By: Jim Bleyer:
The 2019 Tampa mayoral campaign hasn’t brought out the best
and the brightest but it has cast a spotlight on the fractured culture and
numerous special interest factions fighting for the heart, soul, and wallet of
Florida’s fourth largest city.
The seven-candidate lineup resembles a parade of panderers. They
have been appearing at forums ad nauseum hosted by more special interests than
the grains of sand on Ben Davis Beach. All feel obligated to attend
the succession of dog-and pony shows to avoid incurring the wrath of these
pressure groups.
Here is a partial list from just the past five weeks:
1/15 – Society of Real Estate Professionals
1/16 – Downtown Tampa Partnership
1/22 – TBBA & South Tampa Dems
1/23 – Westshore Alliance
1/24 – Hyde Park Preservation Inc.
1/29 – Seminole Heights
1/20 – South Tampa
2/5 – Arts and Culture
2/6 – Davis Island
2/7 – Westshore Palms
2/8 – HIstoric Ybor City Neighborhood Association
2/9 – United Voices
2/11 – West Tampa
2/12 – Forest Hills
2/13 – LGBTA
2/15 – Tiger Bay
2/19 – New Tampa
2/20 – Sierra Club
2/21 – Mayor’s Hispanic Advisory Forum
2/21 – NAACP
2/22 – Hispanic Caucus
A comprehensive, integrated community vision is as rare as
horse droppings on a carousel. Instead, the public has been treated to
condensed white papers (by only three of the candidates), each on a narrow
topic, that go largely unread or undigested.
Rehearsing for these gatherings figured to be a bonzo job
for the Unmagnificent Seven because of the special interest aspect. Yet,
it has been more than challenging for the participants.
Having a professional and personal background with the
arts, I was particularly drawn to the arts and culture forum three weeks ago. It
proved incredibly embarrassing as none of the candidates appeared to possess a
true grasp of the issues faced by the arts community. Outpromising opponents
with unrealistic plans and policies was the order of the day.
With the candidates learning nothing, voters are learning
nothing.
Six of the seven candidates haven’t offered anything new or
inspirational—only Topher Morrison, owner of a small business and political
neophyte, touts unique innovation and total inclusiveness. Sadly, he
is a long shot to make the anticipated two-person runoff despite energizing the
youth vote.
The remaining aspirants are intent on perpetuating Tampa’s
good ‘ol boy network that chains Tampa to third-rate status among the country’s
big cities. These candidates include a legacy candidate, two city
council members with notably unremarkable records, an out-of-touch billionaire
who hasn’t grasped the issues but is convinced he can buy the office, a former
county commissioner with a checkered record whose rhetoric exceeds his
accomplishments, and a former police chief who was castigated by the Department
of Justice for racial profiling.
With that ensemble, Tampanians can only pray for the
drumbeat of the status quo instead of the bugle of retreat and regression.
Tapping Tampa’s enormous potential and thrusting the city into the national
conversation remains a pipe dream.
Except for Morrison attracting the youth vote, there’s no
reason to believe Tampa’s traditional 20 percent turnout for municipal
elections will increase dramatically.
Term-limited Mayor Bob Buckhorn spent eight years
protecting special interests. Under his stewardship, Tampa garnered
an abundance of negative national headlines.
The primary is March 5 with the runoff in April.
Reversing the buildup of adverse publicity will be a monumental task for
the eventual winner.
This post is
contributed by Tampa Bay Beat. The views and opinions expressed in this post
are the author's and do not necessarily reflect those of Bay Post Internet or
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