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Politics Politics Beat Blog

Sources Of Support

Though a high degree of personal ambition and perhaps even an over-proportioned ego are known concomitants of many — nay, most — politicians, candidates for public office still like to maintain that their electioneering is a response to the request of others or to an urgent public need. Or to both.

For those who do well in politics, there is probable substance to such claims.

In the Shelby County mayor’s race, state Representative Larry Scroggs, so far the only Republican candidate, was clearly drafted by the local party leadership, desperate to find a conventionally acceptable standard-bearer.

Bartlett banker Harold Byrd, a Democratic candidate whose mayoral race was discussed at some length in this space last week, is known, liked, and respected in enough local political, business, and civic circles that it would be strange if he weren’t asked to consider public office.

Ditto with Shelby Count Public Defender A C Wharton. And state Representative Carol Chumney no doubt has her share of such boosters as well, though her reasons for running — and for staying in when others, mystified at her persistence, are suggesting she drop out — owe a good deal to the science of public-opinion research. To her pollster, in short.

Wharton: “Early On” Got Harold Ford’s Support

First, a clarification from the Shelby County public defender as to some of the sources of his own encouragement.

There has been a good deal of word-of-mouth and informed speculation concerning the likelihood that Wharton will have stout support in the Democratic primary from Harold Ford Sr., the former longtime congressman and political kingmaker who is now a consultant and sometime resident of Florida but still regarded as a major force in Memphis and Shelby County elections.

Those reports are now duly confirmed by Wharton, who, when asked in an interview this week if he had received explicit assurances of firm support from the former congressmen, said, “Early on. Yes.”

Less well known — at least partly because Wharton is reluctant to discuss the circumstances — is that Wharton’s resolve owes much to encouragement from the former congressman’s brother, the late Shelby County Commissioner James Ford.

“Everybody will be bringing in Dr. Ford as an excuse for everything they intend to do,” Wharton offers semiseriously as one reason why, without some prodding, he has preferred so far not to mention a conversation that occurred shortly before the commissioner’s death. Reasons of delicacy have been another consideration.

Wharton also offered some clarification of his pre-announcement conversations with Bobby Lanier, a major Wharton strategist now and a former chief assistant to outgoing Mayor Jim Rout, a Republican. When rumors started last year concerning Rout’s possible withdrawal from a reelection effort, he called Lanier several times to find out more.

“You should consider it [a mayor’s race] yourself,” Wharton says he was told by Lanier when the shape of Rout’s ultimate decision became obvious, and that suggestion rapidly escalated into an offer of support. Shortly thereafter Lanier became Wharton’s chief mover and shaker, which he remains today.

(The public defender insists that no assurances have been given Lanier about his future status and that no conversations about it have even been held.)

Expressing concern that a misconception might exist about his conversations last year with current opponent Byrd, Wharton said the banker asked him to discuss a possible Byrd candidacy when it was still pending and that — though “uncomfortable” because of his formal status as a Rout appointee — he acceded reluctantly.

Wharton said categorically, “I was never asked about my own possible future intentions, and I never said I would support Harold,” though he acknowledged that Byrd might have drawn an inference from the mere fact of the conversation.

So Why Does Carol Chumney Stay In?

Though he likes to specialize in business and marketing research, Memphis pollster Berge Yacoubian has had his share of name political clients — Bob Clement, Robin Beard, Mike Cody, Otis Higgs come to mind — and if it seems to have worked out that he’s had more underdogs than not, that’s how he likes it.

Republican Beard defied the odds and unseated a congressional incumbent in 1972, then was able to survive the Democratic landslide during the Watergate year of 1974. No longer advised by Yacoubian, he lost a Senate bid in 1982 against then incumbent Jim Sasser. Part of the problem, thinks Yacoubian, was that Beard overlooked issues in favor of negative attack ads that backfired.

In fact, he sees part of his job as helping candidates prepare not only for election but for what comes next if all goes well. “Unlike other consultants, whom I will not name, I do not want to elect someone who can’t govern,” he says. Nor does he want his advisees to make nice, especially. “Some candidates want to be so loved they can’t act,” he says disdainfully.

Yacoubian says he prefers to leave the spotlight to his candidates, the most prominent of whom at the moment is state Representative Carol Chumney.

Of all the candidates for mayor, Chumney is probably the most direct in pressing specific issues. And, despite being told frequently by friend and foe alike that she has little chance of being elected and should consider switching to another race while she can, Chumney resolutely declines to do so.

A look at a survey done by Yacoubian in October provides some insight into both these circumstances.

The most overwhelmingly approved three issues noted by Yacoubian in a table entitled “What Voters Want” are: 1) the passage of “laws to toughen standards for daycare center operators” (92 percent of all potential voters sampled approving it; 89 percent of Democrats); 2) “new funding system for public schools” (89 percent of all voters and 88 percent of Democrats); and 3) “support full consolidation” (78 percent of all voters, 81 percent of Democrats).

Chumney, of course, is the principal sponsor of legislation to tighten day-care standards, and she has made frequent mention during her current campaign of the school-funding issue while pushing consolidation relentlessly.

If Yacoubian is correct, Chumney may not be risking as much by being explicit as her opponents are in responding more indirectly. In any case, Yacoubian says candidly, it’s the best antidote to what he sees as a bandwagon strategy underway on Wharton’s behalf.

The poll, taken at that point last fall when Wharton was announcing his mayoral candidacy, reflects a sense that the Shelby County Public Defender ought indeed to be regarded as the frontrunner in Democratic ranks.

In Yacoubian’s reckoning, Wharton was first choice of Democrats polled — by 37 percent to Chumney’s 27 percent, 7 percent for state Senator Jim Kyle, who has since withdrawn from the face and endorsed Wharton; and 6 percent for Bartlett banker Harold Byrd.

Interestingly, Byrd rises to a close second place among independents polled by Yacoubian, with 23 percent to Wharton’s 25 percent. Chumney’s figure was 18 percent, and Kyle’s was 12 percent.

Meanwhile, another aspect of Yacoubian’s poll shows voter approval of previous job performance to be higher for Chumney than for any of her Democratic opponents.

In short, Yacoubian’s poll figures suggest that Chumney may not be so out of it — among Democrats, anyway — as conventional wisdom has it, and they provide a basis for her seeing Byrd as a rival claimant to runner-up status and, therefore, as a nemesis to be taken on directly.

In any case, Chumney did just that — as recently as the weekend, when she called a press conference to protest the fact that Byrd was allowed to lease campaign headquarters on Poplar Avenue that she had been denied a lease for previously.

The property’s owner, Stanley “Trip” Trezevant, who supports Byrd, responded by saying he saw no issue involved, but Chumney indicated she would begin a process, both locally and in Nashville, of instituting anti-discrimination complaints.

Yacoubian’s October poll seems to forecast a greater degree of participation by women than of men in this year’s elections, and Chumney said Saturday she thought the figure for women would be as high as 65 percent — yet another reason why she thinks her chances shouldn’t be discounted (and a possible reason, too, for her pushing the discrimination hot-button).

Granted, Chumney has raised relatively little money compared to opponents Wharton and Byrd, but she regards this as the consequence of her chances being discounted so consistently in public opinion — the anecdotal kind, that is. She thinks the scientific species — as in pulse-takings by Berge Yacoubian — tell a different story.


NASHVILLE — He came, he saw, and he got down.

That’s one way of describing Al Gore ‘s appearance before a crowd of home-state Democrats at the Renaissance Hotel Saturday night.

Got down, as in did his best aw-shucks-I’m-just-a-Tennessean number, wearing casual dress, a simple open-collared blue shirt conveying an authenticity that his starched-blue-jeans-and-cowboy-boots combo of yore never did, and that adjunct-prof beard of his (yes, he still has it) gets him closer to redneck than you would think possible.

Got down, too, as in got down to business, attacking the Bush administration for fiscal shortcomings and environmental excesses, for stroking the rich and for stiffing campaign-finance reform.

“For everything, there is a season,” Gore said (those words being also the appended title of the prepared text his helpers handed out). “And tonight, as a new election season begins, I intend to rejoin the national debate.”

He did so before an audience of several thousand that included a good many reporters for national news outlets, interested in whether the former vice president intended to hazard a new presidential bid. In the event, he was coy. Having promised to re-enter the national debate, Gore said, “Whether I will do so as a candidate in 2004 or not, I don’t know yet … .”

For the time being, Gore’s political medium is a freshly formed PAC whose name, “Leadership ’02,” is as limp and unassuming in its own way as the beard is and which will “train young people in the skills of democracy and help Democratic candidates in the elections this November.”

Gore will be hitting the road, presumably on the national map, too, but especially in Tennessee, where he intends to continue the work of reconciling himself to the home state which rejected him last year by a crucial 80,000 votes. “I want to make it clear,” he said, “that I understand there’s a lot more work for me to do here — more fences that need mending. But it’s work I am looking forward to because I want you to know that I love this state with all my heart and soul.”

And Gore has put some money where his mouth is. As Memphis’ Pace Cooper, the West Tennessee chair of Saturday night’s “Election Kickoff 2002” effort (and one of three statewide), noted, “The state party is almost bankrupt,”and Gore’s visit churned up some $30,000 in ticket sales (at a mere $25 a head) and another $100,000 in “sponsorships.”

The Democrats will be counting on Gore to help deliver the governorship and, most especially, the 4th District congressional seat which Republican Van Hilleary is vacating to make his own gubernatorial run and which will likely tip the state congressional balance between the parties (currently 5-4 in the GOP’s favor).

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Music Music Features

Sound Advice

The current garage-rock revival may not have paid commercial dividends just yet, but it’s sprouting good bands all over the place. Detroit’s White Stripes may be the best and most well-known of the bunch, but from New York’s Mooney Suzuki to our own Reigning Sound, there are plenty of young bands giving the electric white-boy blues (and folk-rock and soul) a good name again.

One of the better outfits on this circuit has to be Cincinnati’s The Greenhornes, who sounded great opening for the White Stripes here last fall at Earnestine and Hazel’s. The band’s consistently surging, eponymous 2001 debut confirms that their set that night was no fluke. The Greenhornes fall more in line with the archetypal Nuggets vibe than the other bands mentioned above, their mid-’60s sound balancing the rockin’ thrash of the Count Five with the organ-driven blues of the Animals.

The Greenhornes will be back in town this week for a show at Young Avenue Deli on Thursday, February 7th, with locals The Tearjerkers, whose similar attitude draws inspiration from 10-years-after proto-punk heroes the New York Dolls and Johnny Thunders and the Heartbreakers. Should be a mighty fine time.

The Blues Foundation holds its annual unsigned-band contest, the International Blues Challenge, this weekend on Beale. Preliminary rounds will take place up and down the street on Friday, February 8th, and Saturday, February 9th, with the competition finals at the New Daisy Theatre on Sunday, February 10th. Admission to the contest is $10 per night. For more information, see the Blues Foundation Web site at www.blues.org.

Chris Herrington

If you’re dumb enough to GIVE your band a name as gimmicky as The Bastard Sons of Johnny Cash, you had better be talented enough to overcome it. You’ve simply got to know that hitching your Americana wagon to the iconic Man in Black is going to get lots of attention which you may or may not deserve. To even suggest that you might be a badder M.F. than J.C. himself will bring on full-fledged scrutiny. Fortunately for the Bastard Sons of Johnny Cash, they at least come close to making good on their claim. They revel in the traditional honky-tonk tropes — truckers washing down amphetamines with black coffee, lonely jukeboxes, women who drink you dry and rob you blind — but are at their best when walking that fine Cashesque line between classic country and early rock-and-roll. And when BSOJC frontman Mark Stewart howls, “I guess I’ve got to learn to love the pain” in his song “Crying Over You,” it’s with the urgency of an illegitimate child begging for just a scrap of recognition.

But the more I listen to BSOJC the more I think Johnny needs to have a DNA test run. If you ask me, they sound a whole lot more like Dale Watson’s boys. Decide for yourself when the Bastard Sons of Johnny Cash play the Young Avenue Deli on Saturday, February 9th, with The Charlie Mars Band. — Chris Davis

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

SO WHY DOES CHUMNEY STAY IN?

Though he likes to specialize in business and marketing research, Memphis pollster Berge Yacoubian has had his share of name political clients — Bob Clement, Robin Beard, Mike Cody, Otis Higgs come to mind — and if it seems to have worked out that he’s had more underdogs than not, that’s how he likes it.

Republican Beard defied the odds and unseated a congressional incumbent in 1972, then was able to survive the Democratic landslide during the Watergate year of 1974. No longer advised by Yacoubian, he lost a Senate bid in 1982 against then incumbent Jim Sasser. Part of the problem, thinks Yacoubian, was that Beard overlooked issues in favor of negative attack ads that backfired.

In fact, he sees part of his job as helping candidates prepare not only for election but for what comes next if all goes well. “Unlike other consultants, whom I will not name, I do not want to elect someone who can’t govern,” he says. Nor does he want his advisees to make nice, especially. “Some candidates want to be so loved they can’t act ,” he says disdainfully.

Yacoubian says he prefers to leave the spotlight to his candidates, the most prominent of whom at the moment is State Representative Carol Chumney.

Of all the candidates for mayor, Chumney is probably the most direct in pressing specific issues. And, despite being told frequently by friend and foe alike that she has little chance of being elected and should consider switching to another race while she can, Chumney resolutely declines to do so

A look at a survey done by Yacoubian in October provides some insight into both these circumstances.

The most overwhelmingly approved three issues noted by Yacoubian in a table entitled “What Voters Want” are: (1) the passage of “laws to toughen standards for daycare center operators” (92 percent of all potential voters sampled approving it; 89 percent of Democats); (2) “new funding system for public schools” (89 percent of all voters and 88 percent of Democrats): and (3) “support full consolidation” (78 percent of all voters, 81 percent of Democrats).

Chumney, of course, is the principal sponsor of legislation to tighten daycare standards, and she has made frequent mention during her current campaign of the school funding issue while pushing consolidation relentlessly.

If Yacoubian is correct, Chumney may not be risking as much by being explicit as her opponents are in responding more indirectly. In any case, Yacoubian says candidly, it’s the best antidote to what he sees as a bandwagon strategy underway on A C Wharton‘s behalf.

The poll, taken at that point last fall when Wharton was announcing his mayoral candidacy, reflects a sense that the Shelby County Public Defender ought indeed to be regarded as the frontrunner in Democratic ranks.

In Yacoubian’s reckoning, Wharton was first choice of Democrats polled — by 37 percent to Chumney’s 27 percent, 7 percent for State Senator Jim Kyle, who has since withdrawn from the face and endorsed Wharton; and 6 percent for Bartlett banker Harold Byrd.

Interestingly, Byrd rises to a close second place among independents polled by Yacoubian, with 23 percent to Wharton’s 25 percent. Chumney’s figure was 18 percent, and Kyle’s was 12 percent.

Meanwhile, another aspect of Yacoubian’s poll shows voter approval of previous job performance to be higher for Chumney than for any of her Democratic opponents.

In short, Yacobian’s poll figures suggest that Chumney may not be so out of it — among Democrats, anyway — as conventional wisdom has it, and they provide a basis for her seeing Byrd as a rival claimant to runnerup status and, therefore, as a nemesis to be taken on directly.

In any case, Chumney did just that — as recently as the weekend, when she called a press conference to protest the fact that Byrd was allowed to lease campaign headquarters on Poplar Avenue that she had been denied a lease for previously.

The property’s owner, Stanley ‘Trip’ Trezevant, who supports Byrd, responded by saying he saw no issue involved, but Chumney indicated she would begin a process, both locally and in Nashville, of instituting anti-discrimination complaints.

Yacoubian’s October poll seems to forecast a greater degree of participation by women than of men in this year’s elections, and Chumney said Saturday she thought the figure for women would be as high as 65 percent — yet another reason why she thinks her chances shouldn’t be discounted (and a possible reason, too, for her pushing the discrimination hot-button).

Granted, Chumney has raised relatively little money compared to opponents Wharton and Byrd, but she regards this as the consequence of her chances being discounted so consistently in public opinion — the anecdotal kind, that is. She thinks the scientific species — as in pulse-takings by Berge Yacoubian — tell a different story.

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News News Feature

HOW IT LOOKS

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News The Fly-By

SPACE: THE FINAL SUBURB

Many people have become familiar with William W. (Bill) Wood through his campaign to save the Memphis Central Library from atheistic communists. Wood is the man responsible for organizing bi-weekly meetings to pray over a work of art which he and his supporters find offensive. But how many folks know about wood’s other organization, the National Space Society? According to the Web site www.memspace.org., Wood’s group is “dedicated to creating a spacefaring civilization.” They are also looking into the development of “air breathing engines” called SCRAM jets to aid in the creation of just such a civilization. So, like Bill Wood’s Web site says, “If you are excited about helping to pen the frontier in near-earth orbit, in lunar orbit, on Europa, on Mars, or a spaceport in Memphis, contact billwood@memspace.org.”

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We Recommend We Recommend

wednesday, 6

Cowboy Mouth at the New Daisy. And now I must be gone before a house falls on me. As always, I really don t care what you do this week, because I don t even know you, and unless you can get me one of the FREE WINONA T-shirts that are selling like crazy in Los Angeles, I m sure I don t want to meet you. Besides, I have to go now. I hear the phone ringing and it s time to have a little fun.

T.S.

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Sports Sports Feature

GRIZZLIES UPEND JAZZ 86-79

Call last Sunday’s game a wake-up call.

After a listless, lifeless game against the Charlotte Hornets, the Memphis Grizzlies returned to the Pyramid in a big way, bouncing the Utah Jazz 86-79 in front of over 12,000. The game was never as close as the final score suggests, with the Grizzlies opening up a 51-32 point lead at the half.

“That was a great effort, an outstanding win,” Grizzlies head coach Sidney Lowe said after the game. “We had balance. The energy and our effort really stands out.”

Guard Rodney Buford led all scorers with 20 points, while forward Pau Gasol scored 19 points, and pulled down 13 rebounds. Also for the Grizzlies, forwards Tony Massenburg and Shane Battier each scored 12 points apiece, and forward Grant Long scored 10 points in the win.

For the Jazz, guard Andre Kirilenko scored 15 points, guard DeShawn Stevenson scored 14 points, and guard/forward Quincy Lewis and forward Karl Malone each scored ten points.

The Jazz were held to only 29.9% shooting, the squad’s lowest shooting percentage of the season. The 79 points is also a season low.

“We defended,” Lowe said. “Holding a team like that to 30% shooting, we’re happy for it.”

Malone took a different approach. “It was poor shooting,” the Utah star forward star said. “But if you look up there, they weren’t blazing it up either. They just did what they needed to win.

This win marks the Grizzlies second over the Jazz for the season. In the teams’ previous meeting, Memphis beat the Jazz in overtime, 97-95.

The Memphis squad heads to the Milwaukee Bucks on Thursday before taking the weekend off for the All-Star break in Philadelphia. The squad then travels to the Houston Rockets before returning to the Pyramid against the Denver Nuggets on February 14.

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We Recommend We Recommend

tuesday, 5

Grizzlies against the Utah Jazz. Mardi Gras Brewmaster s Dinner at Bosco s Squared. Let s have at em. And at the Blue Monkey tonight it s Memphis Songwriter Stage with Nancy Apple, Jay Harrington, and Molly Ray Okeon.

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HOW IT LOOKS

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THE ENRON TRAIL IN TENNESSEE

It’s got all the elements of a good scandal: lies, corruption, power, and lots and lots of money. Fallout from the Enron/Arthur Andersen debacle spread like Anthrax from Texas to Washington, D.C., eventually working its way into Congress and the White House.

Now, with thousands of Enron employees and investors furious at what they perceive as intentional deception by both companies, those who accepted money from either corporation are finding themselves under the microscope of public scrutiny. But if misery truly loves company, they haven’t got much to complain about.

Between 1989 and 2001 Enron contributed $6 million to national parties and candidates. More than $2 million of that took place during the 1999-2001 campaign cycle. Arthur Andersen contributed $5.2 million in soft money to PACs (Politcal Action Committee) and individuals over the past 12 years.

Both companies favored the GOP, with Enron giving two-thirds of its contributions to Republicans and Andersen giving more than half. Andersen made contributions to more than half of the members of the House of Representatives and to 94 of the Senate’s 100 members. Enron gave money to 71 senators and 186 house members.

Perhaps Tennesseans — at least those who aren’t mourning the loss of thousands of dollars in Enron stock — can take some comfort in the knowledge that, comparatively speaking, Tennessee’s elected officials stayed above the fray.

During the dozen years that Texas senators Kay Bailey Hutchison (R) and Phil Gramm (R) each accepted more than $100,000 in Enron money, Tennessee’s senators, Fred Thompson (R) and Bill Frist (R), received none. Thompson did accept $8,800 from Andersen in his capacity as a ranking member of the Senate Governmental Affairs Committee.

While Texas representative Ken Bentsen (D) took in $44,000 and Texas representative Sheila Jackson Lee (D) accepted $39,000 from Enron, Tennessee’s representatives took in far less.

Over the last 12 years Tennessee representative Ed Bryant (R), a member of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, accepted $1,500 from Enron and $5,500 from Andersen. His fellow committee member, Representative Bart Gordon (D), accepted $1,500 from Enron and $8,000 from Andersen.

As a member of the House Government Reform Committee, Representative John J. “Jimmy” Duncan Jr. (R) accepted no money from Enron and $5,000 from Andersen. Likewise, as a member of the House Financial Services Committee, Representative Harold Ford Jr. (D) accepted no money from Enron and $2,000 from Andersen.

The Enron debacle hit home on another level for Memphis attorney Joseph Barton, who says he lost money when he relied on the information supplied by Andersen in his purchase and holding of Enron stock. Last week Barton became the first person in West Tennessee to file a lawsuit against Arthur Andersen for its role in the Enron case.

“I’m hoping for a settlement that mitigates my losses — before they are completely bankrupt,” says Barton, who is seeking $17,762 in General Sessions Court.

“When I found out they were destroying the documents, that was the trigger I needed to file. They wouldn’t destroy beneficial documents. This was an active misrepresentation as to the value of the company,” says Barton.

Barton says that had Andersen accurately represented Enron’s financial situation, he would not have continued to be an Enron investor.