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Ray Nagin Places Blacks in a Bind
By George E. Curry
Apr 17, 2006

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Ray Nagin is in a political bind. A former cable TV executive, he was elected mayor of New Orleans four years ago with strong support from the corporate community. Blacks voted against him and after his first term in office, they remain convinced that they made the right decision.

Entering Saturday’s election, the corporate community has abandoned Nagin in favor of two White candidates, Lt. Gov. Mitch Landrieu and former Chamber of Commerce Chairman Ron Forman. Nagin has no chance of getting re-elected without carrying the Black vote, the very people that rejected him four years ago and, many say, he rejected while serving as mayor.

Now the charismatically-challenged Nagin is plastering billboards throughout the city, urging people to vote for “our mayor.”

Not only is Nagin in a bind, he has placed Black residents of New Orleans in one as well. They are faced between voting for Nagin, knowing that he has not served them well, or helping a White person become mayor of a city with a two-thirds Black majority for the first time in nearly three decades.

According to a poll conducted last month by Ed Renwick, director of the Loyola University Institute of Politics, Landrieu was leading the mayoral field with 27 percent of the vote, followed by Nagin with 26 percent and Forman with 16 percent. More than one in five voters were undecided.

Among Black voters, Nagin led with 41 percent, followed by Landrieu with 28 percent. Forman, who was endorsed by the New Orleans Times-Picayune and is the favorite of big business, received 30 percent of the White vote. With 22 candidates vying for mayor, a May 20 runoff is all but certain.

Landrieu would pose a major challenge for Nagin. His father, the last White mayor of New Orleans, was considered a progressive part of the “New South” and hired African-Americans in unprecedented numbers. Landieu’s sister is a U.S. Senator. And more than any other candidate, he has been able to fashion a bi-racial coalition of voters.

Despite early predictions that Hurricane Katrina would wash out Black political power in New Orleans, early indications are that Black voting strength in this election will be equivalent to what it was four years ago. Although final figures were not available at press time, during the first four days of early voting last week, African-Americans made up 70 percent of voters. That compares favorably to the 68 percent Black population of New Orleans and 65 percent Black electorate.

To understand the dilemma of Black voters in New Orleans, we must remember that it hasn’t been all that long that we’ve had African-Americans control City Hall, even in predominantly Black cities like Selma, Ala. and Jackson, Miss. One of the mantras of the modern civil rights movement was: “We want a Black face in a high place.”

Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas painfully reminds us that having a Black face in a high place is not enough. If that Black face is going to vote against the interests of African-Americans, we’re better off with that Black face being in a low place. Or, better yet, no place.

For the past month, I have been co-moderating mayoral debates/forums for the candidates in Houston, New Orleans, Atlanta and Baton Rouge. In Houston and New Orleans, Nagin boasted that he is the candidate with the best record and therefore, best qualified to serve as mayor.

He didn’t mention that he was MIA for several days, or that he failed to carry out his own evacuation plan for people without transportation. He said simply judge him on his record.

The record shows that until shortly before Nagin filed for mayor, he had been a registered Republican. And while in office, he committed political suicide by endorsing an unsuccessful Republican candidate for governor. With his ranting and cursing immediately following Katrina, Gov. Kathleeen Blanco, a Democrat, wasn’t inclined to work hand-in-hand with a mayor who had sought her defeat.

Now, Nagin wants Blacks to trust him to be “our mayor.” Yet, he has said nothing on the campaign trail or in his position papers that would indicate that the Ray Nagin today is any different from the Ray Nagin that abandoned African-Americans before and during Katrina.

Nagin shouldn’t get a pass simply because he’s Black. We’ve gone down that road too often with too many politicians. Let all of them compete for the Black vote. Let’s hear all of the plans for restoring the Lower 9th Ward and making sure Black business owners get a fare share of city jobs and contracts. It should be on that basis that a candidate receives our vote. Not because they have placed us in a political bind.

Next Column: Cynthia McKinney Uses Racism as a Crutch

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