Quote:
Originally Posted by ok-ez
I've lived in his district 20+ yrs and never voted for him, he was unopposed last time and probably always has been
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And this is the real problem. I was talking to an activist constituent in his district (an older, African American, anti-gentrification resident) and she was trying to figure out how to get him to be more responsive to resident concerns. My response was somebody has to primary him.
Unfortunately, too many people are woefully uneducated about how the systems of government and politics work, and many are so jaded that they won't engage the very systems that can make the changes they want to see. Furthermore, politicians like Clarke can convince people that the solutions to their very real problems are the things that don't really solve the problem.
For example, gentrification that displaces poorer, often disproportionately black and brown people and makes them feel unwelcome in their own communities is a real thing. Part of that problem is rising housing cost, and a real solution would be to increase the supply of safe, livable housing to keep costs in check. Even better would be to have enough housing to earmark more units for people at various economic levels. However, too often politicians present
LESS housing (more restrictive, low density zoning i.e. the Girard Avenue overlay) as a solution to gentrification. So development continues, but without any contingency to help indigenous residents remain in the community and actually benefit from the development.
And Clarke wins because he can point to shiny new buildings in his district and at the same time claim to be fighting gentrification.