Atlanta's Next Mayor Could Be White

digg Share this on Facebook Huffpost - Atlanta's Next Mayor Could Be White stumble reddit del.ico.us RSS

ERRIN HAINES | 08/31/09 07:00 PM | AP

What's Your Reaction?
Atlanta

ATLANTA — The city that became a post-civil rights movement emblem of the political power held by African-Americans could have a white mayor for the first time in a generation – a possibility that has some in the black community scrambling to hold on to City Hall.

Atlanta Councilwoman Mary Norwood, who is white, is one of the front-runners for the Nov. 3 election, along with City Council President Lisa Borders and state Sen. Kasim Reed, both of whom are black.

All three have bristled at a racially charged e-mail circulated by a black leadership group calling for Norwood's defeat before a possible runoff. If the black candidates split the African-American vote, Norwood may find herself in a runoff.

"I suspect we will see high levels of racial polarization," said University of Georgia political science professor Charles Bullock. "This e-mail may have been used to promote turnout, to get higher levels of participation from the black community. But it could also spark higher levels of participation in the white community. It's a scare tactic."

Atlanta, which has billed itself as "the city too busy to hate," elected Maynard Jackson as its first black mayor in 1973. Blacks who had won the right to vote less than a decade earlier rallied behind Jackson, who forced the city's white business elite to open their doors to minorities and adopted strict affirmative action policies.

His election solidified the voting power of urban blacks, and the city has elected black mayors since. And while blacks have been the majority population and voting bloc in the city for decades, the demographics have changed in recent years.

A large voting bloc – residents in the city's public housing – was erased as Atlanta's crumbling projects were demolished over the past decade. And young professionals, black and white, have flocked to opportunity in the city.

In 2000, Atlanta was 33 percent white and 61 percent black. In 2007, the numbers were 38 percent white and 57 percent black, according to the U.S. Census.

Story continues below

In addition, blacks may no longer feel obligated to elect a black mayor, said William Boone, a political science professor at Clark Atlanta University and co-author of the racially-charged e-mail.

"You have a young generation of blacks – not native to Atlanta – who don't necessarily see that as something that has to happen," Boone said. "They may be staking their vote on matters more critical than race."

In the memo, Boone and Keith Jennings – also a political science professor at Clark Atlanta – urge black voters to rally behind Borders, whose grandfather desegregated the city's police force and who was recently endorsed by the city's black clergy, to prevent a runoff that could hand Norwood a victory.

The incendiary and widely circulated e-mail sent in late August to black Atlantans specifically noted Norwood's race.

"Time is of the essence because in order to defeat a Norwood (white) mayoral candidacy we have to get out now and work in a manner to defeat her without a runoff, and the key is a significant Black turnout in the general election," the message sent by the Black Leadership Forum reads.

"There is an unstated assumption that having a black mayor in Atlanta is equal to having a black social, economic and political agenda or at least someone in office who would be sensitive to that agenda if not a full promoter of that agenda ... A black agenda would better enable us to have our interests respected by and our influence realized in any administration."

Borders is seen as the more formidable challenger to Norwood, but Reed, an Atlanta attorney who ran current Mayor Shirley Franklin's two successful campaigns, was recently endorsed by civil rights icon and former Mayor Andrew Young and enjoys support from the city's young, black professional community.

They and Norwood, a former radio executive who also heads an automated telephone call business, are among 13 mayoral candidates – at least four of them white. Franklin, who became the city's first female chief executive in 2002, is limited to two consecutive terms and will finish her second with mixed reviews.

Borders, Norwood and Reed have all denounced the Black Leadership Forum's e-mail and attempted to shift the conversation away from race.

Norwood, who so far has not been embraced by any prominent black Atlantans, would be the first white woman to run the city. For eight years, the petite, scrappy 57-year-old has held a citywide post on the 16-member Atlanta council, where she is one of five white members. She said her approach is more on results than race.

"We all come in our packages," she said. "This is the package I got."

Not that Norwood is averse to using racial symbolism. Her campaign headquarters is in the former offices of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, co-founded by the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. in 1957. And when she won support from the city's firefighters, she announced the endorsement from a shuttered fire station in the heavily black West End neighborhood, home to some of the nation's best-known historically black colleges.

David Bositis of the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies in Washington said cities with large black populations like Gary, Ind., Philadelphia, Baltimore and St. Louis have all had white mayors in recent years.

"African-Americans are very pragmatic. When they look at politics, they look at what's going to work," Bositis said. "It's perfectly fine if a white mayor gets elected with black support. On the other hand, it's not a good sign if you have ... a white candidate getting elected with white votes. It's an indication of polarization."

___

On the Net:

Lisa Borders: http://www.bordersforatlanta.com

Mary Norwood: http://www.marynorwoodformayor.com

Kasim Reed: http://www.kasimreed.com

ATLANTA — The city that became a post-civil rights movement emblem of the political power held by African-Americans could have a white mayor for the first time in a generation – a possibil...
ATLANTA — The city that became a post-civil rights movement emblem of the political power held by African-Americans could have a white mayor for the first time in a generation – a possibil...
Report Corrections
 
Comments
29
Pending Comments
0
iPhone App Promo

Want to reply to a comment? Hint: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to

View Comments:
Page: 1 2 Next › Last » (2 pages total)
- sbmulqueen I'm a Fan of sbmulqueen 48 fans permalink
photo

Here's an update from today's AJC - the authors (mentioned in this post) are two Clark Atlanta professors and are - surprise! - blaming the media for misleading coverage. Press conference today!

http://www.ajc.com/news/atlanta/authors-of-atlanta-black-128166.html

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:57 AM on 09/01/2009
- Oeht I'm a Fan of Oeht permalink

As someone who has lived in SW Atl for the last 10 years, black candidates have no entitlement to being elected Mayor. Shirley Franklin has been an embarassment. Services have been cut (brownouts), even though taxes have been raised to bring everyone back to work. Water bills have been increased by more than 27% in the last year, yet the City Auditor found out today the Watershed Dept. was badly managing customer's bills.

With that being said, black, white, blue or purple, the most experienced person should be the next Mayor. Mary Norwood is not that person. I don't trust her to lead this place from the terrible state that it is in. She hasn't authored much legislation, not visible in committee meetings, and many times sits on the fence when it comes to tough choices. A perfect is example is voting no for the recent property tax increase when she found out that there were enough votes for it to pass. She doesn't want to discuss the city's finances, and says she doesn't trust them, even though she voted for a 3rd party to audit the books. She's just too political and calculated for my tastes. I don't know who I'll vote for, but I know who I won't be voting for.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:06 AM on 09/01/2009
photo

With the “Black Mayor first” approach there is an unstated assumption that having a black mayor in Atlanta is equal to having a black social, economic and political agenda or at least someone in office who would be sensitive to that agenda if not a full promoter of that agenda; This is a statement put out by the Black Leadership Forum. Put the word "white" in place of the word black. Now what do you think?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:15 PM on 08/31/2009
photo

This Country has about a 15% African American population, and elected a half black, half white President. That just goes to show you the majority of the population was not looking at skin color.

We Can Do It, Yes We Can.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:29 PM on 08/31/2009
photo

Wow, people may elect someone with integrity and character. Seems like the media will try to make it a race issue.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:15 PM on 08/31/2009
- sbmulqueen I'm a Fan of sbmulqueen 48 fans permalink
photo

I see from your profile you're from the South - not sure if that's ATL, but I can tell you, I don't think any of these candidates have the character necessary to fix what's wrong with this city.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:28 PM on 08/31/2009
photo

We're in the same boat in NOLA. I feel your pain. Hopefully next year will be the year when things turn around for all races. There is no room for corruption in politics. We will no longer tolerate it. The Feds are taking corrupt politicians down left and right over here.
Good luck.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:30 AM on 09/01/2009
- chulanow I'm a Fan of chulanow 13 fans permalink

Let's hope Atlanta is brave enough to elect a White Mayor.....just as the US was brave enough to elect a Black President.

That being said......we really should be evaluating people based on their experience and character vs. ethnicity.

If this lady is the best candidate for Atlanta then Democrats should stand behind her....and keep Atlanta going forward.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:25 PM on 08/31/2009

Many of you do not live in Atlanta and do not know the complete story. The article does not give the full jest of the issue. The black community group is named "The Black Leadership Forum". http://www.blackleadershipforum.org/ The memo outlines their agenda to have a black mayor "at all cost". It reasonably be can be surmised from the memo that being black is the only factor in choosing a mayor regardless of the abilities they hold. Check out the Atlanta Journal Constitution's article which reprints the memo: http://blogs.ajc.com/political-insider-jim-galloway/2009/08/27/the-memo-about-to-shake-the-atlanta-mayors-race/ Racism is a human condition regardless if you are black or white. Black controlled government is no different than white controlled government. Absolute power corrupts absolutely. In Atlanta whites have certainly gotten a taste of how it feels to be discriminated against especially when trying to get a job in black controlled government offices. We all have much to learn.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:22 PM on 08/31/2009
- sbmulqueen I'm a Fan of sbmulqueen 48 fans permalink
photo

I agree with you daveinatl, as I too am in the city of Atlanta (vs OTP), and the politics here really have as much to do with race as geography and socioeconomic position. South Atlanta is far different than North Atlanta.

Another facet in this race is that this will be the first mayoral election since the city has completely torn down its once-enormous housing projects (I believe Atlanta was the first city with projects and also had the most). What the housing projects did (among other things, obviously) is concentrate a lot of black voters in one place. The powers that be would mobilize this group – take buses to polls, visit frequently, etc. – and this virtually guaranteed at least 10k votes – an insurmountable edge. Since the city has torn the projects down in an effort to create more livable space and also provide more “housing choice” options, this voting block has been disbursed – some out of the city, some in the city but with no effective way to reach them en masse. AJC did an interesting piece about this too.

http://blogs.ajc.com/political-insider-jim-galloway/2009/07/19/shifting-ground-in-the-race-for-mayor-of-atlanta/

Frankly, I'm not thrilled with either front-runners as they have been part of the big problems here and we need solutions.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:25 PM on 08/31/2009
- jws2346 I'm a Fan of jws2346 41 fans permalink

Man, I'll be glad when it's not news worthy when an elected official is white, black, male, female or what kind of sexual preference he or she has. I just want someone honest and capable, has integrity and represents, to the best of their ability, this great country and the people that voted them into office.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:14 PM on 08/31/2009
- blastocyst I'm a Fan of blastocyst 34 fans permalink

"Atlanta: The City Too Busy To Hate".

May've been true once but after Brian Nichols judge and civilian murdering rampage in '05 Atlanta can at least be called: 'The City Too Busy/Too Confused To Protect it's Citizenry'.
Atlanta grew too big too fast. Now with the collapse of the residential and commercial real-estate market, real unemployment approaching 17% in the aggregate in the city it has become apparent that Atlanta will be plagued by urban blight/decay much in the way that its northern counterparts; i.e.: Philly, NYC, Detroit, St. Louis etc. have been for decades.

Too big
Too fast
Too busy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:04 PM on 08/31/2009

Why are caucasians continually referred to by the slang term, WHITE, while ALL other races are referred to in the Politally Correct manner: Asian, Latino, Hespanic, African/American, etc.?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:03 PM on 08/31/2009
- keerod76 I'm a Fan of keerod76 3 fans permalink
photo

Coming from someone who is both black and a former resident of the ATL, blacks aren't entitled to be mayor of that city. And with the sorry way Shirley Franklin's term is ending, it won't be much of a surprise if whites (and blacks) vote for Norwood.

balmer.typepad.com/keithsmooth
The Dark Prince of Satire

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:00 PM on 08/31/2009
photo

whatever happened to judging a person by the content of their character instead of by the color of their skin?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:00 PM on 08/31/2009
- 3Dubyadot I'm a Fan of 3Dubyadot 13 fans permalink
photo

One word. Obama.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:53 PM on 08/31/2009
- 3Dubyadot I'm a Fan of 3Dubyadot 13 fans permalink
photo

If white people were talking like this about the fear of having a black mayor, the title would read "Racism In The Old South". " a group of black community leaders is urging black voters to rally behind Borders, whose grandfather desegregated the city's police force and who was recently endorsed by the city's black clergy, to prevent a runoff that could hand Norwood a victory."
"It's perfectly fine if a white mayor gets elected with black support. On the other hand, it's not a good sign if you have ... a white candidate getting elected with white votes. It's an indication of polarization."
"African-Americans could have a white mayor for the first time in a generation – a possibility that has some in the black community scrambling to hold on to City Hall."
"Time is of the essence because in order to defeat a Norwood (white) mayoral candidacy we have to get out now and work in a manner to defeat her without a runoff, and the key is a significant Black turnout in the general election" a message from the Black Leadership Forum reads.

What is wrong with these people? I guess jesse or al will show up next, to put their two cents in.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:57 PM on 08/31/2009

SO!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:56 PM on 08/31/2009
- kcflood I'm a Fan of kcflood 3 fans permalink
photo

What ever happened to "the best candidate should win" ?

Think about this in reverse. If white people were openly scrambling to make sure a black person isn't elected, we'd call it racism... Whats the double standard here?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:55 PM on 08/31/2009
Page: 1 2 Next › Last » (2 pages total)
Comments are closed for this entry

 You must be logged in to comment. Log in  or connect with 

Connect