The Temple News: College Democrats and Republicans debate

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8IgqohOKxUk]

Last week, Temple University’s College Republicans and College Democrats debated their respective national party’s platforms, as reported by The Temple News.

It interests me how young people – indeed, perhaps all people – are more interested in the celebrity-type status of national politics, rather than the local politics of municipalities, counties, even state government.

The interplay of national and local politicking and government is something on which I’ve posted here before.

Because younger people tend to be more liberal and most people seem to be less interested in local elections, it seems then that the Republican Party anywhere would have more difficulty finding young talent, particularly in an urban setting like Philadelphia.

Hear College Republican President Ryan McCool speak on the War in Iraq, taking notes from the national GOP.

Philly super delegate endorses Obama

bill-clinton-carol-ann-campbell.jpgCarol Ann Campbell, one of Philadelphia’s super delegates and a city Democratic committee cog, has endorsed Barack Obama after a conversation with the candidate’s wife, the Associated Press is reporting.

Campbell is as involved in partisan politics and the Democratic machine in Philadelphia as anyone.

Previously, the former City Councilwoman had said she wouldn’t endorse either candidate before it came time to cast her vote (assuming it will be necessary) in order that she not burn bridges. Her mind was changed by a 90-minute conversation with Michelle Obama, Barack’s wife who is just about charming everyone in sight.

Indeed, it was generally considered that Campbell was a Clinton supporter before the conversation, according to the LA Times.

As posted elsewhere, the tide is surely turning on the Democratic side of this presidential election.

Interview: Brett Mandel, Philadelphia Forward executive director

Brett Mandel Philadelphia Forward

Today, I also interviewed Brett Mandel, the executive director of Philadelphia Forward,

http://www.chestnuthilllocal.com/archives/121604/index.html

http://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://www.citypaper.net/articles/2005-05-12/cb-1.jpg&imgrefurl=http://www.citypaper.net/articles/2005-05-12/cb.shtml&h=118&w=180&sz=8&hl=en&start=7&um=1&tbnid=dxHelqQj83v_3M:&tbnh=66&tbnw=101&prev=/images%3Fq%3DBrett%2BMandel%26um%3D1%26hl%3Den%26sa%3DN

http://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://www.metro.us/metroimages/8377.jpg&imgrefurl=http://philly.metro.us/metro/local/article/Scores_have_added_to_online_ethicsreform_agenda/7577.html&h=130&w=220&sz=24&hl=en&start=6&um=1&tbnid=dfhXt2H-EFZS5M:&tbnh=63&tbnw=107&prev=/images%3Fq%3DBrett%2BMandel%26um%3D1%26hl%3Den%26sa%3DN

Photo of Brett Mandel, presenting during a real estate taxation conference held at Temple University on Feb. 23, 2007. He was using a model to show that in Philadelphia similar properties pay different real estate tax bills. Photo courtesy of Philadelphia Forward.

Post-racial urban politics: hardly

We have called for and expected the end of mainstream institutional racism in the United States since about the third day after it was exported to this country, maybe 400 years ago.

Back in 1999, when white Republican Sam Katz was challenging black Democrat John F. Street, Katz’s surging success in a city that had nearly as large a black population as white seemed to embolden that notion. Indeed, Katz seemed to make inroads in black communities that hadn’t voted more for a Republican than a Democratic mayoral candidate since 1972, when W. Thatcher Longstreth took on legendary Frank Rizzo, often derided as an outright bigot. Katz won the endorsement of John White Jr., a black former City Council member who lost to Street in the Democratic primary, as reported by the Philadelphia Inquirer.

When less than two months before the 1999 election, Martin O’Malley, a white Democrat, won over black voters in his party’s primary to beat out a field of mostly black candidates, the comparisons were sure to be made, as was done by the New York Times.

Continue reading Post-racial urban politics: hardly

Philadelphia taxes created King of Prussia, lost jobs

It frustrates me that so much of the Delaware Valley’s gain is Philadelphia’s loss. That is, much of what makes this metro region great is development that could have helped make this city even greater.

In researching this thesis and making mention of the 2003 mayoral election between John F. Street and former oft-Republican mayoral candidate Sam Katz, I have referred several times to an essay written on that election by Dr. Jeffrey Kraus, a Wagner College professor of politics and government.

Entitled A Tale of Two Cities Revisited: The Philadelphia Mayoral Election of 2003, Kraus mostly makes the case that national politics trumped the normal rules of urban mayoral politics. Anyone unsure of this can see the popular Tigre Hill documentary Shame of a City for confirmation.

But, something always catches my attention when reading it.

Katz’s campaign focus was – before “the bug” – creating a business friendly Philadelphia. He wanted to slash the city’s wage tax from 4.4 to 3.5 percent by issuing a $750 million bond to be repaid over the subsequent decade.

Kraus continues:

According to Katz, Philadelphia faced three problems: a high crime rate and low quality of life, the exodus of the young and college-educated, and tax policies that create an unfavorable business climate. Katz said that one of his goals as mayor would be to attract 250,000 residents into the city over a 15 year period. By cutting business taxes, Philadelphia would retain businesses. As Katz explained it, “our tax structure created Cherry Hill and King of Prussia.” (Emphasis added)

See, this region is blessed, some might say, with the second largest mall in the country and Cherry Hill, N.J., another outpost of business and shopping. What’s more, the region features the world’s largest management services company in the Vanguard Group, located in Valley Forge, the pharmacuetical giant Merck & Co. has major offices in Horsham and Blue Bell, and the credit card services corporation MBNA, Du Pont Corp. and Christiana Health Care System all are based in Wilmington, Del.

I could, of course, go on, but the point is made. These are among the largest employers in the region, accounting for tens of thousands of jobs and millions in taxable assets and profits.

They aren’t based in Horsham or Wilmington for the view or the chance at a fine skyscraper. They are based in communities that offered enormous tax incentives because, well, increasingly, communications development means you don’t necessarily need to be based anywhere. A half century ago, businesses paid for the privilege to be based in a major city. That has become less and less the case, but Philadelphia hasn’t caught up.

Imagine the population boom, how much denser Center City would be, where the additional funds could go – like further developing a massive, world class, effective, clean and efficient mass transit system – if the King of Prussia mall, Merck and the rest were in Philadelphia.

We need someone to attract these and others back to grow this city into the international destination it once was.