this post was submitted on 19 Jul 2023
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United States | News & Politics

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[–] behindthesailboats@lemmy.world 11 points 1 year ago (2 children)

I agree with you, with the caveat that the article says that there wasn't an election - it was a win by default as the only person to qualify / submit candidacy.

[–] TurtleJoe@lemmy.world 19 points 1 year ago (1 children)

So he was running unopposed? That happens all the time.

[–] abraxas@lemmy.ml 9 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Sorta.

From the article, they're such a "good ol boy" community that the people in power just kinda picked the mayor, who served until he was ready to retire and pick another. He was the first person in town, basically ever, to properly fill out electoral paperwork. So they had a mayor picked out (not him) and they basically just pretended he didn't do it the right way because it isn't THERE way.

Until I say the next thing and just looking at that, you could kinda see the back-and-forth about how the town's so messed up his situation was like a loophole, and no doubt if it were a white person winning the mayorship on those terms people might have taken issue and justified a repeat election....

But his reason for running for mayor puts the whole thing into much clearer contrast. When he was a volunteer firefighter, they'd take away the keys when he tried to respond to fires at black folk's houses, and when he made it he'd be the ONLY firefighter there. They wanted to let those residences burn because of the color of the residents' skin. As one of the town's medics, he was specifically locked out of the station for racist reasons and it led to a patient dying.

It's THAT good-ol-boy a community, and it's such an overwhelmingly black-majority town (like 80%) that going all democratic just won't work for them. So fuck em. If they win their defense on claims of qualified immunity of an office they don't actually hold, immo go down there and declare myself governor.

EDIT: Yet on reading more carefully, it's complicated. The "lame duck" city council voted on a re-election where he did not get the paperwork, and elected themselves back into office, all before he and the new council were sworn in. They may have managed to push the whole thing into a legal grey area in their favor depending on what the local and state laws are. But the problem is that quite literally everyone is telling him "you're not the mayor" when he tries to execute ANY mayoral duties. The bank is refusing him financial access. The staff at public buildings is refusing him physical access.

It's interesting because he's tried to bring in several lawfirms, and they have mostly just taken his money and failed him. This is, at local scale, to too unlike the federal Constitutional crisis we almost had on 1/6/21. What do you do when a town says you're not its mayor and the laws are unclear?

[–] TechnoBabble@lemm.ee 13 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

Sounds like a town so devoid of life that it would be more productive to just let it collapse.

There's a bunch of tiny rural towns that have basically no jobs and no real reason to exist anymore.

Globalization was not kind to rural America. And people listen to snake oil salesmen like Trump because he's the only one talking at them with a distorted compassion.

[–] Formless@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago

https://youtu.be/p3O6bKdPLbw

That vid does a good job of showing what some of the people that live in those towns are like. He doesn’t really ask them any pointed questions but you can get a better sense of the communities and why they might cling to someone like trump (even if it is bad for them)