Mayor Francis Slay, (center) with family and supporters, celebrates his victory in the St. Louis Democratic mayoral primary election on Tuesday, March 5, 2013, at the Dubliner Restaurant in downtown St. Louis. Photo by Christian Gooden, cgooden@post-dispatch.com
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Evelena
Brown, once gave her son a bit of sage advice that he’s yet to really follow. Mama was fully aware of my rebellious streak and when I was a younger man just starting
my hard-hitting publication, Take Five
Magazine, I remember her words vividly:
“We don’t run it; we run around in it.”
Her
words returned to me last night when I realized that Mayor Francis Slay had won
his fourth term in office. The mayor with his more than $3 million in campaign
donations-most of it from uber rich, powerful, right-leaning millionaires with
a privatization agenda-still run it. The rest of us-the poor, the unconnected,
the voiceless, the dreamers-those of us who bucked the status quo and believe
that tax-supported development should be about people not the profits of the
already rich…well, we’re destined to still run around in it.
I
enthusiastically backed Slay’s opponent, President of the Board of Aldermen,
Lewis Reed. I stepped from the shadows of a relatively quiet life in the
nonprofit and entrepreneurial sectors and wrote damning but factual, in depth commentaries
and articles about the Slay Administration. I hosted a mayoral debate and
mocked the mayor who was a no-show and I joined Lizz Brown’s radio program for
a special weekly segment titled “11 Years of Slay.”
I
allowed myself to dream of a St. Louis where African Americans along with rich, growing populations of Latinos, Asians and Bosnians would finally have a chance
to work with a grounded visionary in City Hall. Together, I imagined us rebuilding and revitalizing
our city and making it a truly inclusive and economically vibrant metropolis for
all-not just the privileged few.
Instead,
we have again empowered the powerful. With our votes we have sent an impotent
message to the status quo that they can move full steam ahead with no questions
or challenge. We are still the enablers
of mayoral mediocrity, money-enriched half-truths about “progress” and we have validated
convenient and suspect alliances built on political favors, nepotism and
self-interests.
In
essence, we’ve said that the horrid high school dropout rate, rampant crime, disproportionate
unemployment and a serious health crisis mostly in the city’s lowest-income wards-are all perfectly OK. Future
headlines won’t boast of the extraordinary, ordinary people who finally rose up
and addressed these issues. No, our immediate legacy will be a sad rerun of tax-subsidized
downtown developments, privatized schools and public services, slum
neighborhoods and the incarceration of those who slipped through scissor-sliced
safety nets.
However,
I will never be comfortable with the idea that the powers-that-be will forever “run
it” and the rest of us are destined to “run around in it.” For the first time
in a long time, a diverse body of St. Louisians said “enough!” Old grudges were
forgiven and new racial and economic alliances were forged. For a moment, we
dreamed and boldly acted together. For a brief second, the powerless stepped up
to power and said “it’s our turn!”
That,
my friends, hasn’t changed. A seed has been planted and we cannot back track
now.
This
morning, I heard Lizz on the radio. She talked about the target on the backs of
those who opposed Slay. The administration is known for vindictively
vanquishing its enemies. I refuse to spend my days worrying about payback from
a moneyed mayor. I am too old, too stuck in my ways and too hard-headed to compromise
or speak quietly to power at this point.
Other
than the fact that the same ole players and the same old elitist agenda is still
in play, I have few regrets. I got involved with the mayoral race because I’m
convinced there’s a mighty wave of change rolling through the region. There are
blacks, whites, browns and “others” who realize that our concerns aren’t that disconnected
and that together, we are stronger. It’s just a slow roll.
Dr.
Martin Luther King once preached that “we must never be satisfied” as long as the
poor and powerless suffer. No tears, no regrets on my part. We don’t have to sheepishly
tolerate power run amok. We must have the righteous, resilient resolve to stay
the course and nurture the seed.
We may not “run it,” but we can still challenge and change the way it's run.
Comments
The Post did a good wrap up also:
HTTP://WWW.STLTODAY.COM/NEWS/LOCAL/GOVT-AND-POLITICS/NICK-PISTOR/SLAY-S-PATH-TO-VICTORY-RAN-THROUGH-SOUTHWEST-AND-CENTRAL/ARTICLE_F2A80D3B-3CAE-5968-AC95-6F41D2A34681.HTML#.UTIOJTONL90.EMAIL