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Opinion Viewpoint

A Wake-Up Call

It was one year ago that the Memphis City Council passed the non-discrimination ordinance, which would protect city workers from discriminatory action based on sexual identity and orientation.

The Tennessee Equality Project was at the forefront of grass-roots lobbying and organizing to get the public involved with holding their city council members accountable along with several other organizations — including the Shelby County Democratic Party. 

The night that the ordinance passed, there was an amazing feeling in the air. Memphis had demonstrated the gumption to stand up and fight for equality, and there was a realization of progress being made.

That same evening, the Shelby County Democratic Party was hosting a presidential-debate watch party where several of the folks who worked to pass the ordinance joined in celebration. The feeling was electric. The SCDP had finally joined with advocates for equality and won.

What a difference a year makes. I was in attendance at the recent roast of former Mayor Willie Herenton, an event hosted by the SCDP. While overall it was a very successful event, toward the end of the evening the emcee, TV’s Judge Joe Brown, went off on a rant that sounded as if he had gotten confused and thought he was addressing a Tea Party rally.

Brown’s homophobic and sexist comments were simply too much to take, and I, along with several others, decided to leave. I was stunned that this person thought it was okay to tell young women to “keep their legs shut” at the knees and for the LGBT community to stay in the closet. He even insulted President Obama, accusing him of not having created a single job.

I did not understand. After all, the money raised that evening went to the Democratic Party, the same organization that had come out in support of marriage equality and hosted several women’s events the previous year. What was going on?!

The SCDP per se did not issue Brown’s comments, and I believe most people who are involved with that organization do want to make Memphis a better place. However, allowing for such vitriol at an event honoring our former mayor and raising funds for the party’s 2014 cycle should be addressed.

There are many people out there looking to get involved, and the progressive organization the SCDP has traditionally been in the past is inclusive. To bring more people into the party, we need to be tearing down the walls of discrimination, not adding cement to the wall of bigotry and hate.

In honor of the one-year anniversary of the passage of the nondiscrimination ordinance, I ask that the SCDP come out and stand up for those who have been discriminated against because of their gender, sexual identity, and orientation.

I say, come out and help fight for true equality and tell our great city that Brown’s remarks do not represent the views of the organization. The Democratic Party is the party of inclusion, and it is time that it stops being just a statement and becomes reality.

Election year 2014 is shaping up to be a difficult cycle in Shelby County for Democrats. It is true that there are more registered voters that identify themselves as Democrats, but the truth is that getting people out to vote on a local level takes a strategic field plan, good fund-raising, and the ability to build a strong organization of volunteers.

Building a coalition of people who are committed to fighting for issues and dedicated to political action is important — and necessary in order to win elections.

Capturing the excitement from winning such an important issue and working together in order to accomplish a victory should have catapulted progressives to feel more welcome in local Democratic politics, but, the truth is, it has not.

If the Shelby County Democratic Party continues to remain silent about the remarks made by a man whose politics are seemingly more aligned with Michele Bachmann than with Michelle Obama, then maybe it is time for progressives to start recruiting their own candidates and saying “good-bye” to the old-school patriarchal system that has left out young people, women, LGBT, and those who support their causes.

Liz Rincon is an activist and consultant, whose agency, Liz Rincon and Associates, focuses on accomplishing progressive goals.

Categories
Politics Politics Feature

Doing It Up Brown

Saturday night’s “roast” of former Mayor Willie Herenton at Colonial Country Club, a fund-raising affair of the Shelby County Democratic Party, was highlighted by many things, including a caustic comic monologue by former city councilman Brent Taylor and the culminating appearance of honoree Herenton himself.

But the most talked-about aspect of the affair was a raging monologue by former Criminal Court judge and erstwhile TV judge Joe Brown, not to be confused with the city council member by that name. Brown, who emceed the event, at one point went off on an apparent stream-of-consciousness ramble in which, among other things, he was harshly critical of President Barack Obama: “I think Doc [Herenton] would have made a better president than the one we got up there, because, hell, help is not on the damn way! Been there six years, and I have not seen any bill to put people back to work.”

Brown also had pointed remarks about gays: “I don’t care if you’re gay or not. Do it behind closed doors, and keep Big Brother out of the bedroom. But I’m damned if I’m going to get all worked up about this stuff coming out of San Francisco, when gay rights are more important than people having employment rights!”

And, contending that the rate of illegitimate births in Shelby County had reached 86 percent, Brown fumed, “And the preachers don’t tell these girls to keep their legs shut!”

There was much more in that vein, and, most unusually for what was, after all, a Democratic Party event, and especially since he had talked out loud about possibly seeking an elective office himself next year, Brown concluded, “Get down to business, cut some throats if necessary, and cooperate with the Republican parties [sic]!”

It is a fact that several attendees made a point of walking out during a portion of Brown’s speech. It is also a fact it seemed to resonate with others.

In comparison with Brown, Republican Taylor’s earlier routine had the crowd alternately laughing or groaning virtually nonstop. His barb-laced comments (“I didn’t come to toast, I came to roast!”) were downright playful — though at times morbidly so. Comparing the program for the event to the kind of foldout one might find at a funeral home, self-described undertaker Taylor discoursed on the fact that it takes “six friends” to serve as one’s pallbearers and hoist a casket but that “there were times on the council that your ass would have been drug.”

Toward his close, however, Taylor softened: “You wouldn’t have this kind of turnout if you hadn’t been a friend to everyone in this room.”

Among the friends and sympathizers whose testimonies were featured were Shelby County commissioner Sidney Chism, longtime Herenton associates Charles Carpenter and TaJuan Stout-Mitchell, City Court judge Tarik Sugarmon, state representatives G.A. Hardaway and Antonio Parkinson, Councilman Myron Lowery, state senator Jim Kyle, and Sara Kyle, the former Tennessee Regulatory Authority member now being urged by some Democrats to run for governor.

Attorney Ricky Wilkins, who had earlier confirmed his intent to challenge 9th District congressman Steve Cohen in next year’s Democratic primary, was on hand as a speaker. Other potential 2014 candidacies that were discussed from the dais were those of Sugarmon for Juvenile Court judge and Henri Brooks for Juvenile Court clerk.

Among the conspicuous absentees at the event were Cohen, members of the extended Ford family, and current Memphis mayor A C Wharton. (Harold Ford Sr., the family patriarch, had a large turnout of his own Friday night, also replete with politically influential types, for an open house at his new state-of-the-art funeral center on Sycamore View.)

Wharton was the subject of some withering remarks by predecessor Herenton, who, in a brief speech that concluded the Saturday night roast event, referred to a recording of my 2009 Flyer “exit interview” with the outgoing mayor, portions of which were played aloud on the P.A. system during dinner.

Reprising what he had said back then, Herenton basically said his successor preferred to be liked rather than respected, and he repeated that he had warned Wharton during their famous meal together at Le Chardonnay in 2007 that the forthcoming mayoral contest that year would be “ugly” should then county mayor Wharton (who ultimately opted out) decide to challenge Herenton’s bid for a fifth mayoral term.

The former mayor and current proprietor of the W.E.B. DuBois network of local charter schools also professed gratitude to be back in education after 25 “tough” years in the political sector. He reminded his listeners of his long-expressed intention to publish a tell-all book that would, among other things, expose what he said was a concerted effort within the media and the justice system to unjustly railroad him into prison.

“What they intended was Willie Herenton to be a bunk-mate of John Ford,” he averred.

Herenton’s bottom line: The “haters” could not change the history he made.

In sum: Much of the conversation Saturday night, both from the dais and otherwise, was unusually nitty-gritty and well outside the realm of normal political boilerplate, but the capacity crowd, alternately shocked and charmed, seemed pleased enough with this “inaugural” Democratic Party roast to have a go at another somewhere down the line.

Categories
Politics Politics Beat Blog

Carson Elected New Local Party Chairman by Democrats

New Democratic chairman Bryan Carson with state Representative G.A. Hardaway and asst. city attorney Regina Morrison Newman at post-convention reception.

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  • New Democratic chairman Bryan Carson with state Representative G.A. Hardaway and asst. city attorney Regina Morrison Newman at post-convention reception.

The Shelby County Democrati9c Party, fully mindful of the weakness of their party statewide but determinedly optimistic about local election prospects in 2014, held their biennial party convention Saturday at Airways Middle School and emerged with a new executive committee and a new chairman, Bryan Carson.

Two other candidates, Terry Spicer and Jennings Bernard, did some head-counting during the course of the morning and, realizing they couldn’t win, deferred to Carson when it came time for nominations.

Carson, the son of longtime party eminence Gale Jones Carson and lead supervisor of an epidemiology work section at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, was then elected by acclamation. He would hail his rivals’ actions as presenting an opportunity for unity.

Before caucusing and voting by state House district got under way, the crowd was warmed up by 9th District congressman Steve Cohen, who emphasized what he said were the opportunities for Democrats in next year’s elections and advised the delegates to stand by the party’s principles.

Scorning the idea of “reaching out” too much in efforts to compromise with Republicans, Cohen got off a zinger: “Neville Chamberlain reached out to Hitler. It doesn’t work!”

Outgoing chairman Van Turner received a plaque of appreciation for his efforts during four years at the party helm.

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