“It’s a new day.”
“He had enough.”
John Branston has reactions from Dick Hackett, Jim Gilliland, Susan Adler Thorp, Julian Bolton, and others to the mayor’s resignation.
“It’s a new day.”
“He had enough.”
John Branston has reactions from Dick Hackett, Jim Gilliland, Susan Adler Thorp, Julian Bolton, and others to the mayor’s resignation.
Herenton reaction from Dick Hackett, Jim Gilliland, Susan Adler Thorp, Julian Bolton, and others.
As the fates would have it, when I was interviewed by two radio stations early Thursday morning about the likelihood of an immediate resignation by Mayor Willie Herenton, I answered skeptically, consigning the prospect to the same place in the public consciousness as the old child’s myth about the shepherd who kept crying wolf.
Well, the mayor, who has famously “resigned” before, actually did it this time. The wolf was not only at the door, he was inside at the podium in the Hall of Mayors for what might have been, if not the last time, the most significant of his many appearances in that chamber. Someone in the teeming press corps gathered there to be teased one more time joked that Herenton would be punkin’ us all, that the press conference would be about his new plan for recycling.
As in a sense it was. There is no doubt that the new City Hall, the new city administration (to be presided over, beginning July 10th and ending no more than 90 days later, by interim mayor Myron Lowery), and the new city will be taken through some real changes. Recycling, indeed.
The very fact that Herenton, who was appropriately gracious throughout his leave-taking, could hand over the baton of city government as easily as he did to current council chairman Lowery, with whom he has had his problems, was a sign in itself of the finality of this announcement. Almost nobody afterward saw this departure in the same light as the previous one, a year and a half ago, when Herenton said he would be leaving his office on July 15, 2008.
That was predicated on the notion that he would be taking over his old job, then vacant, as schools superintendent. A recalcitrant school board, which insisted on looking elsewhere, scotched that plan. And so here it is, almost exactly a year later, and the deed is about to be done. And Plan B involves no longer the school board but the even chancier goal of the 9th District congressional seat, currently held by second-term Rep. Steve Cohen, whom the mayor had enthusiastically endorsed in 2006 and who has meanwhile established himself well enough to get reelected last year by a 4 to 1 margin over a well-funded black opponent.
Of course, Herenton is not Nikki Tinker, who has never been elected to anything. The mayor has gone asking to the constituency of the 9th District five times, and each time he has won its vote overwhelmingly – the last time giving him the breathing room he needed over second-place contender Carol Chumney.
Disregard all the insider talk and all the early polls: This will be a barn-burner of a race — a showdown that will give Herenton’s previous races, even the epochal victory in 1991 over the last white mayor, Dick Hackett, even his mano-a-mano over Joe Ford in 1999, the look of idle preliminaries.
It may be, in fact, that Herenton’s leavetaking has to be taken at face value —not prompted by looming legal threats or back-room negotiations or Machiavellian machinations but by the simple fact, as the mayor told an expectant media and a citywide audience on Thursday, that it was “the right time” to go. (The mayor’s one brief moment of pique Thursday came when he was asked about the effect of an ongoing federal investigation on his decision. We all knew he was a “victim,” Herenton said, and made it clear he would not dilate on the matter any further.)
Herenton will now be free to run full-time for Congress, if that is what he chooses. Gone will be the fundraising leverage of the mayor’s office, but there will be compensating advantages — a free hand, for one.
That’s always assuming the feds will leave Herenton alone long enough to make all the proper dispositions for his new political venture. Some weeks ago, Lowery may have spoken for many Memphians — certainly many in the media, who have wasted countless man- and woman-hours keeping vigil in Government Plaza downtown waiting for news of an imminent indictment. (Imminent every week for at least a year and half!)
The government should indict Herenton or get off the pot, Lowery said. We shall soon see what, if anything, it will do.
Meanwhile, what will the new man do? A 90-day wonder for now, by the terms of last year’s simplifying referendum on mayoral succession, Lowery left little doubt that he was a candidate for real in the special election that will take place after he leaves that temporary helm.
Never mind that, as recently as Saturday, at the annual Community Picnic of Herenton sidekick Sidney Chism, Lowery had said, “I am not running today. I may be running soon, though. We’ll have to see.”
He’s running now — and from the catbird seat. Lowery’s primary opponent will still be Shelby County Mayor A C Wharton, who has an early start and just possibly Herenton’s own blessing. Others in the race will be James Harvey of the Shelby County Commission, former city council member and 2007 mayoral runner-up Chumney, and most probably the Rev. Kenneth Whalum of the Memphis school board.
Councilman Jim Strickland has a boom going on at the moment, and another first-term councilman, Kemp Conrad, could take a shot at the job (or at least a shot at the notoriety that running strong would give him for later electoral races). The pathway for Strickland and Conrad has been eased by the certainty now of a special election that will put their perches on the council out of danger. They can still run for reelection in 2011 if they lose a mayor’s race sometime next year or later this year.
It is a cliché, but Herenton’s shoes will be hard to fill — certainly as a newsmaker and possibly in several other ways having to do with an overall positive legacy, once the bad feelings of a tenure gone wrong and gone on too long fade away.
Herenton handed out copies of a souvenir photograph of himself to everyone who came to the Hall of Mayors on Thursday — a photo of a lean and ambitious young man taken at the moment, around 1978, when Willie Herenton had first entered public consciousness as a newly named superintendent of Memphis schools.
You could imagine the thoughts of that pensive-looking young Long and Tall in the picture. An odd and touching momento for the older, wiser, and definitely sadder man to give us now — as if he expected us to miss him. And, to be sure, for better and for worse, we will.
When I was a kid, Mason jars comprised a large part of my family’s kitchen. My mom used them to pickle cucumbers, dill, and garlic from our garden. She followed a special family recipe that had been passed down to her by my great-grandmother. The pickles turned out perfectly… just the right amount of salt, vinegar and crunch.
Last week, the Oblivians, the Gories, and Staff stepped up to the proverbial mic.
This Saturday, June 27, the Tennessee Boltsmokers return to the local scene after an extended hiatus, with a performance at Otherlands Coffee Bar.
The reason for the hiatus, according to TB guitarist Mark McKinney: “After we played at SXSW last year, we decided to take time off [from live performances] to record our next album.” The TBs third full-length, Vintage All American Dream, recorded at Paul Ebersold‘s East Memphis studio, is slated for release this fall.
We’re only a few hours away from tonight’s NBA Draft. The latest, per ESPN’s Andy Katz, is that the Griz haven’t reached any trade agreements and are set to draft Hasheem Thabeet at #2:
Memphis and Minnesota talked again about trading the No. 2 pick (Memphis) to Minnesota for the No. 5 and 6 picks or the No. 5 or 6 and Kevin Love. But the price was too high for Minnesota, so Memphis plans on keeping the pick. According to multiple sources, Memphis would pick Connecticut center Hasheem Thabeet.
There’s also a rumor going around that the Grizzlies have made a promise to Missouri forward DeMarre Carroll at #27. I know that the team likes Carroll and it would not surprise me to see him drafted there, but I do not believe a promise was made. After getting burned with a draft promise in Boston (see: Kedrick Brown), Chris Wallace has been adamant that he is out of the promise business. Additionally, I’ve talked to one team official who proclaimed that Derrick Brown would be preferable to Carroll and another who speculated about players thought to be safely ahead of the #27 pick who might fall to the Grizzlies, the way Darrell Arthur (almost) did last year.
Don’t expect any more here until the draft starts. I’ll be making an appearance on The Chris Vernon Show during the 4 o’clock hour. Vernon is broadcasting live from Jason’s Deli at Poplar and Highland. Other guest will include the Commercial Appeal‘s Geoff Calkins, Grizzlies radio voice Eric Hasseltine, CNNSI’s Chris Mannix, and hoops legend Sonny Vaccaro, who is scheduled to call in live from the draft in New York.
Vernon will be hosting a draft party tonight at Jason’s Deli, but I won’t be sticking around. I’ll be following the draft from Beyond the Arc’s own Vollentine-Evergreen war room, surrounding by fresh-made sangria, barbecue, and friends. After all, the NBA draft rivals Thanksgiving as our most precious national holiday.
I’ll set up live draft post later tonight as a template for commentary and any tips I might happen to pick up. I’m not expecting as much activity as last year, but hope to be surprised.
See you all back here later.
Mayor Willie Herenton said Thursday he is resigning as mayor after more than 17 years in office.
At a press conference in the Hall of Mayors in City Hall, Herenton, 69, confirmed what he said himself has been clear for a long time.
I lost my zeal,” he said. “I’m the kind of guy, I got to climb mountains. This was getting routine.”
Herenton framed his legacy as a child of wedlock, born in the public housing projects, who became school superintendent and, in 1991, the first elected black mayor of Memphis. He made it clear that his legacy will be the foundation of his campaign for the 9th Congressional District seat in 2010 in a race against incumbent congressman Steve Cohen.
In the meantime, he will join his son Rodney in business working with the private sector and government entities. He said he rejected pleas to remain as mayor while he campaigns for Congress because he feels that is wrong. He made only a brief reference to the ongoing federal investigation of his real estate dealings, calling himself “a victim” and saying reporters are obsessed with the story.
He said he is leaving the city with $89 million in reserves and thousands of units of new housing that have replaced most of the old housing projects. He said he brought a diverse assemblage of black and white people into city government.
“When you come to City Hall today, there are so many black people they’re running over each other,” he said.
City Council Chairman Myron Lowery will become interim mayor for up to 180 days, during which time a special election will be held. Lowery said he will be a candidate.
Remember when I live-blogged Mayor Willie Herenton’s press conference about the Memphis Sexual Assault Resource Center?
Well, today, when Herenton announced his resignation (yes, again. Is it a year to the day or what?), I tweeted the press conference here (undoubtably making myself the most annoying person on twitter for a good 45 minutes): https://twitter.com/marycash.
Or, after the jump: my twitter highlights. You know you want to read them …
News media were notified Thursday that Mayor Willie Herenton will make “a special announcement” at 11:30 a.m. in City Hall.
There were no details in the e-mail from the mayor’s office. City Council Chairman Myron Lowery, who would become interim mayor if Herenton resigns, said he was not told to be there and does not know the nature of the announcement.
Fueled by staff departures and the mayor’s apparently sincere interest in running for Congress, the chatter level about an imminent Willie Herenton resignation has moved to orange, and maybe borderline red.