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Detroit mayor rides in luxury as city decays
By Jerry White
2 February 2005
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A series of public scandals involving Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick
have erupted over the last several weeks. The exploits of the
34-year-old mayor, which have been daily news in Detroit and were
recently featured on the front-page of the Wall Street Journal,
give a glimpse of the corruption and arrogance of the political
elite that runs one of Americas poorest cities.
Last month Kilpatrick, citing a $230 million deficit, announced
the elimination of 900 public employee jobs and demanded city
workers take a 10 percent pay cut and other reduced benefits.
The mayor said 24-hour bus service would be ended, city-owned
vehicles sold, and plans developed to privatize the citys
public lighting department. Saying his predecessors had failed
to make tough decisions and citing the supposedly
bloated city payroll, Kilpatrick said the financial predicament
was so dire it requires sacrifice and solutions from everyone.
Behind the scenes, however, there wasnt any belt-tightening
going on in the mayors office. Several weeks before the
budget-cutting announcements the city used taxpayers money
to lease a $57,000 luxury sport utility vehicle, complete with
a moon roof, leather interior and heated seats, for the mayors
wife and three small sons. In order to circumvent public oversight
city officials paid $24,995 a year for the Lincoln Navigator,
five dollars below the amount that would require approval by the
City Council.
For nearly a month the mayor and his aides denied the vehicle
had been obtained for the personal use of his family, claiming
it had been leased for undercover police work. Under pressure
the mayors office released several documents related to
the lease, but the names and addresses of the city employees involved
in the transactions were blacked out.
When a local Detroit news reporter confronted Kilpatrick about
the vehicle during a mayors conference in Washington, DC,
one of his bodyguards slammed the reporter against a wall in full
view of television cameras.
Politicians feathering their own nests is hardly new. These
revelations provoked particular anger from working people in the
Motor City, however, where one in three households is too poor
to own a car. If the mayors family was being outfitted with
a $57,000 SUV, why were they being told there was no money for
essential services, like the barely functioning public bus system?
The mayors actions caused alarm in the media and from
several city officials, who complained that Kilpatricks
lavish tastes or, more accurately, his lack of discretion in covering
them up, had undermined the mayors ability to push through
his austerity plan.
With daily headlines about the Navigate scandal
and warnings that he faced losing support from corporate Detroit
for his upcoming re-election bid, Kilpatrick held a press conference
January 22 where he acknowledged the vehicle had been obtained
for his family.
The leasing of the luxury SUV was only the latest example of
the mayors unrestrained appetite for the high life while
city crumbles around him. On January 21 the Detroit Free
Press ran a front-page article headlined, Detroits
mayor too wild for DC cops, which reported that Washington,
DC police supervisors said their VIP security team stopped offering
after-hours protection for Kilpatrick in 2002 because his reported
nonstop club hopping when he was in town could have resulted
in injury or public embarrassment for their officers.
The mayors cronies have also come under criticism. Several
members of Kilpatricks Executive Protection Unit were disciplined
for milking the city for tens of thousands of dollars in overtime
payments. Mike Martin, the bodyguard who assaulted the reporter
in Washington, DC, was suspended from the police force four times
in 2003, once for shooting at a man during a fight outside of
a Detroit nightclub.
An unsavory picture emerges from all this of political hustlers
for whom the attainment of electoral was solely as a vehicle for
self-aggrandizement: people who are unabashedly in it for
the money. Kirkpatrick is the local expression in Detroit
of a broader social process, the criminalization of the American
ruling elite, from city hall to the corporate boardroom to the
White House.
The only difference between the petty corruption of the Kilpatrick
administration and its public policy is the scale of the thievery
that is going on. One proposal the mayor is reportedly considering
to pay off the big lenders that hold the citys debt is to
simply hand over the public lighting department to the private
utility company Detroit Edison, if a buyer cannot be found.
The Detroit city government has long been controlled by the
Democratic Party. Their record exposes the lie that the working
class can rely upon this big business party to defend its interests.
On the contrary, the Democrats defend corporate interests just
as tenaciously as the Republicans, and the black Democratic Party
mayors in the major cities play a particularly critical role.
In the aftermath of the ghetto uprisings of the 1960s, the
corporate and political establishment in many US cities handed
over power to a series of black mayors, nearly all elected as
Democrats, who exploited illusions among minority workers and
youth that their election constituted black empowerment
and would alleviate the conditions facing black workers. Coleman
Young in Detroit was one of the most prominent representatives
of this trend.
Young, in 20 years in office, and his successors Dennis Archer
and now Kilpatrick, followed the dictates of the Big Three auto
companies and other big corporations and banks. More than three
decades later, Detroit remains economically devastated, a synonym
for urban decay and poverty. At the same time, however, Young
& Co. cultivated a layer of black politicians and businessmen
who enriched themselves at the expense of the citys population.
The gap between this black elite and the impoverished black workers
in Detroit is as deep as the class antagonisms and social inequality
that pervade America as a whole.
Kilpatrick came to prominence long after the black Democrats
abandoned any pretense of liberal reformism. The son of US Congresswoman
Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick and Bernard Kilpatrick, the chief of
staff of former Wayne County Executive (and Democratic Party machine
boss) Ed McNamara, Kilpatrick has been hailed by the media as
a part of a second generation of black leaders.
These black Democratic politicians, who include US Representatives
Jesse Jackson Jr. (D-Ill.) and Harold Ford Jr. (D-Tenn), reject
the policies associated with the civil rights era and have embraced
the reactionary politics of personal responsibility
and the capitalist market. Summing up their outlook recently,
Cincinnati Councilwoman Alicia Reese told the Detroit News
the civil rights movement had been fought to open the doors
to the marketplace. The struggle today, she said, was about
establishing a new generation of entrepreneurs. Were
talking about venture capital.
Kilpatrick epitomizes this grasping and reactionary social
layer. In his State of the City address demanding sacrifices from
Detroit workers, he quoted approvingly from the prescriptions
of the Mackinaw Center, a right-wing think tank in Michigan that
promotes unrestrained free-market policies as the solution to
every social problem caused by the profit system.
The recent revelations about his administration constitute
one more refutation of the claim that the Democratic Party speaks
in the interest of the working class and expose, in particular,
the bankruptcy of racial politics. Black workers cannot defend
their interests by electing black capitalist politicians, whether
Democrats or Republicans, but must join forces with white, Hispanic
and immigrant workers in a common struggle against capitalism.
See Also:
Detroit mayor demands mass
layoffs and cuts in city services
[14 January 2005]
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