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Politics Politics Feature

Cohen, Blackburn, Alexander Win Big

In the true spirit of “The Purloined Letter,” the Poe story in which vital evidence was overlooked because it was right before the eye, the runaway wins of three congressional incumbents may have escaped proper notice.

Hence an overdue statement of the obvious. 9th District congressman Steve Cohen won big, so did 7th District congresswoman Marsha Blackburn, and so did U.S. Senator Lamar Alexander.

Although the Election Commission, all these hours after the polls closed, seems still to be having difficulty making numbers accessible, these are the relevant percentages:

Democrat Cohen demolished three opponents with nearly 88 percent of the vote; his closest runnerup among three self-styled “independents” was Jake Ford with 5 percent of the vote, eking out Dewey Clark and Mary Taylor Shelby Wright with 4 percent each.

Republican Blackburn overwhelmed her Democratic opponent, Randy Morris, by 71 percent to 29 percent, and Republican Alexander beat his Democratic challenger, Robert Tuke, 65 percent to 31 percent statewide. Alexander won all but one of Tennessee’s 95 counties, losing only Haywood County to Tuke though his margin of victory in Shelby County was narrow, only 50.75 percent to 46.67 percent.

A fourth incumbent, 8th District congressman John Tanner, a Democrat, was unopposed.

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Opinion Viewpoint

Chris Davis Explains It All

The long, brutal presidential campaign is finally over. The result? To quote an unsettlingly accurate headline from The Onion, “Black Man Given Nation’s Worst Job.” Mission accomplished. Yes, we did.

As expected, Democrat Barack Obama, the change candidate, trounced Republican John McCain, the other change candidate, and by all rights, today should be a day of celebration, elation, and optimism. Hopes should soar, as Americans of every color and class lay hands “on the arc of history,” to bend it away from cynicism and despair.

But contrary to what you’ll read elsewhere on the Internet, this isn’t a “Morning in America” moment. And it’s not an FDR moment either. This is Barack Obama’s moment to take the helm of a hobbled, embattled country that is broke, broken, and still deeply divided.

McCain’s concession speech may have been earnest and conciliatory, but his audience didn’t seem to be buying any of it. His bitterly divisive campaign strategy reinforced at every turn the Bushist idea that some Americans are fundamentally more American than others. It was a theme that Alaska Governor Sarah Palin, McCain’s unvetted running mate, vigorously and disastrously embraced.

After 9/11 turned America into a nation of trembling sheep, Karl Rove and Bill Kristol’s bellicose band of neoconservatives infected the national discourse with an idea that only good conservatives can love this country, even if they hate half the natural population. Right-wing radio and Fox news reimagined the Land of the Free as a land of terrifying extremes, where God-fearing pro-life moderates are constantly threatened by radical, troop-hating leftists who want to eradicate God, round up the guns, and turn the children of honest farm-folks gay.

So what happens when the real patriotic America-loving Americans are made exiles in their own land by the anti-American Americans who’ve elected this Socialist half-black secret Muslim and/or radical Christian? Maybe they’ll come to understand that Democrats aren’t so bad after all. Maybe unity will happen. But that seems unlikely at this point.

In the closing weeks of his campaign, McCain told his supporters that America was once again on the brink of war. The old soldier, who sacrificed so much for his country, appealed to the most extreme elements of his party, suggesting that, if elected, Obama would start a war with Real Americans.

“The whole premise behind Senator Obama’s [economic] plans is class warfare,” McCain said during the final Presidential debate at Hofstra University in New York. That same night, he seconded Palin’s claim that Obama had been “pallin’ around with terrorists.”

He said he wanted to know more about his opponent’s tangential relationship with Bill Ayers, a University of Chicago professor and former 1960s radical whose bombing days were over decades before he ever served on a board with Obama.

To accuse a fellow American of “pallin’ around with terrorists is a serious charge, but it’s nothing compared to the threat of a class war. War means somebody’s going to win and somebody’s going to lose. One class will be brought low so that another can be elevated. That’s what war means. In this case, the McCain camp played into fears that hard-working white folks will be robbed so that shiftless blacks can benefit from Obama’s great socialist redistribution of America’s wealth. By telling “real Americans” that a real war was coming, McCain gave Real Americans permission to take measures to defend themselves.

Even the propagandists at Fox news started taking note of the nasty vibe radiating from the crowds at McCain/Palin rallies. Fox anchor Shepard Smith was openly contemptuous when Joe “the Plumber” Wurzelbacher, the bald white paranoiac doofus handpicked by the McCain campaign as a straight-talking emissary from Real America, repeated baseless statements about how the election of Obama meant death to Israel.

By election day, the McCain campaign had witnessed the defection of many prominent conservatives, like columnist Christopher Buckley and former Secretary of State Colin Powell who, after reflecting on McCain’s troubling campaign choices, decided to endorse the Democrat.

McCain was clearly playing with fire by pandering to the most volatile segment of his electorate. But even if McCain’s talk of a false America was nothing but empty campaign lip-service, there are dark places in America where those ideas are likely to take root and grow.

Only a week ago, a pair of Real Americans from the Mid-South was arrested after their plot to assassinate Obama surfaced. The plan was insane, involving fast cars and white tuxedos, but the men, who both identified with a white supremist philosophy, were entirely serious. The social extremists that President Bush has coddled for the last eight years, that John McCain has protected throughout his career, are about to be cut off, cold turkey, and it’s impossible to know how this potentially volatile minority will respond.

Maybe it is morning in America. If so, it’s a terrible hangover morning in America, where all the excesses of the long night before may come back to haunt the revelers. Maybe Obama is the antidote for the problems we face at the moment, but what about the ones that lie ahead? In the 1960s, domestic terrorism was a leftist phenomenon. That was then. In the new century it will come from Real America. Yes, it will.

–Chris Davis

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Special Sections

Gaylon the Great

2990/1242249819-gaylonsmith.jpg “The planes of his face are hard and clean-hewn as are those on a freshly minted coin. It is the face of a Roman emperor — harsh and imperious … his body was that of a master gladiator, the neck falling sheerly into massive shoulders.”

No, that is not a description of ME, but thank you for thinking so. Instead, Commercial Appeal sports editor Walter Stewart was writing in 1958 about Gaylon Smith, widely regarded as the greatest athlete in the history of Rhodes College. And it may come as a surprise to some readers, but Rhodes — previously known as Southwestern — has fielded some mighty fine football teams over the years.

Raised near Beebe, Arkansas (a town so dinky that another writer observed “an automobile can’t go through it”), Smith was wooed by schools throughout the region. He eventually picked Southwestern, and from 1935 to 1939, the “Bull from Beebe” stunned the crowds with his astonishing feats in baseball, basketball, and track. But it was as an unstoppable running back with the Lynxcats that he caught the attention of sportswriters across the South. The coach at the University of Alabama, of all places, even commented, “If I had been able to use him as a fullback, I wouldn’t have lost a game.”

Categories
Sports Sports Feature

Grizzlies Win, 90-79, Over Warriors

The Grizzlies moved to 2-2 last night with a convincing 90-79 win over the Golden State Warriors, while Marc Gasol had a breakout game.

1. We Like This New Gasol: Midway through the second quarter, with Marc Gasol on his way to a 22 point, 9 rebound first half, a fan behind me exclaimed, “I like this new Gasol!” The royal we concurs …

Read the rest of Chris Herrington’s game blog at Beyond the Arc.

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Politics Politics Feature

Karl Rove Says: It’s Obama in a Landslide

From Rove.com: The final Rove & Co. electoral map of the 2008 election cycle points to a 338-200 Barack Obama electoral vote victory over John McCain tomorrow, the largest electoral margin since 1996. All remaining toss-up states have been allocated to the candidate leading in them, with Florida (27 EV) going to Obama, and Indiana (11 EV), Missouri (11 EV), North Carolina (15 EV), and North Dakota (3 EV) going to McCain.

The two candidates are in a dead heat in Missouri and North Carolina, but they go to McCain because the most recent polls conducted over this past weekend show him narrowly ahead. Florida, too, could end up in McCain’s column since he’s benefited from recent movement in the state …

Read more Rove here.

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News

Addressing MPD

The City Council’s public safety and homeland security committee voted today to send a police residency resolution to the full council.

The resolution would allow police officers to live within 20 miles of the Shelby County line.

“The police department has said that one third of the new hires have said that if they were required to live in the city of Memphis, they would not have applied,” said Council member Jim Strickland. “I think crime is important enough to make this exception. That’s why I’m voting for it.”

For more, visit Mary Cashiola’s In The Bluff blog.

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Opinion Viewpoint

Bianca Knows Best … And Helps With a Momma’s Boy

Dear Bianca,

My live-in boyfriend has a very unusual relationship with his mom. He calls her every day, and while I thought that was kind of cute at first, it creeps me out now. Things really got weird when he started inviting his mom to spend the night at our house.

The first time he invited her to sleep over, I tried to put my foot down. I don’t want some lady I barely know, who also happens to be a recovering alcoholic, sleeping on my couch.

But the boyfriend insisted and his mom came over while I was at work. When I came home, I was shocked to find her there. It was completely awkward. He and his mom sat around and watched TV all night, and I had to entertain. I had to cook dinner. I had to make small talk. It sucked.

Now he’s considering asking her to come and stay for a few months, since she’s losing her house to foreclosure. I’d rather her stay at another family member’s house, but my boyfriend wants her here. How can I put a stop to this? Am I being insensitive and bitchy?

The Bitchy Girlfriend

Dear Bitchy,

Though you are being a tad bit bitchy, I wouldn’t call you insensitive. You and your boyfriend share that space, and both parties should agree when someone is going to be staying over.

Entertaining guests is a lot of work, especially for the person who takes care of the cooking and cleaning. It sounds like that would be you, since your boyfriend sat on his ass all night while his mom was visiting.

If you were uncomfortable around his mom for one night, a few months would be a nightmare. If his mother had nowhere else to go, I’d say suck it up and stop being bitchy. But it sounds like she has other options.

Since you’ve already tried reasoning with your boyfriend, maybe you should try giving him a taste of his own medicine. Invite someone he doesn’t like or doesn’t know very well to sleep over. Make it as inconvenient as you can.

Perhaps you could invite someone over that has an annoyingly loud baby or a penchant for non-stop chatter. Or you could invite a girlfriend and schedule a Sex in the City marathon. Make it uncomfortable for him, then try reasoning with him. Hopefully, after he’s experienced what it feels like to be uneasy in his own home, he’ll understand your position.

Got a problem? Bianca can solve it. Send problems to bphillips@memphisflyer.com.

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Politics Politics Feature

After Big Early-Vote Totals, is Election Day Turnout Down?

We all know by now that record
crowds early-voted in Memphis and Shelby County — 254,359 or
39.1% of total registered voters. Two on-site reports that have reached the
Flyer
— one from a Republican candidate, another from a Democratic activist
— indicate that Election Day voting is down, however. Following is the
Democrat’s email to his network:

“VOTER TURNOUT IN MEMPHIS IS
DRAGGING EVERYWHERE. There are no lines, no wait times. I was at Miss Blvd
Christian Church at 12:30pm and it was not only slow, it was EMPTY.

“Early Voting has brought us to a
tipping point–if we vote in the next four hours in the numbers we need, we’ll
flip the state. If not, we’ll have nobody but ourselves to blame.

“I’m worried what is happening all
over the country is happening in Memphis, just as we feared: Early Voting and
escalating polls have made us overconfident, lazy, and COMPLACENT. This is the
same plateau effect that has cost us so dearly in the past….”

Our Republican informant also mentioned light
voting in the inner city but reported crowded polls in Cordova and East Memphis.

The two anecdotal reports together, if ultimately corroborated, conform to a pattern established in recent years whereby early voting has drawn proportionately larger numbers of African-American voters, who are mainly Democratic, and Election Day voting has seen proportionately larger numbers of white Republicans turn out.

All of this is F.Y.I., Memphis and
Shelby County – whether you’re Democrats hoping to hold on to an indicated edge
in early voting or Republicans wanting to catch up or just voters wanting to
see a full turnout. There’s still time to cast your ballot. (And apparently no humongous lines in your way.)

–Jackson Baker

Categories
Politics Politics Feature

It’s Obama!

The major networks are calling the presidential election for Illinois senator Barack Obama, the first African American to win the office. Jubilant crowds across the nation celebrated the historic moment, which brought eight years of the Republican rule of George W. Bush to an end.

At 10:15, his opponent, Republican John McCain offered his concession speech to a crowd on the lawn of the Biltmore Hotel in Phoenix. He said Senator Obama had achieved “a great thing,” and offered his condolences for the death of Obama’s grandmother as well as seemingly heartfelt congratulations.

“I have always been a fortunate man,” McCain said, as he thanked his family and his running mate, Governor Sarah Palin, whom he called one of the “best campaigners” he’d ever seen.

“A lost election will never mean more to me than your support and friendship,” McCain concluded.

Forty-five minutes later, in Chicago, Obama addressed a joyous crowd estimated at 100,000 people in Grant Park. He and his family emerged on the stage to the fading strains of Jackie Wilson’s “Higher and Higher.”

Obama thanked his family, his campaign team, his running mate, Joe Biden, and his supporters. He made a gracious nod to McCain, citing his opponent’s bravery and service to America.

“You did this because you understand the enormity of the challenges ahead,” Obama told his supporters. He enumerated the problems “we face,” including the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and the healthcare and economic crises.

“You may not always agree with the actions I take, but I will always be honest with you about the challenges we face,” he said. “We rise or fall as one nation, one people … I need your help.”

“A new dawn of American leadership is at hand,” he said.

Categories
Politics Politics Feature

As the Nation Goes One Way, Tennessee Goes the Other

To put in some context the disconnect between those of us
earthlings who live in these parts and the rest of the political species, a single
email slug-line from a Republican publicist up yonder in Nashville, Bill Hobbs,
said part of it: “HISTORY!”

Not what you think. Hobbs was documenting what appeared to
be his party’s total takeover of the Tennessee legislature. Both houses. This at
a time when Democrats were sweeping the nation, and the entire world was focused
on the landslide election of a new American president, the African-American
Democrat from Illinois, Barack Obama.

As for the rest of the off-story, that which affects the
small corner of Tennessee called Shelby County was that, well into the night,
there were no returns to speak of in the races that most concerned local
citizens – nothing, for example, in the city council race between Kemp Conrad,
a Republican, and Paul Shaffer, a Democrat.

When returns finally began to be counted (the problem was
in absentee ballots, we were told in periodic news reports through the evening)
Conrad had a lead. He would finish with a 42 percent of the total, as aganst 33 percent for Demcorat Paul Shaffer and an unexpected 20 percent for John Willingham, who set out to be a spoiler for fellow Republican Conrad.

A true surprise: All of the fine-print items, two city ordinances, two county ones, and six from the city Charter Commission, passed easily.

So what happened in Tennessee? How did the Volunteer State
end up on another planet altogether from neighboring Arkansas, which at least
re-elected its Democratic senator, Mark Pryor, or Mississippi, which returned
the Dixiecrat Travis Childers over his Republican opponent Greg Davis in the
Magnolia State’s First congressional district. For one thing, Tennessee
Democrats performed some of the most amateurish politicking ever seen – a
decided contrast to the polished operation run for more than a year on behalf of
Obama himself.

Such money as was lavished upon the Volunteer State by
national Democratic sources was allocated by the state party almost entirely to
four state Senate seats and a handful of House seats – where, in both cases,
results were below par. Nothing for the Obama-Biden ticket itself, and the
failings of party strategy could be summed up in two circumstances: the fact
that Democrat Randy Camp’s game plan in state Senate district 29 – John Wilder’s
old bailiwick – consisted almost entirely in the fundamentally dishonest claim
that his Republican opponent, state Rep. Dolores Gresham, had voted to raise her
own pay X number of times.

This old chestnut is undeserving in the extreme –
across-the-board legislative and congressional pay raises are always embedded in
budget resolutions at the end of sessions and are inseparable from them.
Everybody
votes for them. They have to! Ronnie Musgrove’s losing Senate
campaign in Mississippi was based on the same bankrupt strategy.

In Tennessee the strategists who ran the legislative campaign
decided also to try to make something of the participation of former Governor
Don Sundquist or of members of his administration in assorted legislative races
(including Gresham-Camp). This, Democratic strategists trumpeted, without any
evidence whatsoever, meant that the Republicans meant to pick up the campaign of
a state income tax where Sundquist left off in 2001.

At the beginning of this election season, most attention in Tennessee was focused in three or four tightly contested races for the state Senate. The Democrats hoped they could win all four, giving them once again a majority in the Senate, whereby Memphis’ Jim Kyle, the Democratic Senate leader would become the new Speaker.

That didn’t happen; the GOP pretty much ran the table, in fact, and Ramsey’s majority is now stronger than before. Worse, from the state Democratic point of view, was the unexpected loss of enough state House seats to give the Republicans a one-vote majority there. That means, among other things, that longtime Speaker Jimmy Naifeh of Covington will lose his position.

Said Jeff Ward, a Tipton Countian and leader of the possibly resurgent TeamGOP organization which has been after House Speaker Jimmy Naifeh’s scalp all these years, “You won’t believe where they’re going to put Naifeh’s office now. He’ll be lucky to get space in a bathroom.” Things probably aren’t that bad, but the hard-driving, somewhat autocratic longtime Democratic speaker may indeed find himself dealing with some retribution here and there as Republican Speaker-designate Jason Mumpower of Bristol takes over. In the wake of the election, there were numerous suggestions from sources both friendly and unfriendly to Naifeh that the 67-year-old Speaker might find it timely to retire.

Naifeh, of course, has been able to get Republican votes before when it came time for the House to elect its officers, but those were always occasions when he already had enough Democratic votes to win reelection as Speaker, and the GOP votes were obvious efforts to build bridges to the man with the power.

The Republicans will have the power now, not just in the two legislative chambers, but in the election of constitutional officers – secretary of state, comptroller, and treasurer. The GOP will also find itself the majority part of the five-member county elections commissions, which historically have been Democratic over Republican by a margin of 3 to 2, even in East Tennessee counties where the Democratic voter is minuscule or non-existent.

All of this may or may not mean the austerity that Mumpower and Ramsey have already pledged. The Republican Congressional majority that existed in the second Bush term eventually turned into big spender, a factor in the national party’s fall from glory. But social causes like anti-abortion and pro-gun measures are sure to advance.

Governor Phil Bredesen, who went all out for several of the losing Democratic candidates, may find his initiatives stymied and be forced to re-invent the idea of “triangulation.”

And the new Republican-dominated legislature, if it can maintain its numerical advantage, will be able to shepherd the state’s redistricting procedures after the 2010 census, both for the state legislature and for congressional seats, where they hope to gain in West and Middle Tennessee.

“It may be the end of the Democrats in Tennessee as an effective state party,” worried Memphis city councilman Jim Strickland.

That, of course, remains to be seen. As we can see from the national results, the political pendulum does swing back and forth. But for the time being it has swung the Republicans’ way in Tennessee.


More as details become available