Hilary Clinton Campaign Chairman John Podesta and businessman Frank White Jr. exchanged a string of emails on February 25 and 26 about securing the black vote.

“The black is obvious super critical,” White told Podesta. “I’m hearing the same complaint in political circles that I continue to hear while fundraising: ‘The campaign doesn’t value black folks and takes us for granted.’ Can I make a suggestion? A black campaign vice chair or Sr adviser would go a long way during the primary and send the message that ‘Hillary puts her actions where her mouth is,’ and actually does appreciate the black vote.”

“I have been working on that and will resolve soon,” John Podesta replied. “We need to strengthen the overall structure and this is the most critical piece of that. Right now I think we should do this right after Super Tuesday.”

White is the Founder and CEO of DuSable Capital Management. He served as the National Vice-Chair of President Back Obama’s 2012 re-election campaign.

Hillary Clinton ended up winning seven of the 11 states involved on Super Tuesday primaries against Bernie Sanders. According to exit polls, Clinton won almost the entire black vote in Arkansas, Alabama, and Tennessee. Her victory in these states is primarily due to the black vote.

However, young blacks have expressed a skepticism towards Hillary Clinton, in part due to the policies her husband enacted during his presidency. One of the bills passed through Bill and supported by Hillary was the 1994 crime bill, which contributed to the U.S. culture of mass incarceration. Two decades after the bill, the nation’s prison population more than doubled—from 95,162 in 1994 to 214,149 in 2014.

Despite White’s requests, there were already several black staffers working for the Clinton campaign at the time, including Maya Harris, who served as Clinton’s senior policy adviser since April 2015.