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The mayoral ‘machine’ goes haywire, Reed fires back — UPDATED

Thursday, August 27th, 2009
Sen. Kasim Reed is not happy

Kasim Reed is not happy with memo

The Atlanta mayor’s race has just blown up with a controversy whose fallout could well linger over the rest of the election season. Sometime yesterday, an incendiary bomb in the form of an e-mail went out calling on African American leaders across town to throw their support behind a single black candidate for mayor  in order to head off a victory by Councilwoman Mary Norwood, who is painfully white.

The e-mail cites WSB polls showing Council President Lisa Borders gaining support to trail closely behind Norwood while state Sen. Kasim Reed remains trailing in the single digits. On the strength of the numbers, the e-mail author invites the recipients to join him in supporting Borders for mayor.

Reed is taking the missive seriously enough that he quickly retaliated with a statement calling the e-mail’s message “divisive,” “vitriolic” and “racist.”

And who is author? None other than Aaron Turpeau, a longtime political operative who could be considered the most prominent remaining gear in the old “Maynard Machine.” Turpeau worked on Jackson’s first two campaigns for mayor, then for both of Andrew Young’s successful bids, and then for Jackson’s third go-around.

But Turpeau, wasn’t simply Jackson’s appendage. Despite his longtime boss’ endorsement of Bill Campbell, Turpeau worked for both of Campbell’s opponents, Michael Lomax and Marvin Arrington. He later jumped on board Shirley Franklin’s campaign, which gave fuel to critics who dismissed Franklin as the “machine candidate.”

Turpeau hadn’t signed on to work with any mayoral hopefuls this time, a fact which stirred the curiosity of many political observers.

Obviously, however, Turpeau isn’t content to sit on the sidelines. In a follow-up memo (view PDF here), he elaborates on his position, which he calls, in a striking display of candor, the “Black Mayor first” approach:

1.    There is a chance for the first time in 25 years that African Americans could lose the Mayoral seat in Atlanta, Georgia, especially if there is a run-off;
2.    Time is of the essence because in order to defeat a Norwood (white) mayoral candidacy we have to get out now and work in a manner to defeat her without a runoff, and the key is a significant Black turnout in the general election;
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Andrew Young endorses Reed for mayor

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009

Machinists, take note.

That is, those who still believe in the existence and relevance of the “machine politics” of Atlanta’s past will find their theories bolstered by the fact that former Mayor Andy Young just cut a radio spot endorsing state Sen. Kasim Reed for his old job.

You can listen to the spot here. Here’s a transcript of the lead-in:

About 20 years ago I met a young man who impressed me a great deal. He was in the process of putting together a student run foundation that would help college students to help themselves and help those who were less fortunate stay in school.
I took the liberty then of saying I hope you finish your education and come on back to Atlanta where you grew up ’cause in about 20 years we’re going to need a mayor like you.

That young man, as you may have guessed, was Kasim Reed — who, at 39 40, is still a young man.

According to my former co-worker Kevin “Professor Griff” Griffis, the “machine” created by the late Maynard Jackson hasn’t existed for years. With Jackson’s passing, the fabled machine no longer even has its mainspring.

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Morning newsdome: Inaugurnation roundup!

Wednesday, January 21st, 2009

>> Washington City Paper, CL’s sister in news awesomeness, was on the front lines of yesterday’s joyful madness. Check out their twitter feed and uber blogging that captured Obamania in D.C.

>> Plus, Flickr photos of all the festivities from readers and images from the WCP staff photog.

>> Thoughts from the Chicago Reader, Obama’s old ‘hood…

>> CL Charlotte had Inauguration covered from all angles in their Obama-Rama blog

>> Civil rights leaders share their experiences and thoughts on the historic Inauguration — Andrew Young, John Lewis and the Rev. Jesse Jackson.

>> And, in case you were wondering why your internet kept crashing yesterday, you can already blame something on Obama.

>> Crazy!: So many people were gathered to watch the Inauguration in D.C. that the masses could be seen from satellite (i.e. space).

(Photo by Joeff Davis)

Atlanta’s largest homeless shelter could soon be shuttered

Friday, December 19th, 2008

The woman approaching is stooped and sunken-eyed, with a weather-ravaged face that hints she might be much younger than she looks. She carries a frayed backpack and when she speaks, it’s in the beaten-down manner of someone accustomed to asking favors.

The Peachtree-Pine shelter houses hundreds of homeless men.

The Peachtree-Pine shelter houses hundreds of homeless men.

“Thank you, Miss Anita,” she says, as she follows her subject along the sidewalk and through the side door of the Peachtree-Pine homeless shelter. “You’re always good to me, even when I stray.”

Anita Beaty assures the woman she’ll be taken care of and ushers her into a small lobby where other street people occupy chairs along the walls or gaze out windows.

“We’re the first place people can come so they don’t die on the street,” explains Beaty as she sits down for an interview a few minutes later.

As executive director of the Metro Atlanta Task Force for the Homeless, Beaty has run the city’s largest shelter on the corner of Peachtree and Pine streets for more than a decade. White-haired and grandmotherly, her appearance belies her reputation as a relentless advocate for the homeless, and in conversation, she comes across as so soft-spoken and unhurried that you’d never guess this is someone whose world is unraveling.

Earlier this month, the city turned off the water at Peachtree-Pine, citing unpaid bills totaling more than $160,000. Beaty quickly persuaded a judge to issue a temporary injunction to restore service, but her agency must comply with a daunting payment schedule or the water goes back off.

While water is the most immediate of the problems facing the Task Force, it’s far from the only one. It may not even be the biggest.
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Morning headlines

Wednesday, August 6th, 2008

JIM MARTIN: Soundly defeats Vernon Jones to win the Democratic nomination for U.S. Senate; will face Saxby Chambliss in November.

TED JACKSON: There’s a new (Democratic nominee for) sheriff in town.

CLAYTON: Kem Kimbrough beats controversy-prone Sheriff Victor Hill for the Democratic nomination.

DEKALB CEO: Burrell Ellis beats Stan Watson and, with no Republican contender in the race, is the new CEO.

EX-BIN LADEN DRIVER: Found guilty today in the first Guantanamo war crimes trial.

SEA TURTLE NESTS: A record number have been found in Georgia this year.

ARBORING A GRUDGE: The New York Times reports on former Atlanta senior arborist Tom Coffin, who was fired July 29 for pointing out to his bosses the under- or nonenforcement of the tree ordinance in certain parts of the city.

WILLIE B.: The subject of a new documentary produced by Andrew Young.

UGA: Named by Sports Illustrated as the magazine’s preseason No. 1 and featured on one of five regional covers this week.

Morning headlines

Wednesday, July 2nd, 2008

WITHDRAWAL METHOD: Third of three candidates for president of Georgia State withdraws his name from consideration, leaving no active candidates.

STORK LIFT: South Georgia’s endangered wood stork is making a comeback, having doubled the number of nests found last year, according to the DNR’s Wildlife Resources Division.

DOT: Settles sexual harassment charges against two former board members for nearly $150,000.

PACK LIGHT, PACK HEAT: State Rep. Tim Bearden thinks better of bringing a gun to pick up his family, but Georgia Carry continues his crusade, suing the city, Mayor Shirley Franklin and Hartsfield-Jackson GM Ben DeCosta for the right to bear arms at the airport. Also, giddy gun carriers congregated Tuesday at a Cobb County restaurant to mark the first day they could do so.

STUDY: Finds Georgia needs to raise college graduation rates.

T.I.: Andrew Young is working to mold the rapper into a different kind of King.

VOTER REGISTRATION: Continues to grow in Georgia. But don’t take my word for it — this AccessNorthGa news graphic answers all your questions.

Andrew Young will participate in panel on Rwanda genocide

Tuesday, November 20th, 2007

The 1994 Rwanda genocide will be the focus of a Nov. 27 panel at Emory University that will feature former U.N. Ambassador and Atlanta Mayor Andrew Young.

Young will be on a panel that also features James Kimonyo, Rwanda’s ambassador to the United States, and Emory’s Deborah Lipstadt. Also among the panelists will be University of North Dakota law professor Gregory Gordon, formerly at the Department of Justice Criminal Division’s Office of Special Investigations, where he helped investigate and prosecute Rwandan war criminals.

The program is scheduled for Tuesday, Nov. 27, from 6 to 8 p.m. in Glenn Memorial Auditorium. Free tickets are available on campus at the Dobbs University Center information desk, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory School of Law, or at the GoodWorks International RSVP line at 404-527-8545.

The panel will discuss the genocide and its impact on Rwanda. An estimated 800,000 to 1 million people were killed by militia groups.

The country is home to Karisoke, the gorilla research center founded by Dian Fossey. Clair Richardson, president of the Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund, noted last week that the country’s academic community was targeted during the killing spree. “The National University of Rwanda lost 80 percent of its faculty in the genocide,” she said.