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- <text id=94TT1225>
- <title>
- Sep. 12, 1994: Cities:Forgive Me, Voter
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Sep. 12, 1994 Revenge of the Killer Microbes
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CITIES, Page 43
- Forgive Me, Voter
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> In an unlikely comeback, ex-cocaine abuser Marion Barry has
- a chance to be Washington's mayor again
- </p>
- <p>By James Carney/Washington
- </p>
- <p> When most Americans think of Marion Barry, this is what they
- see: a grainy FBI videotape showing the mayor of Washington,
- D.C., in a hotel room smoking a pipeful of crack cocaine. That
- image, followed by his trial and conviction on a drug charge,
- turned Barry and the District of Columbia into international
- symbols for all that was wrong with America's drug-infested
- cities. It was the kind of scandal that destroys political careers
- forever.
- </p>
- <p> That was four years ago. On a street corner in northwestern
- Washington one evening last week, Barry stood on top of a ladder,
- his arms wrapped around a telephone pole, as a passing car came
- to a sudden stop. A young woman shouted from the car, "Hey,
- Marion Barry, you're gonna be mayor again!" Barry turned, a
- green campaign poster in one hand and a staple gun in the other,
- and acknowledged the endorsement with a smile. Across the street
- Kevin Britton, an elementary-school gym teacher, explained that
- he too wants the former three-term mayor back. To Britton, Barry's
- six-month stint in jail should not be seen as a disqualification.
- Far from it. "That makes it all the more a marvel," Britton
- said. "Marion Barry could have thrown in the towel, but he didn't.
- It took character to pick himself up, and this city needs that
- kind of character in a leader."
- </p>
- <p> With enough voters so faithful as these, Barry, 58, may achieve
- one of the most improbable political comebacks in U.S. history.
- A Washington Post poll last week showed him in a statistical
- dead heat--34% to 33%--with city councilman John Ray in
- a three-way contest to win the Sept. 13 Democratic primary,
- where elections in Washington are usually decided. Well behind
- both Barry and Ray was incumbent Mayor Sharon Pratt Kelly, with
- just 14% support.
- </p>
- <p> In his unorthodox campaign, Barry's message is more about forgiveness
- and redemption than the usual stuff of municipal politics. Wherever
- he goes, he talks about the "god force" that helped him recover
- from his drug and alcohol addictions. He claims to serve as
- a positive role model to young people caught up in the city's
- web of violence and despair. The city's children, he says, see
- him as "an example of somebody who got up off his knees, who
- was human, who overcame personal demons." Cathy Hughes, a black
- owner of several radio stations, disagrees. "It's like telling
- young people it's okay to shoot drugs for a while," she says.
- </p>
- <p> Barry's resurgence also reflects Washington's racial and economic
- fissures. Even in the aftermath of his arrest, Barry retained
- many sympathizers, especially among African Americans who believed
- federal prosecutors had set him up. By 1992 he had moved to
- Washington's poorest section, cast himself as a voice for the
- downtrodden and won a seat on the city council. To many of his
- core constituents, returning him to the mayor's office would
- amount to vengeance. Mary Cox, a lawyer and Barry ally, says
- that in much of Washington's African-American community, "you
- learn early on that if you're a black man and you stand tall,
- and if you speak up for others, you're going to jail."
- </p>
- <p> Barry rarely taps that polarizing sentiment explicitly, but
- he has focused his campaign on the people he calls "the least,
- the last and the lost." In 1978 he won his first mayoral election
- with substantial backing from the city's white minority (blacks
- make up two-thirds of Washington's 577,000 residents). That
- support has vanished: a recent survey shows Barry polling just
- 1% of the white vote. Many middle- and upper-income blacks have
- also abandoned Barry, which means that to win, he will have
- to rely on heavy turnout among lower-income blacks. To add to
- that base, Barry has been registering new voters at a record
- pace.
- </p>
- <p> Aiding Barry's chances is the weakness of the opposition. Kelly
- won office with a promise to sweep the city clean of the corruption
- and mismanagement that plagued Barry's last years in power.
- But critics say she has done little to cure the ills of Washington,
- where a third of the population is on public assistance. The
- homicide rate is only modestly lower than in 1989, when Washington
- earned the title "Murder Capital of the U.S."; fire-code violations
- may delay the opening of many D.C. public schools; and Congress,
- which acts as overseer to the D.C. government, is threatening
- to take action on the city's chronic budget deficit. Having
- soured on Kelly, those who would vote for anyone but Barry are
- turning increasingly to Ray, a bland 15-year veteran of the
- city council and a perennial runner-up in mayoral elections.
- His campaign has focused largely on the promise to restore the
- city's tattered image and improve its relations with Congress.
- </p>
- <p> Even if he wins next week, Barry could still face an obstacle
- in William Lightfoot, a city-council member who has promised,
- if necessary, to challenge Barry as an independent in November's
- general election. But Barry is counting on compassion. "Every
- person in Washington has a bit of redemption and forgiveness
- in them," he says. Besides, he adds, "I'm the candidate with
- the most experience. The people know me." Yet the problem for
- many voters is that they don't know which Marion Barry, the
- old or the new, is the one on the ballot.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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