The second atlanta fire
A black-on-black feud erupts over affirmative action
By Jack E. White
November 29, 1999
Web posted at: 11:43 a.m. EST (1643 GMT)
Even if you totally disagree with Atlanta Mayor Bill Campbell's
vow to "fight to the death" against a right-wing assault on his
city's affirmative-action program, you have to acknowledge his
candor. "This is as important to us as our right to vote was back
in the '60s," he declares. "African Americans have to be as
resolute on this issue as the Jewish community is about aid to
Israel." Any "handkerchief-head Negro" who disagrees, he adds,
ought to be "shunned."
Starting, no doubt, with Cynthia Tucker, who edits the editorial
page of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. These two brilliant
black people have been waging an epic feud since the mayor took
office six years ago. Campbell says Tucker suffers from a "slave
mentality" that causes her to be "more vicious than white
journalists." She says Campbell is "strident," "vain" and "out of
control."
Atlanta prides itself on being "the city too busy to hate," but
it's not too busy to quarrel about the mayor's pugnacious
strategy for battling the Southeastern Legal Foundation. That
conservative group filed a federal lawsuit in August alleging
that the city discriminates against white males by requiring
prime city contractors to set up joint ventures with minority-
or female-owned businesses. Tucker supports affirmative action,
but she complains that Campbell has abused the program by
showering lucrative contracts on his wealthy black supporters.
She argues that courts have become so hostile to affirmative
action that spending hundreds of thousands of dollars to defend
Atlanta's program is futile. Instead, says Tucker, Atlanta
should replace its program with one that gives preferences to
local companies, as Detroit did in 1994 when it was faced with a
similar challenge. Since then, she says, black- and
female-headed companies there have obtained about $600 million
in contracts, roughly the same as under the old approach.
Answering her charges, Campbell snaps, "She hasn't done her
homework." The city, he points out, is about to embark on
projects, including an airport expansion, that may generate $10
billion in contracts over the next five years. Under the existing
program, nearly $4 billion would flow to companies owned by
minorities and women. Adopting a local-preferences program would
not assure the same level of business for minority firms, he
argues, because national companies could easily qualify by
setting up Atlanta-based subsidiaries. Campbell says he is
prepared to use "any means necessary" to protect the program in
its current form--not only in the courts but also by picketing the
homes of the Southeastern Legal Foundation's supporters and
boycotting their companies. As for charges of cronyism, he notes
that many of the wealthy black contractors who have contributed
to his campaign have also donated to his political foes.
The Campbell-Tucker feud would be no more than a clash of egos if
so much were not at stake. Campbell believes preserving
affirmative action is vital to the continued prosperity of the
black middle class. Tucker thinks blacks need to prepare for the
day when such programs are outlawed by conservative courts or
ballot initiatives such as California's Prop. 209. This is a
serious difference of opinion that deserves a dignified debate by
serious people, not a wallow in the mud. Surely, the mayor of a
major American city and one of the country's most formidable
journalists are smart enough to figure that out.
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Cover Date: December 06, 1999
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