Brooklyn-bred rapper Wyclef Jean is counting on New Yorkers to back his run for president of Haiti - but he can't count on his former bandmate.
Soon after the celebrity singer filed papers for his candidacy Thursday, fellow Fugees star Pras announced he's supporting another hopeful.
"I endorse Michel Martell as the next president of Haiti because he is the most competent candidate for the job," Pras said in a statement.
Jean is hoping other Haitian expats living in New York don't agree.
New York, and Brooklyn in particular, is home to the world's largest number of Haitian expatriates - and Jean told the Daily News he's looking for their support.
"Wyclef Jean needs to be 3 million strong. Diaspora moving together to engage in help to get these people into a better situation," Jean said.
Jean came to New York at age 9, moving to the rough-and-tumble Marlboro houses in Coney Island and later to Flatbush, said his older brother, Sam, 39. He went to Public School 199 in Midwood before leaving for New Jersey.
Wyclef has stayed loyal to his homeland - he never became an American citizen and likes to show off his Haitian passport.
After a devastating earthquake rocked the island nation in January, his star power and public appeals for help attracted millions in donations to his charity, Yele.
Still, interviews Thursday with Brooklyn Haitians show Jean might have a tough road ahead of him.
"Wyclef is a musician. He's not fit for the job. It's like taking an engineer and putting him in a hospital," said Yvon Olivier, 59, manager of Chaco International Shipping in Flatbush.
Like President Obama, Jean is relying on younger voters to get him into office, distancing himself from the older candidates - including his 78-year-old uncle, Raymond Joseph, who has been the U.S. ambassador for the past five years.
Aside from the family troubles, Jean will also have to grapple with questions about Yele. Tax returns showed that some prequake donations to Yele went to Jean's Manhattan recording studio and his Haitian television production company.
Jean told The News that he learned from his mistakes, changing Yele's leadership and opening up its books.
"People say, 'Are you running for president?' " Jean said. "I say no, I am naturally being drafted by my country to serve my country," he said.
HERE'S ANOTHER STORY FROM TMZ:
Wyclef Jean has at least one critic who thinks his pursuit of the Haitian presidency is "not a good thing" -- and it happens to be a musical rival who sued the former Fugee just last year
TMZ spoke to rapper MC Out Loud of the group Blahzay Blahzay -- who is currently locked in a legal war with Wyclef, claiming Jean illegally sampled part of Blahzay's 1995 hit "Danger" on the 2007 song "Welcome to the East."
Out Loud tells us he's concerned about Wyclef's jaunt into politics due to several allegedly shady dealings ... saying, "We call him Wy-theft ... so many foul business moves."
Out Loud also says of Wyclef's presidential hopes, "There's nothing wrong with the move if he can help ... but when artists enter the political arena, it's not a good thing."
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