Proponents of the Q expansion deal may have been high-fiving
themselves over the goal they scored last night by flipping Ward 14 councilman
Brian Cummins but we think that’s just the end of the first quarter. Cummins’
about-face, which could not possibly have been about the trinkets and beads the
Cavs offered [largely, refurbishing two or three dozen basketball courts at
city recreation centers and high schools — does that mean varnish and buff?]
and their cheerleaders raved about. The last minute maneuvering done to secure
what may
turn out to be a pivotal 12th vote in favor of the deal largely
showed how weak County Executive Armond Budish and Cleveland Mayor Frank
Jackson have been in representing the public interest. Seldom have last-minute
cosmetics been such obvious lipstick on this pig of a deal.
By our calculus, the second quarter starts tonight at Olivet
Baptist Church where the Greater Cleveland Congregations will likely have a
very large crowd for their strategy session on next steps. And it is pretty
plain what the next step will be: an intense citywide petition drive to secure
enough signatures from registered Cleveland voters to force a referendum on
last night’s vote. (I wouldn’t be surprised if somebody’s choir was singing
“Ain’t nobody gon’ turn me around” as part of the meeting.)
Our understanding is that Cleveland’s charter requires ten percent
of the number of voters at the last general election to force the referendum,
or about six thousand signatures. GCC and its allies, who include SEIU and the
Cuyahoga County Progressive Caucus, should have no trouble getting twice that
number in far less than the required 30 days. Councilmen and mayoral candidates
Zack Reed and Jeff Johnson will no doubt be lending their support as well.
Call it halftime if enough
valid signatures are submitted to force a vote of the people. The parties will
switch sides, as it were, and the opponents of this deal [not a deal but this deal,
as GCC likes to point out] would suddenly seem to have the home court advantage.
Assuming the corporate
interests don’t find a way to tilt the court by resorting to the courts [this
is where that 12th vote may play a role in arguments over whether
“emergency legislation” of this nature is subject to referendum], the parties
will fight to persuade the voters in a campaign that will be reminiscent of the
Kucinich mayoral recall of 1978, decided in the mayor’s favor by something
like, as I recall, a scant 238 votes.
To extend this metaphor a
bit, if voters reject this deal, then the 4th
Quarter would see some hard bargaining for the first time on this construction
deal. But the playing surface would be enlarged, and new players would be
recognized.
The Cavs would still get
their expanded playhouse, but the price of the ticket will have been adjusted
significantly.
At the end of the game, Dan
Gilbert and his Greater Cleveland Partners may finally learn that you shouldn’t
always play a Zero Sum Game with the public interest.
Now wouldn’t that be a
Transformation worth celebrating by an entire region!!!!
2 comments:
Richard,
Great piece. I'm looking forward to the report on last evening's meeting.
Cheers,
Jeff Hess
Have Coffee Will Write
Thanks, Jeff,
Last night's meeting was a strategy and work session closed to the media. I did not attend. I understand it was nuts and bolts work on signature gathering. Teams left the meeting with petitions and instructions and, based on my observations about how GCC operates, specific targets about how many signatures each team should have by a specific date.
The "press alert" issued by the new coalition this morning shortly after 7am is discussed in our post today.
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