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Beyond the Case Against Mark Brewer

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It is hard to be in the position that the high priest of the Michigan Democratic Party Mark Brewer is in right now. But the signs on the wall were clear, and this day was sure to come when Democrats themselves would wage a battle to unseat the longest serving party chairman in history.

I thought Brewer would have made a graceful exit after the 2010 election that saw Republican control of all the major branches of government in Michigan. Brewer’s argument at the time was that the losses in that election were a national pattern because many Democrats took a beating after the debates on the national health care reform.

Yet it was clear in anyone’s mind that any military general who leads an army to war and lost that general has to turn in his or her resignation right away. That is just the principle standard. If Brewer was a football coach for a college team he would have been long gone with that many losses in the games played. If he was a CEO of a private firm he would have been fired by the board with that many deficits to his resume.

Why didn’t Brewer resign then?

Because the powerful United Auto Workers (UAW) always had his backing. In fact his closeness to the UAW was so evident that anytime Brewer’s name came up in the political chattering class, the UAW was always mentioned as his biggest ally. He was tied to the UAW at both the joint and the hip. And that explains for many of the Michigan Democratic Party’s colossal and epic failures in terms of how one powerful entity had dominant control of the party leading it in one direction. With the UAW as Brewer’s personal political bodyguard it prevented the party from trying candidates that would expand its reach and also helped put real meaning to it as the party of the big tent that is welcoming to everyone.

For instance, the epic failure of the Michigan Democratic Party in denying Richard Bernstein nomination to become Michigan’s first blind Attorney General was in large part due to the dominance of the UAW and Brewer. So much for a party that calls itself the party of the big tent. Bernstein, an incredibly brilliant lawyer who did not take the LSAT to enter law school, but instead wrote a thesis arguing how the LSAT was discriminatory against the blind and got into law school as a result of that would have made by all accounts a strong attorney general.

But now the very UAW that protected Brewer all along is undergoing a political transfiguration itself with its new exciting leader Bob King who is now openly pushing for Brewer’s final exit. Did it have to take the arrival of the King for Brewer to exit the stage now?

The Michigan Democratic Party cannot blame their failures alone at the feet of Brewer who is undergoing a public political crucifixion in a way no one imagined would happen to a man that commanded the stage that long. But if you observe how dictators in third world nations are overthrown, it is normally through very public political crucifixions where their own people crying out in the streets finally saying they’ve had enough call for their resignation. Though Brewer is not a third world dictator, he stayed this long because the party leadership including institutions like the UAW allowed it to happen. They cannot blame Brewer alone because their hands are not clean either.

The political Damascus or the tipping point for the party should have been in 2010 when they lost the Governorship, the Legislature, Supreme Court, Secretary of State and Attorney General. Added to that was the late lackluster fight to prevent Congressional redistricting even though the issue was never made a political voting incentive before the 2010 election.

In a rare move the Michigan Democratic Congressional delegation is abandoning Brewer which is perhaps the biggest blow aside from his former ally the UAW. The vote of no confidence expressed by the delegation could be Brewer’s undoing even though the man created by the UAW is insistent on seeking another term. He’s headed to the party convention Feb 23 at Cobo Hall in downtown Detroit for a real floor showdown either to show his mastery of the institution he led for decades or to nakedly shame and expose the party that wants him out now.

Brewer is setting a historic precedent because if he prevails at the convention then it shows how weak the Michigan Democratic Party has become all these years. From there the Michigan Democratic Party can change its name to the Mark Brewer Party.

Brewer is employing a Tea Party strategy hoping that delegates from around the state can see what he has done and he’s got some real support for it. He can describe his fight for re-election as a battle against the Democratic Party status quo even though he himself is the status quo. And all voters need to see to believe is to cynically read into the Michigan Democratic Congressional delegation’s opposition to Brewer and call it the status quo/Washington type battle against Brewer. This is a classic Tea Party battle that Brewer is waging.

The next leadership of the Michigan Democratic Party will have to step up and reach out to minorities and young voters. The next leaderhip of the party will have to do more than just engage Detroit three weeks or months before the next election.

The next leadership of the party will have to stop buying into the narrative that minority candidates or candidates who push minority issues are not electable on the other side of the state.

In the past qualified African Americans and other minority candidates seeking higher offices have been relegated to the dogma or old narrative that they can’t be elected statewide. As a result they are hardly assisted in fundraising and their efforts are minimized to that effect rendering them virtually unable to win. If the party leadership believes in their ability to govern and knowledge of the issues affecting Michiganders then it should support these candidates without resignation or reservation.

When newly sworn Supreme Court Justice Bridget McCormack first began thinking about the idea of running for the Michigan Supreme Court some in the party were afraid that her association with the University of Michigan Innocence Clinic which she co-founded would have been a major sticking issue for voters on the west side of the state.

Why?

Because of the sentencing disparities most of the people the clinic has helped so far to gain their freedom as a result of wrongful convictions have been African Americans and other minorities. So some were already pushing the narrative that a candidate with a resume of fighting for minority issues won’t have a chance even though the party should be working to change that kind of deep seated narrative not promote it.

But McCormack did the unconventional and reached out to those very minority groups including Hispanics, African Americans, Arab Americans, Jews and others across the state as well as white voters and got their support to earn the title Justice McCormack. With the support of some outside-the-box thinking leaders in the Michigan Democratic Party looking for change coupled with a diverse community support McCormack waged an uncoventional and an inclusive campaign that landed her on the state’s highest court.

If Brewer must go then Democrats have to be ready to install a leader that will offer real change, unconventional ways of expanding the party and no longer play to the same old lines of associations that often has hurt the party more than it helped. A real change not the same old tactics that weakened the party and rendered it almost impotent in winning elections in Michigan.

Democrats, you have your work cut out for you. Feb 23 will prove if the party and the army of delegates expected to descend on Cobo Hall get it.

Bankole Thompson, Chronicle Senior Editor

Bankole Thompson is editor of the Michigan Chronicle and author of “Obama and Black Loyalty,” published in 2010, and his recent book, “Obama and Christian Loyalty” with an epilogue by Bob Weiner, former White House spokesman. Thompson is a political news analyst at WDET-101.9FM (NPR affiliate) and a member of the weekly “Obama Watch” Sunday evening roundtable on WLIB-1190AM New York and simulcast in New Jersey and Connecticut. E-mail bthompson@michroicle.com

1 comment

  • Eric Rice

    Mr. Thompson,

    With hearty applause I fully recognize your precise and irrefutable assessment of the critical failures of Mark Brewer. Your keen reflection on Mr. Brewers inability to distinguish himself as a formidable leader of the Michigan Democrats while shamelessly and opportunistically referring to his crippling alliance with the UAW amid festering internal and external political opposition is refreshingly candid. I am compelled to further elaborate on the nuclear fallout of the 2010 elections....Mr Brewer had no political capital going in to the 2010 elections as his political debtee, the UAW, endured great criticism for it's often inflexible negotiation strategies thusly contributing, in part, to the demise of Chrysler and GM. To my perception, this diminished Mr. Brewer's influence and stirred the collective concerns of Michigan Democratic party members now openly expressing that the UAM, without the luxury of overwhelming public support it once enjoyed, enforced it's monolithic and passe political agenda through Mr. Brewers eagerly willing hands. And, if I may humbly site one of your many poignant remarks, Mr. Brewer's assertion that the national debate on healthcare, resulting in volatile election results for Democrats throughout the nation, is fundamentally incorrect and amounts to nothing more than an excuse. The National Healthcare debate was and remains an area of great concerns for Americans but, as Detroit and moreover the State of Michigan, remains confronted with dire job opportunities, escalating crime, and failing schools the healthcare debate finds itself a distant 3rd or 4th in the prioritization of Michiganders. Local elections, the positions of Secretary of State, and the Governor's seat could have been preserved if an effective strategy replete with diversity initiatives, effective public relations, and grass roots voting drives would have preserved, at least some, of these critical posts for Democrats. Additionally, Mr. Brewer's unwillingness to abandon his seat is reflective of a Democratic party in disarray. Internal rumblings should have led to his voluntary resignation, instead the party trods along following it's Nero, with no visible personalities willing to contend current circumstances. 2014 will be critical, and it is my hope our Michigan Democrats will abandon the whining dialogue of blaming the steady and undermining social agendas of the Republican elite and, instead furnish formidable personalities to further the progress set forth by the Obama administration. We need those seats if right to work to be revised or repealed; we need those seats to protect against the potential tyrrany of unqualified and unwarranted EFMs; we need those seats to preserve the integrity of our public schools as they face extinction at the hands of overzealous cost cutters who value profits over wholistic and effective educational opportunities.

    Eric Rice Tuesday, 26 February 2013 14:21 Comment Link

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