My Endorsement for President of the Board of Aldermen
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Regular readers know that I love incumbents to be challenged — nothing worse than someone getting elected for a four-year term simply due to the lack of a challenger. I’m also fond of giving the new guy a chance, especially if the incumbent has been in that office a while. So where am I on the race for President of the Board of Aldermen? I’m not a huge booster of incumbent Jim Shrewsbury but I am opposed to Lewis Reed. Let me explain.
I’m going to go right for big issue — race! I personally don’t vote on race and would hope that nobody does. Sadly, the reality is that white & black voters alike do too often vote on race. And candidates on both sides can sometimes use that to their advantage. From PubDef this morning:
Reed is trying to become the first African-American ever elected President of the Board of Aldermen and the first black to unseat a white incumbent in a citywide election in 25 years.
Funny, I thought Reed was trying to become a better President of the Board of Aldermen? I’ve seen similiar statements elsewhere which makes the campaign about race, not city-wide issues. From the St. Louis American on January 3rd:
If Reed beats Shrewsbury on March 6, he and Green would form an African-American majority on E & A. This would be the second time in the city’s history that blacks formed a majority on the city’s chief fiscal board. From 1993 to 1997, Bosley was mayor and Virvus Jones was the city’s first black comptroller.
I may be an exception, but I really don’t care what the race is of my elected officials as long as they are representing the interests of the city. However, I have commented that our elected officials are not fully representative as we do not have any asian or latino representation as well as many of the other ethnicities that make up our population. Everything is black vs. white.
For a number of years now we’ve had a white majority on E&A with Slay & Shrewsbury but that has seemed to make little difference in the final outcome of votes. All three have shown a willingness to vote with or against the others as it should be. Shrewsbury has twice ran for Comptroller against black candidates and lost.
At some point our city must address the issue of race. A city-wide election between a white candidate and a black candidate is not the time to do that. Mayor Slay needs to pick a non-election year and hold some on-going forums to hash out issues and concerns over race. During the election cycle a white candidate simply cannot say the black candidate is taking the black vote for granted and the black candidate can’t help sounding as though the only reason they are running is to shift racial power at city hall.
Both Jim Shrewsbury and Lewis Reed have supporters on their sides that gives me reason to doubt both. Shrewsbury has some of the white good-ole-boy network in his corner while Reed has both black & white political insiders in his corner. Jennifer ‘Drive-Thru’ Florida’s early backing of Reed turned me off right away. Ald. Phyllis ‘Raze Bohemien Hill’ Young supporting Shrewsbury is equally offensive. There are some people, elected & non-elected, backing each candidate that I like and respect so this does little to help in a decision.
Both candidates are political creatures. Shrewsbury has been in the game longer than Reed giving him some more experience, quite possibly a bad thing. Shrewsbury as the incumbent came into the race with a huge advantage — only needing to prove why he should remain. Reed’s task became having to prove why we should dump Shrewsbury and select him, no easy thing to do. As a result, his campaign has gone to the negative side while Shrewsbury has had the comfort of taking the high road in most cases.
St. Louis Oracle, on his site, had an interesting post about role reversal in this contest, concluding with:
So, in this classic match up, the slick black dude is the proponent of Big Business, tax cuts for the rich, and “trickle-down†economics, while the little nerdy white guy is the true representative of ordinary people. Go figure.
Oracle has also endorsed Shrewsbury, here is a quote from his endorsement:
Shrewsbury is a principled, matter-of-fact, no-nonsense guy who doesn’t “showboat†to the media. Reed has criticized Shrewsbury’s lack of “vision,†without really saying what that means. The contrast is reminiscent of that between Former Mayor Vince Schoemehl and Former County Executive Gene McNary. In describing their joint efforts for the region in the 1980s, Schoemehl explained that McNary “sold the steak,†while Schoemehl “sold the sizzle.†Notably, sizzle-selling Schoemehl’s ward organization backs Reed. But the “vision†thing doesn’t resonate with me. If “vision†means new proposals and new ideas, let’s see them! Reed offers hardly any specifics. The appeal seems to be an attempt to tap into the “style over substance†trend that is infecting society. I don’t buy it.
My reality is that I don’t have high expectations for the issues that matter to me, such as a new zoning code, to be any different regardless of who wins. However, I think I have a better chance of getting Jim Shrewsbury to listen and be responsive. He may not look it, but in many respects he is quite progressive minded. Reed simply has not impressed me to this point and I have no incentive to elect a black man to the position just for the sake of doing so. Tomorrow vote to re-elect Jim Shrewsbury.