Thursday, January 8, 2009

MAY IS ENOUGH











If the 18 candidates running for mayor really want Detroit to succeed, they will pledge that if they lose, they will not run again in November 2009.

You may not have realized it, know it, or worse, you may not care, but there are 18 candidates running for mayor of Detroit in the special before the formal election in November.

The fact of the matter is this: Detroit is transition. Currently Kenneth V. Cockrel Jr. is the interim mayor, but somehow he seems to think that he’s already been elected. Be that as it may, the residents of Detroit will have their chance to make it known who they want to be the mayor in the primary in February and then again in the special general election in May. Once that election is over, the entire state of Michigan will have to decide whom we want to elect as governor.

The last thing that Detroit needs is a heavily contested special election in February and May and then turn around and see another heavily contested election over the summer.

May should be the last dance. Once we get our mayor in May, he or she ---I see you Sharon McPhail --- should slide into victory in November so that the city of Detroit can get on to handling the business of saving our city that is currently on life support.

Detroit residents, neighborhoods and businesses deserve the peace of mind that we won’t have to go through an entire year of elections. How can the city stabilize if we have the potential of having 4 mayors in 16 months? No business will want to invest in a city where they don’t know who the leadership is. Or worse, where the leadership changes every couple of months.

We have a long list of candidates, some you’ve heard of, some you haven’t. I affectionately refer to the lesser-known candidates as the “miscellaneous candidates.” Next week, I will be profiling some of the most viable mayoral candidates, and some not so viable (Coleman A. Young II, I’m talking to you!).

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

I Think She Might Need Security













By David Stephen

It is an incredible abuse of power for Detroit City Council President Monica Conyers to travel to Israel for 7 days while there are pressing issues in Detroit that need to be addressed immediately.

Yesterday, Detroit’s credit rating was reduced to junk-bond status by the S&P 500 putting the city in a deeper financial crisis. Conyers’ trip to Israel has no benefit to the city, and furthermore, puts the country in danger. Conyers is married to a high-profile congress member, John Conyers, who is the chairman of the judiciary committee.

Could you imagine the security risk it poses if a wife of a U.S. congressman gets injured, or worse, kidnapped or killed in a war zone? Israel just invaded Gaza because they claimed rockets were being launched into their country.

Ironically, when Monica Conyers traveled to Orlando, Florida, home of the “happiest place on earth,” she felt it necessary to bring two police officers along with her for security. She also caught a black eye at a westside Detroit bar back in 2004. Yet, she didn’t feel it necessary to bring security as she travels to a nation where the U.S. Department just issued a travel advisory. A Conyers staff person told the Detroit News she’s traveling there to study “what it will take to achieve peace” in Israel.

Oh great! Detroit has a lot to gain from this trip!