home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=89TT2519>
- <link 89TT3051>
- <link 89TT1635>
- <title>
- Sep. 25, 1989: Hope, Not Fear
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Sep. 25, 1989 Boardwalk Of Broken Dreams
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 20
- Hope, Not Fear
- </hdr><body>
- <p>New York may be the next city to elect a black mayor
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Lacayo
- </p>
- <p> For American racial and ethnic groups on the way up,
- gaining control of city hall is confirmation of emerging
- political clout. So it was a triumphal moment last week when
- Manhattan Borough President David Dinkins defeated three-term
- incumbent Edward I. Koch to win the Democratic Party mayoral
- primary in New York City. Since Democrats outnumber Republicans
- 5 to 1, Dinkins became an instant choice to prevail over the
- Republican challenger, former U.S. Attorney Rudolph Giuliani,
- and become the first black chief executive of the nation's
- largest city.
- </p>
- <p> Dinkins' chances for a November victory were bolstered by
- the fact that he won almost a third of his party's white voters,
- the largest share of white support ever racked up by a
- nonincumbent black candidate in a mayoral primary in any major
- city. Dinkins' victory was widely credited to his quiet,
- conciliatory manner, which many voters hope can heal the racial
- tensions in a city shaken by several racial incidents, most
- recently the murder of a black teenager by a gang of Brooklyn
- whites. "You gave this city something special," Dinkins told his
- cheering supporters last week. "You voted your hopes and not
- your fears."
- </p>
- <p> If Dinkins succeeds, New York would join the growing ranks
- of cities with black mayors. African Americans occupy just 1.5%
- of elective offices at the federal, state and local level,
- though they account for 11% of the voting-age population. But
- 22 years after the ground-breaking 1967 elections of Carl Stokes
- in Cleveland and Richard Hatcher in Gary, more than 300 American
- cities have black mayors, including 25 with populations over
- 50,000.
- </p>
- <p> That political triumph has been tempered by the fact that
- those same cities are often plagued by crime, drugs and
- deteriorating schools. Black mayors have had much success in
- fostering the growth of a black middle class, dispensing
- thousands of city jobs and using minority set-aside programs to
- direct a portion of city contracts toward black-owned
- businesses. Unfortunately, they have fared no better than their
- white counterparts in solving the intractable problems of the
- growing black underclass.
- </p>
- <p> Many of the first black mayors, like Stokes and Hatcher,
- were charismatic veterans of the civil rights movement who
- became national spokesmen for the plight of the inner cities.
- For their constituencies, long denied access to political power,
- the mere election of one of their own to offices from which they
- had long been excluded was a reward in itself. "Early on, black
- voters' expectations were not necessarily tied to material
- gains," says William G. Boone, a political scientist at
- Atlanta's Morehouse College. "It was more of a psychological
- gain."
- </p>
- <p> But black takeovers coincided with the deterioration of the
- economies of American cities, especially in the industrial
- areas to which many blacks had migrated from the South. Places
- like Cleveland and Detroit suffered a dwindling of the
- well-paid manufacturing jobs that had pulled generations of
- unskilled workers into the middle class. Many whites, fearing
- black government, fled to the suburbs, taking their taxable
- incomes with them. The financial bind worsened under the Reagan
- Administration's cutbacks in urban aid. "It's like getting the
- prize and seeing that the prize is hollow," says Linda Williams,
- policy analyst at the Joint Center for Political Studies in
- Washington.
- </p>
- <p> Even when they presided over healthy local economies, some
- black mayors became preoccupied by the needs of the middle
- class, black and white, at the expense of poorer constituents.
- During Maynard Jackson's two terms as mayor, from 1974 to 1982,
- Atlanta became a symbol of New South prosperity. In the 1970s,
- however, the number of black households in the city classified
- as poor actually increased by almost a fourth, to 31%. But
- Jackson jolted the local white establishment by aggressively
- demanding that black businesses get a share of city contracts.
- As a result, his tenure is so fondly remembered that when he
- decided to run for mayor again this year, he quickly piled up
- such a huge lead in the polls that his only challenger, Fulton
- County Commissioner Michael Lomax, withdrew from the race.
- </p>
- <p> Mayors who presided over less fortunate cities had even
- less to offer their poor constituents, and have suffered
- accordingly. In 1986, Gary's Hatcher and Newark's Ken Gibson
- became the first black mayors to fall to challenges from a new
- generation of black aspirants less interested in national
- podiums than in the unglamorous day-to-day management of their
- cities. Many of the new generation of urban leaders, such as
- Baltimore's Kurt Schmoke, a former prosecutor, have backgrounds
- in business or the professions. "There is a growing respect for
- the intractability of urban problems," says analyst Williams.
- "Some of the new black mayors have learned from the old black
- mayors not to promise too much."
- </p>
- <p> A classic battle between old and new is the one shaping up
- in Detroit. Last week four-term Mayor Coleman Young, 71,
- finished first in the city's nonpartisan primary in a campaign
- in which opponents hammered at Detroit's drug and crime
- problems. (The mayor's image was also tarnished when paternity
- tests forced him to acknowledge having fathered a child out of
- wedlock six years ago.) If Young is getting on in years, it has
- not cramped his boisterous style. At a victory rally last week,
- he urged his jubilant supporters to "go home, get some rest and
- come back tomorrow to kick some ass!"
- </p>
- <p> Young's toe will be aimed at Tom Barrow, 40, a black
- businessman the mayor defeated four years ago by painting him
- as a pawn of white suburbanites. But Barrow has been blasting
- at Young's predilection for sparkling downtown development
- projects over measures to help the city's devastated
- neighborhoods. A cousin of the heavyweight champion Joe Louis,
- Barrow also derides the mayor as a holdover "from an old era"
- who naively granted sizable tax abatements to Chrysler and
- General Motors for plant construction projects that did not
- create as many jobs as promised or that cost taxpayers too much.
- Barrow promotes himself as wise in the ways of business and
- administration.
- </p>
- <p> A crop of hopefuls cut from the same professional cloth is
- lining up to challenge Washington's Marion Barry, who has been
- weakened by continuing allegations of drug abuse. Barry's
- dilemma worsened last week when a grand jury heard testimony
- from a witness who said she saw the mayor in a Virgin Islands
- hotel room last year with convicted drug dealer Charles Lewis
- and a quantity of cocaine. If Barry is forced to resign or
- decides not to run for a fourth term next year, Jesse Jackson
- may enter the race.
- </p>
- <p> Even the most successful black mayors can also fall prey to
- the arrogance and corruption that have dogged many of their
- white counterparts. Last week the city attorney of Los Angeles
- concluded that five-term Mayor Tom Bradley "clearly stepped into
- that gray area between factual innocence and a chargeable
- offense" after Bradley's phoning the city treasurer last March
- on behalf of a bank that employed him as an outside "adviser"
- led to a city deposit of $2 million. The city attorney also
- filed a civil suit accusing Bradley of failing to disclose on
- city conflict of interest forms six investments totaling up to
- $420,000. Bradley now faces the prospect of stiff civil
- penalties as well as continuing investigations into his
- financial affairs.
- </p>
- <p> David Dinkins has been in politics for almost as long as
- Bradley, but he seems newer to many New York voters. He has
- garnered far fewer headlines than Giuliani, who made a name for
- himself with high-profile cases against Mafia chiefs and Wall
- Street cheats. Last week elated black voters were greeting
- Dinkins' victory with tears and shouts of celebration. But some
- had also already reined in their expectations about what any
- mayor, black or white, can achieve. "With the Dinkins victory,
- there is hope," says Utrice Leid, managing editor of the City
- Sun, a Brooklyn-based newspaper aimed at a black readership.
- "But so much is desperately wrong."
- </p>
- <p>--Janice C. Simpson/New York, James Willwerth/Los Angeles and
- Don Winbush/Atlanta
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-