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- <text id=93TT0439>
- <title>
- Nov. 01, 1993: Bright City Lights
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Nov. 01, 1993 Howard Stern & Rush Limbaugh
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- POLITICS, Page 30
- Bright City Lights
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>In mayoral races, fence-mending "pragmatic idealists" take aim
- at crime, jobs and schools
- </p>
- <p>By JACK E. WHITE--Reported by Jordan Bonfante/Los Angeles, Michael Riley/Atlanta
- and Elizabeth Taylor/Cleveland
- </p>
- <p> The last revolution in America's city halls began in 1967 with
- the election of Carl Stokes as Cleveland's first black mayor.
- In the next two decades, hundreds of black mayors were swept
- into office by a tide of black pride, white-liberal optimism
- and the hope for an urban rebirth. As veterans of the civil-rights
- wars, these pioneering politicians saw themselves as crusaders
- for racial justice. For many voters, black and white, that was
- enough. As Jesse Jackson crowed after Harold Washington's 1983
- triumph in Chicago, "Our time has come!"
- </p>
- <p> And gone. A generation after Stokes' breakthrough, black mayors
- are no longer a novelty, and the high hopes that their arrival
- would usher in a new era of urban revival have long since faded.
- Hobbled by age, ill health and frustration, three of the longest-serving
- black mayors--L.A.'s Tom Bradley, Detroit's Coleman Young
- and Atlanta's Maynard Jackson--have declined to seek re-election.
- Several cities where black mayors once reigned--Chicago, Philadelphia
- and Los Angeles--have reverted to white control, and New York
- City may be about to join them. But the big turnover at city
- hall cuts across racial and party lines. Even in cities like
- Atlanta and Detroit, which are so heavily black that no serious
- white candidate even bothers to run, a new breed of black mayors
- is emerging. They have more in common with their white contemporaries
- than with their black predecessors. Call it the nonvision thing.
- </p>
- <p> It amounts to a back-to-basics approach to governing, putting
- more emphasis on delivering services, fighting crime and balancing
- the budget than delivering lofty speeches. Unlike earlier mayors
- who carried the combative style of the civil-rights movement
- into office, the new breed tends to be hands-on managers and
- conciliators who served long apprenticeships on city councils
- and in business. They tend to seek private-sector solutions
- to long-festering urban woes instead of advocating big programs
- from Washington. As Minneapolis Mayor Donald Fraser, who is
- stepping down after four terms, puts it, "pragmatism has pushed
- ideology out the window."
- </p>
- <p> Nowhere is the new style of urban leadership more apparent than
- in Cleveland, where Mayor Michael White, 42, is running for
- a second term. He cut his political teeth as a volunteer in
- Stokes' historic campaign, but his approach is vastly different.
- "Our generation traded jeans and large Afros for the use of
- the halls of power," says White. "We know that standing outside
- throwing bricks can only go so far."
- </p>
- <p> Since his election in 1989, the self-described "pragmatic idealist"
- has sought to persuade Clevelanders, from the white economic
- elite to the poorest blacks, that they have a mutual interest
- in the city's prosperity. One of the first calls White made
- after being sworn in was to Richard Pogue, a prominent white
- lawyer who headed the Greater Cleveland Growth Association.
- "I know you didn't support me," White told Pogue. "You know
- you didn't support me. But I'm the only mayor you'll have for
- four years. You're the only growth association I'll have. So,
- it's in everybody's interest to work together." The resulting
- cooperation with Pogue and the rest of Cleveland's blue-chip
- business community has paid off in a burst of economic development
- and thousands of jobs.
- </p>
- <p> Even so, some blacks, who make up 40% of the population, derisively
- call the mayor "White Mike" for spending so much time with business
- leaders. But White is willing and able to play hardball on behalf
- of the city's poor. When one of Cleveland's banks sought to
- merge with another Ohio institution, the city filed an objection
- to the action after months of negotiations about a development
- plan. White withdrew his city's opposition only after the bank
- agreed to invest $100 million in neighborhood development. "I
- tell the banks that it is right, moral and religious to invest
- in the neighborhoods of Cleveland," says White. "And then I
- say, `If you haven't been to church, are amoral and have no
- religion, I can guarantee you that by investing in Cleveland,
- you're going to make a lot of money.' "
- </p>
- <p> A moderate Republican version of that pragmatic approach is
- being tested in L.A., where newly elected Richard Riordan is
- trying to run the government in a businesslike manner. As befits
- the corporate lawyer and entrepreneur he was for 40 years before
- entering politics, Riordan's first priority has been to get
- his priorities straight. At the top of the list: putting more
- cops on the street. Riordan's rationale is that L.A. cannot
- work out of its economic slump unless it can attract more investment.
- And that, he says, will be impossible as long as the city is
- dangerous. Riordan pounds the message home at every opportunity:
- "We will not turn L.A. around until it is safe for business
- and safe enough to stop the flight of young families." With
- police chief Willie Williams, he has devised an ambitious plan
- that would add 3,600 officers to the 7,600-member force.
- </p>
- <p> Riordan believes the money to finance that change can be found
- by ruthlessly paring other city departments. As a private-sector
- problem solver, says Riordan, "I can approach things without
- an agenda. I can come in and solve problems without having to
- kiss ass with this interest group or the other." Despite the
- brusque rhetoric, his administration is as politically correct
- as any liberal Democrat's. Of his 199 appointments to city commissions,
- 97 are women, 33 are black, 27 are Latino and 14 are Asian,
- an almost perfect reflection of L.A.'s demographic breakdown.
- That reflects the surprising fact that Riordan got 45% of the
- Latino vote and 15% of the black vote against Democrat Michael
- Woo, a left-leaning former city council member who ran in former
- Mayor Bradley's footsteps.
- </p>
- <p> So far the pragmatic approach has been most successful in cities
- where white voters are in the majority. In two upcoming elections,
- the strategy is being tried by black candidates in heavily black
- cities that have long been ruled by legendary urban chieftains:
- Detroit and Atlanta.
- </p>
- <p> The contest in Detroit is an abrasive referendum on Coleman
- Young's often combative 20 years ruling a city marked by chronic
- unemployment and rampant crime. Dennis Archer, a 51-year-old
- former state supreme-court justice, is trying to put together
- a biracial coalition on the Michael White model, while Sharon
- McPhail, a former local prosecutor, is running with Young's
- endorsement. She has appealed to the sentiments of some of the
- city's 75% black population by painting Archer as the favorite
- of suburban whites. Archer's reply is right out of the pragmatist
- playbook. Says he: "I do have a cooperative relationship with
- those who live outside the city. Anybody thinking about leading
- this city needs that kind of relationship."
- </p>
- <p> In contrast, the virtual three-way race to succeed Maynard Jackson
- has been conducted with almost classic Southern politeness,
- perhaps because Atlanta is in such bad shape. The city's population
- has dwindled from 495,000 in 1970 to 394,000, as the middle
- class of both races fled to the suburbs, leaving behind a large
- residue of poor people. In addition, preparations for the 1996
- Summer Olympics are behind schedule.
- </p>
- <p> Both front runner Bill Campbell, a gregarious city councilman,
- and his main opponent, former Fulton County commission chairman
- Michael Lomax, are running as nonideological innovators. Campbell
- has promised to "rip the system apart and replace it with something
- that works," in part by shifting more cops to foot and bicycle
- patrols in high-crime areas and refinancing municipal debts.
- Lomax, an aloof former English professor, has called for the
- privatization of such city landmarks as the Omni arena to raise
- revenue to help finance his civic programs. If elected, he says
- he'll put up a billboard for Olympic visitors near the airport
- reading "Welcome to Atlanta--a real city with real problems
- and real people working real hard everyday to solve them." That
- is a description of politics at its best, with or without a
- vision.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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