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Politics > Politics & Prejudices

Bing and beyond

 

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Here's what was most unusual about last week's election for mayor of Detroit. Not the mildly surprising result. Not the tiny turnout. Not the fact that someone with no political experience was elected to the city's top job for the first time since 1890.

No, the amazing thing was that this was an old-fashioned, normal, decent election. No race-baiting. No talk about who was black enough. No bashing the suburbs. Very little bad behavior at all, from the candidates, anyway. What this came down to was a contest between two decent professional men who wanted to tackle the risky task of trying to make things better in our stricken and troubled city.

The voters, those few who did vote, chose Dave Bing, the 65-year-old basketball star turned successful businessman. Why they did so was, I think, clear. They had seen all they wanted of dysfunction in City Hall, from the criminal regime of Kwame Kilpatrick to the near-paralysis caused by the antics of Monica Conyers. Nobody blamed Ken Cockrel Jr. for this. My guess is, if the voters had been asked whether he was a good, decent and honorable man, the results would have been much the same as the vote on whether to revise the city charter — 78 percent yes.

But what doomed him was the failure to get the regional plan to renovate Cobo Center done, with council first approving and then disapproving it, after some spiteful sabotage by the venomous and now widely despised Monica. Nobody blamed Cockrel for her buffoonery, but it added to the perception that he couldn't corral the gang of idiots on the council and make them function.

Finally, Freman Hendrix's 11th-hour endorsement really did the trick. Hendrix is a classic in politics — a supremely competent player who somehow lacks the electoral appeal to win the top prize. But he was a close third in the primary, and commanded enough respect among a certain group of voters to make the difference.

As a result, at the last minute, virtually all the undecided swung to Bing, who won a close, but clear, overall victory.

None of that really matters, however. What matters is what happens now.

We all need to hope that Dave Bing turns out to be the greatest mayor in the history of this city. The stakes are high, and the situation is that desperate. I admire the little bit I know about Bing. As I have said, if I had been eligible, I would have voted for Ken Cockrel Jr., primarily because he has experience in government.

Nothing against Bing, but we've been burned more than once before by electing officials with no political background. Seven years ago, we elected a brilliant and charismatic governor with no executive or legislative experience, and Jennifer Granholm has been an utter failure at leading decisively and getting it done.

There have been exceptions, however; Dwight D. Eisenhower was a competent president despite a lack of political experience. Dennis Archer was a good mayor who had never run for any partisan office before — though he had run political campaigns.

Bing built up a successful business in Detroit after his basketball playing days ended in 1978. That took a lot of work and wasn't a guaranteed success. He played in an era when salaries were far smaller than today — in 1970, for example, he made $90,000.

He must have had some diplomatic and organizational smarts, which are essential. Apart from the ability to persuade and to make the hard calls, one of the main secrets of governing is to get people in key jobs who know more about their areas of expertise than you do.

Bing's first moves after the election seemed sensible, as the mayor-elect appointed a transition "turnaround team" led by Freman Hendrix, Denise Ilitch and a Ford retiree named Joe Walsh. This is not your normal "transition team," but a group designed to study the books and "look at policies, procedures, and the best way of running city government."

Radical reforms are needed, and the city has little time and less margin for error. The official unemployment rate is 23 percent; the real rate much higher. The problems don't stop, from the decaying infrastructure to the fact that this is a city that once had 2 million people and now has much less than half that.

Most urgent of all is solving the $300 million budget deficit. After that, Bing and the rest of the city have to face the fact that the economy is almost certainly going to get worse before it gets better.

General Motors is on the brink of bankruptcy. More jobs in the city will be lost whether it goes through that difficult process or not. L. Brooks Patterson and his mini-me, Mike Bishop, the Republican majority leader in the state Senate, are talking openly about stealing the North American International Auto Show away to the Rock Financial Center, probably as early as next January.

So with Detroit way behind deep in the fourth quarter, we have to put our faith in the Hall of Famer who just came off the bench. Somehow, for some crazy reason, I am optimistic.

Because I still believe in this town. Kwame Kenyatta, the city councilman, won, hands down, the statesmanship award of the week. He'd been talking about running for the full four-year term as mayor. The day after the special election, he pulled out. "Our people are battle-fatigued right now. It's time for Detroit to pull together," he said.

A number of other potential candidates, including even Sharon McPhail, said they wouldn't challenge Bing either. By the time you read this, Cockrel will have had to decide whether to try again. I hope he doesn't, frankly. He can do more good where he is, as a partner in getting the necessary reforms enacted. In any event, Cockrel started the healing process, and restored dignity and decency and credibility to the office of mayor.

Over at Wayne State University, where Cockrel got his degree and where I teach journalism, there is a very simple word for the way he is regarded by those who know him: Proud.

After he won last week, Bing, who grew up in Washington, D.C., told The Washington Post, "We've got a city where a lot of people don't even hope or dream anymore." He added, "I still dream. I dream that this city can be what it was before I even got here." Inspiring people to dream is important.

But we should all stop dreaming that Detroit will someday be "what it was." It won't ever be — and that's not all bad. Detroit, in what we think of as its Golden Age, the city romanticized by old white people in Livonia, was far from perfect. It was racist and bigoted and polluted. What we need is a new model that works, and that in some sense includes everyone in the area.

Impossible? Ridiculously idealistic? Have you forgotten who is president of the United States? Last Saturday night, amid the stunning beauty of the Fox Theatre, Leonard Cohen, the greatest poet of our age, sang across the generations to a sold-out audience.

"There's a crack, there's a crack in everything," that timeless voice rasped. "That's how the light gets in."

Most Detroiters don't know their city has a motto that's more than two centuries old. Speramus meliora. Resurget cineribus. Or in our tongue: We hope for better things. It will rise from the ashes.

It will, too, if we make it so.

Jack Lessenberry opines weekly for Metro Times. Contact him at letters@metrotimes.com.

Comments

Report this comment On 5/13/2009 11:31:26 AM, Thrasher said:

Will someone please convince Jack to retire!!! Please offer him a weekend forever in a Sunrise Home in Montana....Enough already!! Leonard Cohen is an inflated self absorbed ventriloquist like Jack over the hill twit. The greatest poet of our age ..lol,lol, Dylan already confirmed Smokey Robinson was and of course Nikki Giovanni and Sonia Sanchez would blow away a stif like Cohen.. Anyway I understand why Cockrel is so boring he was a one of Jack's students. The voter turnout in Detroit was a classic example of 2 margainal candidates that did not warrant a hugh turnout..Voters in the city are quite smart in this regard.They know when 2 stiffs are in the joint.. Of course Jack returned to his usual race rant script against the Black woman on the city council some things will never change with 2nd rate hacks like Jack.. Bing is not the answer of course nor was Cockrel..I am still waiting for the right person to surface...I better hurry up and move to the city..I hate to be late for my own party....lol,lol,lol

Report this comment On 5/13/2009 12:35:30 PM, eltury said:

Check out the Onion today.

Report this comment On 5/13/2009 12:50:33 PM, Thrasher said:

A progressive post election analysis: 1. Bing and Cockrelare both average at best candidates and the main reason for the low voter turn out..Voters were not given much of a selection... 2. Cobo Center Saga had nothing to do with Cockrel's 2nd place finish besides being an average candidate his inability to handle Monica and his failure to convince the DCC to bypass the charter and have only one election was fatal and displayed his shallow leadership skills. The Cobo saga was a much to do about nothing diversion..Truth is GM should pay for any modernization of Cobo Center and Monica was correct about Federal Stimulous Funds... 3. Freeman's endorsement of Bing was worthless and impotent clearly if he could not convince voters to vote him over Bing and Cockrel of course his endorsement was worthless.. 4. The governor's lack of leadership skills and the tired racist chants of Brooks Patterson made many voters reject Cockrel since he was a doormat for both Grandholm and Brooks...Bing at least is his own man.. 5.Fact is Bing is out of his element tired old caretaker type whose best days bounced away years ago..Bing does not represent the future but nothing more than a stale placeholder..The city needs a young turk not a KK clone but a young missle capable of taking down tired old slugs like Jack, Bing, Brooks, Jennifer and the cadre of brain dead CEO's who have made our state a funeral home and a 3rd world venue...The city can hold out a little longer for this icon to emerge..I think I know who it is.. To be continued:......

Report this comment On 5/13/2009 2:08:54 PM, Woodwards Friend said:

Jack, You (rightly) criticize Monica for her antics over the Cobo deal but then in your very next paragraph you praise Freman Hendrix for his competence even though he played the same desperate game of chicken over Cobo Hall. Why does Hendrix keep getting these free passes? His dismal campaign in 2005 allowed Team Kilpatrick to snatch victory from the jaws of defeat. His grandstanding on Cobo was beyond reckless. Aside from assuring the auto show remains an international event, the Cobo deal would have written off 5% of the city's structural deficit without sacrificing a signal service or program. There’s no gray area on that one. That his stand on Cobo gave credence gave political cover to the same clay-eaters who called him "Helmut" four years ago makes his behavior that much more repugnant. Freman Hendrix is as third-rate as they come. WF http://www.dyspathy.com

Report this comment On 5/13/2009 4:15:23 PM, Thrasher said:

Who speaks up and on behalf of the DPS and its students? I found the remarks made by US Education Secretary Arne Duncan deplorable and tragic on so many layers. Duncan's script at Detroit Cody was out of order , his statement that DPS is at ground zero is a direct slap in the face to those who give their heart and soul for the academic achievement of students in Detroit's public school. Duncan's indictment was over the top and neither accurate nor conducive for making the DPS a model and a candidate for federal educational funds recently approved by congress. Duncan's advice to the Detroit's new mayor to take over the school district has no foundation nor demonstrable merit . It is another empty gesture for the chatter class. Duncan's alleged concern for urban school districts is a farce since his own children do not attend DC's public schools. Duncan is the classical liberal type which has contributed in part to the decay in our urban school districts and the culture at large. I hope the parents, educators and administrators' who were present at Duncan's remarks to today stood up and rejected his shallow and inaccurate remarks about the DPS and its students. They deserved better from the nation's educational guru.

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