By RiShawn Biddle on 2.27.08 @ 12:08AM
Have Indianapolis voters tired of Carson family rule?
As the grandson of the late Indiana congresswoman Julia Carson
and the favorite of the Indianapolis political machine she so
carefully cultivated in her lifetime, Andre Carson should be a
shoo-in to take over her open congressional seat.
The fact that the district is a Democrat stronghold, along with
the backing he has gotten from such prominent leaders as House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi and U.S. Senator (and fellow scion) Evan Bayh,
should ease his path to power.
But as the seat comes up for a special election next month,
Carson petit-fils is struggling to defeat his Republican
opponent, Jon Elrod, who made a splash two years ago by ousting a
Democrat from the state house from a seat that both he and his
brother had held for 30 years.
At the same time, Carson junior faces challenges from three
heavy hitters within his own party in the congressional primary in
May. If he can clear both of those hurdles, he will still have to
take on Elrod again in the general election in November.
He is also is dogged by suspicions about his ties to the Islamic
community, especially after Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan
essentially endorsed the younger Carson during a eulogy at his
grandmother's funeral two months ago. Carson the younger distances
himself from Farrakhan by claiming that his grandmother invited
him. Said Carson in a recent interview about his faith: "I am
multifaceted."
The younger Carson could manage to keep the seat in the family.
But his struggles show the difficulty of sustaining old-style black
political machines, many of which were built during the Civil
Rights era on race-baiting, appeals to black pride, and the doling
out of welfare benefits.
As younger generations of blacks realize the extent of the
damage to their communities wrought by this archaic form of
leadership, even heirs apparent will strain to articulate reasons
for continuing the status quo.
OVER A FIVE-DECADE career, Julia Carson parlayed her ties to the
United Auto Workers union and her mentor, former Congressman Andy
Jacobs, into a powerful coterie of churches and political officials
that took control of one of the nation's few urban Republican
strongholds.
Her power was hard-won. Carson grand-mere worked all
the angles, from sending out condolence letters to grieving
constituents to cutting through the bureaucratic red tape of the
welfare system, to accusing her opponent during her last congressional
race of having "beat his wife into a pulp."
Carson fils is a onetime rapper, former state excise
police officer and flunky in the state's homeland security agency.
He snagged his only political office -- a seat on Indianapolis'
city-county council -- after one of his grandmother's proteges
resigned when it was revealed that he didn't live in the district.
Although physically imposing, the soft-spoken youngster lacks his
grandmother's authoritativeness.
He also has horrible timing. This past November, Indianapolis
voters replaced nationally lauded mayor Bart Peterson (who won his
first campaign for office eight years ago with Julia Carson's help)
with heavily underfunded Republican rival Greg Ballard, while
ousting several members of the city-county council.
The corrupt antics of the elder Carson's allies -- especially
then-council president Monroe Gray -- along with rising crime and a
65-percent increase in the city's county-option income tax, finally
brought voter anger to a boil.
Those scandals and grievances reminded voters of the reality
that quality of life hardly improved under Carson's grandmother.
The city's largest school district, Indianapolis Public Schools,
admitted that four in ten students who made up its original class
of 2007 dropped out, while another 13 percent will likely follow.
The city's job base, once far more robust than its Rust Belt
rivals', has barely grown this decade.
Blacks, including the 25 percent who live in poverty, were
especially hard hit as seven years of skyrocketing felonies --
including a near-record 153 reported homicides in 2006 --
devastated their neighborhoods.
This decline, along with the corruption of her allies and her
own dirty politicking, colors the very legacy of the elder Carson
on which her grandson is running. His own brief record resembles a
typical black Democrat precinct captain rather than a change-agent,
which essentially makes him a creature of the very culture voters
are rejecting.
This is especially true with younger, college-educated blacks,
who realize that real gains can only be made through economic and
neighborhood improvements, not through traditional graft and
race-pimping; someone like Newark Mayor Cory Booker or former
Congressman Harold Ford Jr. (another dynastic successor) is
preferable over an old-school pol.
So a challenger like Elrod, a socially moderate Republican who
is known for attending closely to his constituents, would seem more
attractive than the younger Carson, who, like his grandmother,
represents more of the same.
topics:
Nancy Pelosi, Islam, NATO, Oil