunpoint last fall. Her husband, Daniel Pfeiffer, works full-time in Chicago as the communications director for Barack Obama's presidential campaign.

"Every night for about six weeks, [Rahm] made me send him an e-mail every night when I got home." But that wasn't all. She said the congressman would make sure Feinberg had locked the doors and turned on the alarm. "He's a big brother to the people who work for him."

Politics is a family business for Feinberg.

In the '80s, she spent her Saturdays and Sundays driving around West Virginia with her father, Lee Franklin Feinberg, who was running for the state Legislature. When he took office, she would visit him in Charleston and "sit on his lap while he was voting." Her mother, Mary E. Stanley, is a magistrate judge of the federal district court in Charleston.

"I don't know if it was a plan the whole time," she said of going into politics, "but [it's been] part of my life from very early on." Feinberg calls her résumé a "bit schizophrenic," from her first job as a staff assistant Senate Veterans Affairs Committee to a position with the environmental working group to a move to former Sen. Tom Daschle's office.

"My father's worked at the same law firm since he graduated from law school," she said. "I've probably had 10 different jobs in 10 years."

Feinberg's friend Tammy Haddad, former vice president of politics for MSNBC and now president of Haddad Media, said Feinberg's success goes beyond her relationship with Emanuel. "She clearly has Rahm's trust, but other people around town trust her, too."

She met her husband when they both worked for Al Gore's 2000 presidential campaign. She heard Pfeiffer's voice during conference calls and thought he was cute. They worked together again in 2002 on South Dakota Sen. Tim Johnson's campaign. Pfeiffer told The New York Times' Vows section that he didn't "put two and two together for a long time. But sitting 4 feet away from her, well, it wasn't very long before I wanted to go out with her."

This year is obviously a big one for Feinberg, with elections coming up in November affecting both her and her husband's careers. But when this reporter suggested she and Pfeiffer could be a Washington power couple in four months' time, Feinberg laughed.

And although she's "had a stomachache through the entire '08 election," Feinberg said she does see herself somewhere other than the Hill someday. She's enrolled in a master's program, studying Middle East foreign policy at the National Defense University at Fort McNair in Washington.

Haddad said Feinberg is following a simple linear path - though it might not seem that way. "I think she's one of the rare people that are focused on success," said Haddad. "So she's willing to figure out ways to get there."

The Sunday Gazette-Mail is part of the Politico Network.

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Posted By: lenny (10:07am 11-10-2008)
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hey Izzy. Cool observation. Thanks.

Posted By: IzzyCohen (5:33am 11-09-2008)
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From a linguistic viewpoint, Barack's choice of Rahm is a beautiful example of serendipity. In Hebrew, BaRaQ (bet-resh-kuf) means "lighting" and Ra3aM (resh-aiyin-mem) means "thunder". They should work very well together.

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