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Book Features Books

Books from Memphians with a Message

“An nything you like about this book is due to me, and any errors are the fault of those listed above.”

Those words, following a list of acknowledgements, are in the author’s foreword from a new book — and a scholarly one, in fact — that political junkies and, really, all serious writers with an interest in the future of their society can profit from. The sense of humor in the sentence quoted above is a tip-off that the author, who knows his subject, well understands that famous maxim of Aristotle’s: “All art must both amuse and instruct.”

The book is Rethinking U.S. Election Law: Unskewing the System (Edward Elgar Publishing, Ltd). The author is one Steven Mulroy, professor at the University of Memphis and, of late, a member of the Shelby County Commission. Even more recently, Mulroy was the sparkplug and primary eminence of the local movement to reject a City Council-sponsored referendum that would have prohibited the use of Instant Runoff Voting.

Back in 2008, Mulroy was the Johnny Appleseed of the IRV process when the original referendum authorizing it was passed by Memphis voters. IRV, in brief, is a means of voting whereby voters, instead of just picking a single candidate, can rank several in order of preference, so that if no candidate succeeds in polling a majority, the voters’ secondary choices are weighted and factored into the results so that a majority winner can prevail.

The result: No plurality winner (as in the last presidential election). No expensive and ill-attended runoff or the anti-IRV referendum emanating from the Council. IRV is scheduled for use in the 2019 city election but still must maneuver its way past a couple of legal actions — one of them from the state Election Coordinator — attempting to block it.

“One common response to any argument for a national popular presidential vote [another cause preferred by the author] is, ‘we live in a republic, not a democracy.’ Indeed, that response comes up in just about any discussion of any significant electoral reform. It is, of course, a shibboleth rather than an argument. The U.S. is both a democracy (governed by the people) and, more specifically, a republic (governed by the people through elected representatives). … [B]oth terms are consistent with the Founders’ original understanding, and any purported distinction between the two” is irrelevant.

That about says it.

Equally rewarding to the lay reader and the political adept is Jocie (The Hillhelen Group LLC, $20 at Novel), a personal memoir by one of the most thoroughly committed citizens of Shelby County. In the course of this jaunty, passionate, and humble narrative, one encounters a being determined to fully experience the actual world she lives in and equally determined to improve it to the most ideal specifications she can imagine.

The author, Jocelyn Wurzburg, has used her life to graduate from the status of “good little girl” in 1950s Memphis to that of mover and shaker in almost every good big cause there has been in the rapidly changing social ferment of her adulthood.

The singularity and determination to be of her times and not just in them caused Wurzburg to ignore every barricade she encountered — religious, social, political, what-have-you.

She has been active, from the time of the 1968 sanitation strike crisis, in the cause of racial togetherness and civil rights, to the point that the Tennessee Human Rights Commission has not only taken note of her efforts, the THRC has named its highest honor the Jocelyn Wurzburg Civil Rights Legacy Award.

A lawyer, she became a pioneer in the art of domestic mediation once she realized that divorces for most people had become a zero-sum game. She has also been a force in women’s rights movements locally, statewide, and national.

For all her involvements and distinction, though, she remains as down-to-earth and gracious as the old cliche of Southern hospitality would suggest. She is famously colloquial in speech and, when circumstances call for it, deportment. If you don’t know her, you should. If you spend your time in the company of people trying to help Memphis find its best self, you will.

Categories
Politics Politics Beat Blog

Serendipity and Synchronicity: Simultaneous Homages to Racial Harmony, 3-30-17

JB

“We must embody the character and teachings of Dr. King and demonstrate that no one has a corner on the market of the principles of patriotism, compassion, and equality. There are times in our lives that we cannot change the direction of the wind, but there are always opportunities to adjust ourselves for a more just America. And let us pray that we can proclaim that it is through the peace that comes with understanding that we should, we must, and we shall overcome.”

Peggy Wallace Kennedy, daughter of the late Governor George Wallace of Alabama, speaking to the Academy of Professional Family Mediators National Conference at the downtown Doubletree Hotel, Thursday, March 30. (Kennedy, center, is pictured here with Paula Casey (left) and Jocelyn Wurzburg, hostess for the event.)

Kennedy, a teen at the time of her father’s ill-fated 1962 pronouncement of “Segregation Today, Segregation Tomorrow, Segregation Forever” from a doorway of the University of Alabama, disagreed intensely with her father’s position, but, as she said in an interview with the Flyer, “I had no power to speak in my family.” She speaks now, frequently and powerfully, on the theme of racial equality, and has  joined U.S. Representative John Lewis, a hero of the 1965 Selma march, in a symbolic re-enactment of the crossing of the Edmund Pettus bridge there.

She believes that her father, who, late in life, after being wounded by an assassin, began trying to make amends, came to sincerely regret actions that he took, she said, not for reasons of the heart but for reasons of political expediency.,

JB

“It was in this particular Clayborn Temple, I was speaking on the Martin Luther King Celebration on this stage [in 1991], and Congressman Harold Ford walked in from this entrance here and what the audience was talking about was, they wanted Mayor Hackett out, and they wanted a black mayor. I really didn’t want to be the Mayor. Harold Ford walked in and I said…”Harold, you heard the people. Take leadership!”….That was the genesis of the People’s Convention. I did not seek the Mayor’s office…They said, “Dr. Herenton, we want you to be the Mayor. That would give it credibility.’ I said, ‘I don’t want to be the Mayor.’ I was selected on the first round, 70-something percent, and all of a sudden, I said, I’ve got to run!”

Willie Herenton, former five-times-elected Mayor of Memphis, speaking simultaneously in historic Clayborn Temple in Memphis on Thursday, March 30, on how he came to be a candidate and became the first black mayor of Memphis in 1991. (The occasion was the unveiling of Otis Sanford’s book, From Boss Crump to King Willie: How Race Changed Memphis Politics.)

Sanford (right, below), was interviewed on stage at Clayborn by Susan Thorp. The author, former managing editor of The Commercial Appeal and current holder of the Hardin Chair of Excellence in Economic/Managerial Journalism at the University of Memphis, was scheduled to appear also at Square Books in Oxford, MS, at 5 p.m., Monday, 4-3-17.

JB

Categories
Opinion Viewpoint

Vote No to Misogyny!

When people have asked for our recommendations in prior election cycles, we have always prided ourselves on supporting candidates regardless of party, gender, race, or ethnic background. We look for the most qualified candidates to serve the public. We study the issues and the candidates’ backgrounds and qualifications.

This year, we have been appalled that the most unqualified, vile, misogynistic, xenophobic, and racist candidate to ever seek the presidency continues to receive support from local Republicans. We were also appalled that no local Republican state legislators sought to oust the despicable State Representative Jeremy Durham before the state attorney general’s report revealed the depths of Durham’s depravity.

These two sexual predators do not deserve to be in elective office. Thank goodness the GOP finally grew a spine and ousted Durham. It should have happened much sooner. They only did it after there was a public outcry. Republicans running for state and federal office continue to state their support for the unqualified and embarrassing GOP presidential nominee, Donald Trump. Shameful.

Jeremy Durham

In response, we are recommending that this year you vote only for Democrats. It is the only way to show disgust with what the Republicans have done. We think they deserve to be defeated for their support of two sexual predators. The legislature wouldn’t have ousted Durham if they hadn’t had to do so in order to keep him from receiving a legislative pension. Lots of people knew about his antics and turned a blind eye, including our local GOP legislators.

It has been extremely disappointing to see the Grand Old Party and all of our elected Republican officials, with the exception of Governor Bill Haslam, twist themselves into knots to support their presidential nominee. They want to have it both ways. They think they can disavow what Trump says and still endorse him, so as to keep his supporters voting for them. The Republican nominee’s campaign has normalized the abnormal.

These are troubling times, politically. The history of the Republican Party was once a proud one. It was the first party to support abolition of slavery and women’s suffrage. The grandfather of Alice Paul, a prominent suffragist, helped found the GOP in New Jersey. U.S. Senator Margaret Chase Smith, a Republican who represented Maine for 24 years in the Senate, believed in compromise and governing. She also called out Republicans when they were wrong.

Senator Smith’s “Declaration of Conscience” in 1950 condemned Wisconsin Republican Senator Joseph McCarthy. Smith stated she didn’t “want to see the Republican Party ride to political victory on the Four Horsemen of Calumny — Fear, Ignorance, Bigotry, and Smear.” Those words are just as important to heed now as they were back then.

Two of the three of us whose bylines are above — Happy and Jocie — were once active Republicans. We all now see Donald Trump’s nomination and support as a culmination of racist overtures dating back to the late Lee Atwater’s Southern strategy. It was appalling back then, and the GOP deserves the meltdown it is experiencing now.

There used to be liberal and conservative ways to solve problems. Now we are seeing a complete failure by the GOP to even acknowledge a problem exists or that government has a role to help solve it. We grieve this turn of events and hope the Republican Party can reconstitute itself and its legitimate role in our democracy. They don’t need another sham “autopsy,” such as the one written after the 2012 election. They also need to stop the obstructionism and begin to participate in governing again. We believe in robust debate among the parties. We also believe reasonable people can disagree without being disagreeable.

The November 8th sample ballot is posted online at shelbyvote.com. Read it and learn more about who is running, and for which offices. Early voting starts October 19th and runs through November 3rd. Election Day is November 8th. Please vote. It’s never been more important.
Happy Jones is a retired family therapist; Jocelyn Wurzburg is a professional mediator; and Paula Casey is a speaker/writer/editor. An original, shorter version of this column appeared on MemphisFlyer.com.

Categories
Politics Politics Feature

Mano-a-Mano

A political comeback is apparently in the works for former public services and neighborhoods director Kenneth Moody, who left office in 2009 with his patron, former Mayor Willie Herenton. And that will set up an interesting one-on-one contest in next year’s Democratic primary for the job Moody seeks — that of Juvenile Court clerk.

Already an active Democratic candidate for the position is Shelby County commissioner Henri Brooks, whose campaign against what she saw as abuses at Juvenile Court resulted in a scathing Department of Justice report last year that has required extensive (and costly) fixes by the court.

The current Juvenile Court clerk, Joy Touliatos, is expected once again to be the Republican candidate for the office, facing the winner of the 2014 Democratic primary.

Confirming his intent to be a candidate, Moody acknowledged that, under his administration as public services director, serious problems developed in two city divisions under his general purview — the rape crisis center (MSARC) and the city animal shelter. Both divisions were administered by subordinates, but Moody said this week, “I take responsibility for what went on. I was director of public services.”

Moody, now an administrator of a local security service, says he learned from that experience and “it has made me a better manager.”

A former basketball star for the University of Memphis, Moody will have support from some influential allies, including Bank of Bartlett president Harold Byrd and local activist/philanthropist Gayle Rose, both longtime friends.

Jocelyn Dan Wurzburg, a well-known Memphis activist in social and civic causes, is coming in for a double dose of statewide honors.

Wurzburg, an attorney, was recently honored by the Tennessee Human Rights Commission (THRC) at its 50th anniversary celebration in Nashville for her longtime advocacy in civil and women’s rights. The commission created a special award, to be called the Jocelyn Dan Wurzburg Civil Rights Legacy Award, which will be given to deserving recipients henceforth.

THRC executive director Beverly L. Watts said: “During this year of recognizing civil rights advocates throughout the state, the 50th anniversary co-chairs and I realized Jocelyn Wurzburg embodies civil rights ideals, principles, and dedication to equality. This award was presented to Jocelyn D. Wurzburg for her specific contributions to the commission and her dedication to equality. The board will present this award at its discretion to those who embody the dedication to equality.”

Also a pioneer in the mediation process, Wurzburg was originally appointed to the THRC in 1971 by Governor Winfield Dunn and reappointed in 2007 by Governor Phil Bredesen. She authored the 1978 legislation that became the Tennessee Human Rights Act and transformed the commission from an advisory organization to one with power to litigate claims of discrimination.

Wurzburg is one of two Memphis figures who will be inaugurated into the Tennessee Women’s Hall of Fame at the 10th annual Women’s Economic Summit in Nashville this weekend. The other is former University of Memphis president Shirley Raines.

Germantown mayor Sharon Goldsworthy will also be prominent at the summit as a member of a mayors’ panel discussing economic issues.