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Politics Politics Feature

Tennessee Senate Candidates Hit Snags

As has become increasingly evident — and was predictable from the start — the November 4th election ballot in Shelby County lacks the punch and volatility that was so evident in the August 7th “big ballot” election, with its myriad of party primaries, judges’ races, and eccentric personalities. 

The one possible marquee race for local and statewide voters, that for the U.S. Senate, saw both candidates — the highly favored Republican incumbent, Lamar Alexander, and his Democratic challenger, Knoxville attorney Gordon Ball — stumbling this week in their efforts to gain momentum and positive public attention.

Alexander, it will be remembered, polled only 49.5 percent — a minority — of the total Republican primary vote on August 7th, a circumstance that prompted him to go hat-in-hand last month in search of support from his closest challenger, Tea Party-backed state Representative Joe Carr of Lascassas.

Carr polled 40.6 percent of the primary vote, despite having spent only $1.1 million on his campaign against Alexander’s $7.1 million, and despite restricting his efforts essentially to his Middle Tennessee bailiwick. Carr campaigned very little in East Tennessee and was basically a no-show in populous Shelby County, home of another challenger, wealthy radiologist/businessman George Flinn, who polled 5 percent of the vote as a late entry.)

At their post-election meeting in September, at a Cracker Barrel restaurant on Carr’s home ground in Rutherford County, Alexander asked for his runner-up’s support but failed to get anything more than an assertion from Carr that he would “think about it.” The TNReport.com news site reported this week that Carr, having duly thought about it, still isn’t ready to endorse the GOP incumbent.

“It’s not up to me. It’s up to Senator Alexander. The ball’s in his court,” Carr was quoted as saying. Reportedly, he is insisting that the senator, who has issued a series of ambiguous statements about the hot-button issues of Common Core and immigration, be more explicit in opposing the former and standing against any variant of amnesty on the latter. (For what it’s worth, Democrat Ball has done just that.)

Apparently, there are other obstacles to a rapprochement between Alexander and his former primary challenger. Carr is said to be have been resentful that Alexander failed to return “five or six” would-be concession calls from him, beginning on election night, and made a point of extracting an apology from Alexander on that score when the two of them met in September.

Carr was evidently rankled also by a poll released shortly before the August election that misleadingly showed Senator Alexander leading his challenger by 30 percent.

If Alexander was having his problems in squaring personal and political accounts with Carr (and, by implication, with hardcore Tea Partiers), Ball remained luckless in his attempts to get Alexander to even talk directly about their differences on a debate platform (though the two will appear, along with other statewide candidates, in a Farm Bureau forum two weeks from now).

The Democrat had troubles of another kind, too, stemming from a Buzzfeed.com report that Ball’s campaign website consisted almost entirely of boilerplate cribbed verbatim from the published platforms of other Democratic Senate candidates  — including Senators Joe Manchin of West Virginia, Sherrod Brown of Ohio, Kay Hagan of North Carolina, and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts.

One example of many may suffice. 

Warren: “We need to put people to work rebuilding our roads and bridges, upgrading our water systems, teaching our kids, and protecting our communities — earning paychecks and keeping Massachusetts growing.”

Ball: “That’s why it is so important that we get people back to work right now, rebuilding our roads and bridges, upgrading our water systems, teaching our kids, and protecting our communities, earning paychecks and keeping Tennessee and America growing.”

Buzzfeed’s disclosure of this and the numerous other examples of cloned prose on Ball’s website forced an embarrassed response from the candidate (“I had no idea that this material was cut and pasted on my website from other sources.”) and a righteously phrased demand from state Republican Chairman Chris Devaney that Ball exit the race: “Gordon Ball, with nearly everything on his website plagiarized, should do the same and halt his fraudulent campaign today.”

Trace Sharp, a spokeswoman for the Ball campaign, would later set forth the obvious, that a campaign staffer, since departed, had assembled a series of statements on issues from various sources that Ball could concur with and placed them on the candidate’s website.

To reprise Horatio in Act One of Shakespeare’s Hamlet: “Needs no ghost come from the grave to tell us this.” Virtually all candidates, all of the time, lean heavily on boilerplate prepared by staffers for their public statements. Unlike major addresses, which usually are designed specifically for candidates by their speechwriters (or improved by the candidates themselves), talking points and website pronouncements hardly every reflect much originality.

To be blunt, it is highly doubtful that most of the aforesaid sources for the Ball website — Senators Manchin, Brown, Hagan, and Warren — were the actual authors of the remarks cribbed by the unidentified Ball staffer. And it surely wouldn’t be that difficult to uncover remarks made by Republicans — Alexander and Carr, say, on the evils of the “Obama agenda” — that displayed a remarkable sameness.

Still and all, this week’s disclosure was a setback for Ball, as Carr’s latest blowing-off of Alexander was for the Senator.

 

• But, if the U.S. Senate race may so far have failed to inspire many Tennesseans, other issues on the November 4th ballot — notably four constitutional amendments — were beginning to gain traction.

A case in point is Amendment One, which would essentially nullify a 2000 state Supreme Court decision that struck down the state’s power to impose significant restrictions on the right to abortion — going further in many ways than the U.S. Supreme Court itself had.

The amendment reads: “Nothing in this Constitution secures or protects a right to abortion or requires the funding of an abortion. The people retain the right through their elected state representatives and state senators to enact, amend, or repeal statutes regarding abortion, including circumstances of pregnancy resulting from rape or incest or when necessary to save the life of the mother.”

Proponents of the amendment say that it merely makes the Tennessee Constitution neutral on abortion. Opponents say it is designed to roll back the hard-won rights of women and cite the last prepositional phrase, from “including” on, as being especially ominous.

Resisters to Amendment One had back-to-back meetings this week. The Tennessee Democratic Party held a Tuesday night fund-raiser at the Racquet Club to oppose the amendment, and Planned Parenthood was host for a scheduled “Clergy Perspective” event opposing the amendment at Evergreen Presbyterian Church.

Adherents were also active. Two examples: Proponents of Amendment One were conspicuous in passing out literature at the two-day Bartlett Festival at Freeman Park this past weekend, and an organization called Concerned Women for America held a press conference in Nashville on Tuesday to announce results of a poll purporting to show Tennesseans favor the amendment.

All of this is tip-of-the-iceberg. Clearly, much more public activity is coming on this issue, as, for that matter, on Amendment Two, which establishes a method of selecting state appellate judges via gubernatorial appointment, coupled with legislative ratification; and on Amendment Three, which would enact an explicit constitutional ban on a state income tax.

 

• Some 70 attendees at a “legislative forum” held by the Tennessee Nurses Association (TNA) last week got more gratification than they may have expected from a cross-section of public officials and candidates.

The number one item on the TNA’s wish list seemed to be a call for legislation in the next session of the General Assembly that would confer “full practice authority” on several categories of advanced nurse practitioners. 

Such authority, sanctioned in only 16 states, would grant the qualifying nurses latitude, independently of supervising physicians, to write prescriptions, make medical assessments, order tests, and make referrals. 

Among those endorsing the request were U.S. Representative Steve Cohen, a Democrat; state Senate candidate Flinn, a Republican; Democratic state Representatives Karen Camper of Memphis and Craig Fitzhugh of Ripley; and Tea Party U.S. Senate candidate Tom Emerson.

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Flyer Flashback News

Looking Back at the “Best Of Memphis” List That Started It All

In 1994, five years after the first issue of the Memphis Flyer hit news stands, we launched the first “Best of Memphis” poll. Back then, votes were cast on paper ballots, and each and every vote was counted and tallied by hand, which was a lot of work considering the first poll had 72 categories.

Some things haven’t changed since we started the poll; Huey’s, Rendezvous, Seikisui, Buster’s Liquors, and even WMC-TV news anchor Joe Birch have reigned supreme as the “gold medal winner” in their respective categories since day one.  

To prep readers for the first poll, an editor’s note read: “We thought it would be fun to do a ‘Best of’ Issue. Our friends at Memphis magazine do one every year. Weekly newspapers from Los Angeles to the East Coast have been doing them for years. It couldn’t be that difficult, could it? We’d get about a hundred or so ballots back, count them, and put together a story.

We miscalculated a few things, not the least of which was the incredible volume of returned ballots. They came in boxes — hundreds per day. Tabulating the results took much longer than we had planned. And while we were very specific about our ‘one ballot per reader’ rule, we were still surprised at the number of businesses that tried to stuff our ballot box. Bars and restaurants were the main culprits. There was even a vain attempt made by a local deejay.”

The staff must have had their hands full with all of those ballots, but luckily the tradition, however tedious, carried on. The very first “Best of Memphis” Ballot also featured a Staff Picks section, complete with categories like: Memphian We’d Like to See Go Out In Drag (Mike Ramirez, George Klein, Bud Dudley), Most Overrated Memphian (Cybil Shepherd), People We’d Like To See Leave Town (“the pitchwoman for Hank’s 1/2-Price Furniture; the waving street corner anti-abortionist; the nut who put up those ‘Tobacco Kills’ signs all over the place; anybody who has ever spray-painted or has uttered the phrase ‘Meat Is Murder’), and even Worst TV Hairdo (Jerry Tate of Channel 3).

While some reader categories have remained a constant throughout the history of the “Best of Memphis,” others didn’t stand the test of time. In 1994, we had now-defunct categories for Best Fast Food (Wendy’s) and Best Place to Celebrate Divorce (Tiffany’s Cabaret). In 1996, we asked readers to rank the Best Place To Use Your Dog As a Chick/Dude Magnet (Overton Park) and Best Place to Cure a Hangover Without Alcohol (“my bed,” with CK’s Coffee Shop in a close second).

Twenty years later, the “Best of Memphis” poll is our biggest issue of the year. Local businesses proudly display their rankings, and readers argue over who should or shouldn’t have made the cut. It’s safe to say that the list has become an important part of local culture celebrating all the good things about life in Memphis. Except of course, Jerry Tate’s poor hairdo.

Categories
News The Fly-By

Central Station Celebrates 100 Years

Downtown’s Central Station may not be the passenger hub it was in the heyday of train travel, but it’s still chugging along.

This weekend, October 3rd through 5th, the Memphis Railroad & Trolley Museum, located inside Central Station, will celebrate the 100th anniversary of the station’s 1914 grand opening with live music, a train memorabilia sale, special exhibits, and more.

“We want the younger generation to have an experience that shows them what it might have been like to be alive in Memphis in the 1900s,” said Joe Oliver, founding director of the museum. “Rail transport and travel is a big part of the Memphis story, part of our history, and our heritage is in danger of being lost because it isn’t as easy to see as it once was.”

On Thursday, October 2nd, the celebration will kick off with a show by country band the Grahams at 7:30 p.m.

On Friday, October 3rd, two train exhibit cars will pull into the station — one displaying the history of Amtrak and another displaying that of Norfolk Southern. Both will be open for tours from noon to

5 p.m. on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday.

Memphis Rail & Trolley Museum

Central Station in 1914

“The Norfolk Southern car will have a locomotive simulator. You’re the engineer. You’ll see the countryside pass and the tracks as you’re rolling down. You’ll have to blow the horn when you approach streets,” said Bill Strong, director of the Memphis Railroad & Trolley Museum.

On Saturday, October 4th, the official anniversary of the station, the Memphis Rail & Trolley Museum will be open for free. Guest lecturer Milton Winter will talk about the history of Central Station. A train show and sale will be set up in the building’s boardroom, peddling all sorts of rail artifacts and collectibles.

Double J Bar-B-Q will be served in the Amtrak parking lot from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Visitors can also board a bus headed to the Memphis Area Transit Authority (MATA) trolley barn on North Main for a tour.

Central Station was constructed for around $1.5 million at the corner of Main and Calhoun (now G.E. Patterson) to replace another train station at that same location. In the station’s heyday, numerous rail lines operated passenger trains there.

By the 1960s, many rail lines began discontinuing passenger trains. On

May 1, 1971, Amtrak took over all inter-city passenger train service. Illinois Central, which was headquartered here, moved their offices out of the station by 1989.

“After Illinois Central moved out, the station became a hull. It was at one time referred to as the worst Amtrak station in America,” Strong said. “People were scared of the neighborhood, and there were drunks passed out in the street.”

In the 1990s, the station was remodeled, and the once-sleazy South Main area was transformed into a thriving arts district.

“In 1991, the Illinois Central railroad sold the station and all the property to the city of Memphis for $10. And the city said, ‘MATA, you’re going to run this building,” Strong said.

Today, Central Station still serves as the Amtrak hub, and it’s home to the Memphis Rail & Trolley Museum. The former Illinois Central office space on the upper floors is now apartments, and parts of the bottom floor is rented out for special events.

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News The Fly-By

Downtown Memphis Leads the County in Growth Since 2000

Downtown Memphis sparked and boomed over the past 14 years, according to a new report from the Downtown Memphis Commission (DMC), and more fireworks are on the way.

Downtown Memphis Commission

Downtown’s population grew more than any place in Shelby County from 2000 to now, the report said. The area is unmatched in the region for work and play, and it does all this in six square miles, only two percent of the county’s entire landmass. 

Downtown fell on hard times after the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King. Jr. in 1968. Businesses were boarded up, and residents raced to the suburbs. Signs of life returned in the 1980s; Beale Street was reopened, and some urban pioneers moved onto South Main. Progress was slow throughout the 1990s, but momentum mounted, the boom began, and that’s good news for the entire city, said DMC President Paul Morris. 

Downtown Memphis Commission

 “I really, truly believe that [the growth of] Downtown is one of the most efficient and effective ways to save our city,” Morris said. “I know that sounds like I’m exaggerating, but we strongly need new citizens in Memphis. And we need to retain the talent and the people that we have here now. Downtown is performing in that regard.”

And Downtown’s fireworks show isn’t over. The report says $294 million worth of new attractions have either just opened Downtown or are on the way. That list includes Bass Pro Shops, Beale Street Landing, and the Main Street to Main Street bike and pedestrian path. 

Downtown Memphis Commission

But a “tremendous amount of challenges” remain for Downtown, Morris said. 

“This report shows a lot of the successes, but [the DMC] spends 99 percent of our time focused on the problems,” he said. “That’s our purpose, to solve the problems, not just to celebrate the successes.”

Many blighted properties pock the city’s sprawling Downtown landscape. The DMC is trying to increase the cost of holding blighted property and decrease the cost of redevelopment. 

Downtown Memphis Commission

Downtown also shows a weak demand for office space, mainly because of competition from suburban office centers. Some of the vacant space Downtown has been successfully converted to residences, Morris said. But the Downtown market is also seeing organic growth from existing companies.

Categories
News The Fly-By

Fly on the Wall 1336

Cool Things

“Jay,” artist Lance Turner’s mural depicting Memphis garage-rock hero Jay Reatard, is being installed this week as a part of the “Mosaic” public art project sponsored by the Downtown Memphis Commission. Turner, a photo realist of sorts, likes to show viewers the pixel grid because he thinks painting is an inherently self-referential form. This mural —like the musician who inspired it — goes in and out of focus depending on your point of view. If you’re standing right in front of the mural, it looks like this.

The farther away you move, the more things come into focus. It’s a nifty addition to the neighborhood, and just one part of the ambitious mural project.

Neverending Elvis

Speaking of art inspired by Memphis musicians, who wants to buy three 7-foot-tall Elvises? Andy Warhol’s “Triple Elvis” depicts the King (three times) as a gun-slinging cowboy and hits the auction block at Christie’s on November 12th. “Triple Elvis” is being offered for sale alongside another of Warhol’s celebrity portraits, “Four Marlons,” which depicts Brando as he appeared in the film The Wild One.  The estimated combined price is $130-million, which really isn’t bad for seven of the 20th century’s biggest stars.

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Editorial Opinion

Consistency on Abortion in Tennessee

Two weeks ago in this space, we ruminated a bit on the sad irony that Tennesseans had overwhelmingly voted back on August 7th to keep pure politics out of the appellate court system, only to see their judgment thwarted in the

immediate aftermath of the election. The state’s Supreme Court — apparently including the three justices whose careers had just been saved from a GOP-sponsored partisan purge by a 2-to-1 statewide vote — concurred in what surely looked like a plain-and-simple political act: the election of an avowedly Republican state attorney  general, Herb Slatery, who had until then been serving as the lawyer for GOP Governor Bill Haslam.

Slatery’s predecessor, the now deposed Robert Cooper, had by virtually all accounts served with distinction. The main disqualifying factor for him apparently was that he had been appointed to office by a previous Democratic governor, Phil Bredesen. That fact had put him on the hit list of the state’s reigning legislative power, Lieutenant Governor Ron Ramsey, whose PAC had bankrolled much of the capaign against retaining Justices Gary Wade, Connie Clark, and Sharon Lee, all of whom had earned Ramsey’s wrath because — you guessed it — they, too, had been appointed by Bredesen.

No doubt Slatery is both an honest man and a competent lawyer. We have no reason to think otherwise. Our concern about his appointment has to do with the political context of his selection. It seems reasonably clear that the High Court’s vote was a de facto courtesy nod to the Republican Party, which unmistakably is now the governing body of state government. So much for the principle of checks and balances, although no doubt the justices were acting somewhat in the name of consistency.

For what it’s worth, that idea is inherent in one of the major issues on the forthcoming November 4th state ballot — the statewide referendum on Constitutional Amendment 1, which would essentially repudiate a state Supreme Court decision from 2000 in the case of Planned Parenthood v. Sundquist. By a 4-to-1 vote, the court established guidelines in its ruling that extended protection for abortion rights beyond what even the U.S. Supreme Court had established. The proposed Amendment 1 would severely shrink that protection, apparently putting in jeopardy even, in the words of the amendment, “circumstances of pregnancy resulting from rape or incest or when necessary to save the life of the mother.”

The weekly Tennessee Journal, as even-handed and judicious a publication as there is in Tennessee, examined that fact last week in the light of the recent judicial-retention election and summarized its findings under the head: “An affirmative vote on Amendment 1 would repudiate court.” As the Journal noted, Ramsey had stated explicitly that a success for his purge campaign “would send a strong message that we expect our judges to interpret the Constitution, not rewrite it.”

As a corollary, these retention results would surely seem to mean, in the interests of consistency, that the Constitution should not be rewritten in the mode of Amendment 1.

Let the public be clear-minded where the reprieved justices may not have been.

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Who Wore It Better? The Oshi Edition

Once upon a time, first lady Laura Bush—and three other society ladies—wore the same $8,500 Oscar de la Renta gown to a White House reception. That’s right: four women, wearing the same red dress at the same party.

Much the same thing happened last night at the grand opening of Oshi Burger Bar, an Asian-inflected burger joint at the fancy end of South Main. For the occasion, founder Jeff Johnson wore a gray plaid jacket from Memphis’s Lansky Bros.

Oh, and Ben Fant? He wore the same thing.

Ben Fant and Jeff Johnson

  • Ben Fant and Jeff Johnson

“I wore this jacket to a meeting a few months ago,” explained Fant. “Jeff liked it, so he went and bought one of his own.”

Fant, it turns out, works for Farmhouse Marketing, the firm that did the menu design, web design, and environment design for Oshi. He and Johnson are also friends.

“So it was bound to happen sometime,” added Johnson.

The question now is: Who wore it better?

More on Oshi tomorrow …

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Fly On The Wall Blog Opinion

New (Painted) Faces on South Main

Little by little the Mosaic public art project sponsored by the Center City Development Corp. is changing the face of South Main. Here is a close up look at some complete, and near complete murals. 

This team-painted piece remembers the Memphis sanitation strike. The faces are  all pretty spectacular. 

This guy’s probably my favorite. 

Or maybe this guy…

Follow the Jump to see details from Lance Turner’s “Jay,” a tribute to Memphis garage punk Jay Reatard, and a train-inspired mural. 

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New (Painted) Faces on South Main

[jump]

Sixteen coaches long…

Note the actual cow skull just above the painted one. Nothing beats a mural with bones. 

And finally, a pixelated rocker…

The Rocker up close…

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News News Blog

Former MPD Officer Receives 11-Year Sentence for Raping College Student

Aaron Reinsberg

  • Aaron Reinsberg

A former Memphis police officer has been sentenced to 11 years in prison without parole for raping a Rhodes College student.

In January 2013, Aaron Reinsberg, 32, reportedly met the 21-year-old woman at a Beale Street nightspot, which she worked for part-time. The entertainment district in downtown Memphis was Reinsberg’s patrolling beat at the time.

The two exchanged phone numbers, and the victim went home. Reinsberg subsequently used his personal cellphone to access county law enforcement databases to find her home address, according to the Shelby County District Attorney General’s office.

The same night, Reinsberg traveled to the victim’s home and was allowed inside by her roommate. He was left alone with the woman in her bedroom.

The woman, who was inebriated, fell asleep while Reinsberg was in her room, according to reports. When she woke up, she was undressed and he was on top of her, raping her. Due to her intoxication, she was unable to resist Reinsberg during the incident.

Reinsberg, who joined the Memphis Police Department in 2011, has been convicted of raping the woman. This week, he was sentenced to 11 years in prison with no parole. The former officer was also sentenced to one year for official misconduct. The sentences will be served concurrently.

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Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Dr. John Digs the Mighty Souls

American musical Titan Dr. John played at GPAC last weekend. Born Malcolm John “Mac” Rebennack, Dr. John has been in studios since the 1950s and the trickster God of American music since the gods know when. He was a protégé of Professor Longhair and is as essential as roux to New Orleans. His first album, Gris Gris from 1968 is definitive spooky voodoo and his 2012 Locked Down is a tour de force of songwriting. Of note last Saturday was 11-year-old Ayler Edmaiston, who played tambourine onstage with Dr. John and the Mighty Souls Brass Band, one of his father, saxophonist Art Edmaiston’s gigs. Art also plays for Gregg Allman and a host of other jazz and soul luminaries. Memphis is home to many talented people. But how many played with Dr. John at 11? Look out.

Dr. John Digs the Mighty Souls