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Political Discussion
Reply to "Vincent Gray Running for Reelection"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Especially with Gray channeling himself to Black radio, speaking in a Black dialect, etc. Fenty didn't even pretend to be Black. He identified himself as mixed-race. Did this hurt him in 2006? No. In 2006 he was Black enough. But by 2010, with the perception that he was catering to White, upper-class interests, he was no longer viewed as "Black enough". Then he was half White, with a wife who was a foreigner.[/quote]How about the perception being that he appointed an inexperienced schools chancellor -- born out by the string of mistakes Rhee made that made things worse rather than better? I'm white and upper middle class -- my issue with Fenty was his poor judgment in hiring Rhee, not his race. And you know what? I bet the African-American parents at my kid's school also took issue with her poor management style rather than Fenty's race. Folks, if you want to make it only about race, you're entitled to but the reality is that Fenty screwed up on some very important issues and he didn't make those mistakes because he was mixed race - he made them because he thought he could do no wrong and then refused to deal with the consequences. [/quote] I've said this already -- yes -- what contributed to the perception that he wasn't black enough by catering to white, upper class interests in a variety of ways -- his appointments, his priorities -- all of that. The fact that he also happened to be mixed race was only a contributing factor -- a small contributing factor -- to the feeling/conclusion of many Black people that he was not Black enough.[/quote] Again, I would like to know what your source is of the "many black people" that felt he was not black enough. In Fenty's first term, he was very grass roots, door-to-door and in touch with his constituents very well liked by Black folks appearing to address the needs of the citizens in low and middle class areas. That didn't happen, and hiring Rhee was the icing on the cake, teachers, the union parents in under served areas wanted his head on a silver platter. If anything, Fenty's was looked upon of supporting an upper class agenda leaving the city lopsided. [/quote]
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