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News
Mayor's Race In Cleveland
Aired October 29, 2001
With no incumbent on the ballot, voters in Cleveland
will choose a new mayor Tuesday for the first time since 1989. Both candidates
are liberal democrats in their forties. Both say if elected they'll improve
education and access to healthcare. But with an electorate distracted
by terrorist attacks and no clear distinctions between the candidates,
for some racial differences may be a deciding factor. From member station
90.3 WCPN®, Janet Babin reports.
Janet BabinWhile the Cuyahoga River is perhaps
best known for catching fire in the 1960s, many Clevelanders see it as
a stubborn dividing line: most African Americans live east of the river.
The city's west side is overwhelmingly white. Although the mayoral candidates
don't campaign on it, and don't want to talk about it, they're finding
support largely split along the old River lines. For Urban radio talk
show host Maraafu Ojo, the electoral choice for his east side neighbors
is clear.
Maraafu OjoWe can't allow city hall going
back to white folks, that's how this thing is gonna be sold.
JBThe city's political landscape changed
dramatically this summer when Cleveland's second black Mayor, Michael
White announced he wouldn't seek a fourth term. Serving the longest of
any Cleveland Mayor, White facilitated the city's partial comeback. What
he failed to do was groom a successor.
To fill that open slot, 10 mayoral hopefuls flooded last
month's primary election, but the city's black political insiders didn't
see a clear frontrunner. They appealed to a number of prominent African-American
politicians to run, including Congresswoman Stephanie Tubbs Jones. All
declined.
Tubbs Jones and other black leaders ended up endorsing
a newcomer, Raymond Pierce; a former Clinton Administration appointee
who's never held elective office. Congresswoman Tubbs Jones downplayed
the fact that Pierce is political neophyte:
Stephanie Tubbs JonesHolding a prior elected
office is not a prerequisite to becoming Mayor of the city of Cleveland.
Hillary Clinton never held public office and she's the Senator of the
state of New York.
JBBut Cleveland State University Professor
Ron Bush says Raymond Pierce's lack of political experience points to
a sense of desperation among members of Cleveland's political machine.
Ron BushThe black population in the city,
like the black population in the U.S., is the most homogenous group of
Democratic Party supporters. The fact that we have a candidate running
today as a mayoral candidate - Mr. Pierce - who has virtually no elected
experience, suggest that somebody wanted a black candidate.
JBIn contrast, Pierce opponent Jane Campbell
is a veteran politician. She shrewdly held off on a decision to run for
Mayor until finding out who she'd be running against.
Campbell's campaign has risen more than three times as
much as her opponent's. She carries the support of Cleveland's business
interests, and most of its labor unions.
Campbell, who is white, avoids discussions of race and
ethnicity, but after her victory in the primary, she made sure the stage
was filled with prominent African American ministers, a gamut for support
east of the river. "J", a well-known gospel radio host led her winning
chant.
"J"When I say Jane, you say Campbell...
Jane... Campbell... Jane... when I say mayor...
Jane CampbellMy commitment to the African-American
community is unwavering, it is part of who I am.
JBBut Pierce paints Campbell as a suburban
socialite who wants to use the Mayor's office as a steppingstone to the
Governor's Mansion. He says he's working hard to assure west side voters
that he'll represent them fairly.
Raymond PierceThat's never an issue for African
Americans; it always seems to be an issue for non-African Americans. My
administration will be diverse.
JBCleveland's current Mayor was successful
in part because he was able to represent interests on both sides of the
river. While the candidates try hard to avoid discussing the racial divide,
their advisors can't, and they say neither candidate will be able to win
without crossover votes from the other's political base. For NPR news,
I'm Janet Babin in Cleveland.
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