Chattanooga Times Free Press

COLLAPSE OF THE CAREER POLITICIAN­S

- Creators.com

The prevailing consensus among political analysts in the United States about Donald Trump’s victory in 2016 centers on the idea that career politician­s in America have, over time, become divorced from the realities of day-to-day existence in America. Washington politician­s seem less able to relate to individual­s while relating to policies those individual­s do not think are helping them.

This is playing out across the country with upstart candidates who have never been in politics convincing voters that they have a better understand­ing of what to do than career politician­s who have dedicated their lives to public service. One of these races is happening in Oklahoma where political newcomer Kevin Stitt is in a runoff against longtime Oklahoma City Mayor Mick Cornett.

On paper, it should be no contest. Cornett is a successful mayor of a successful city. In 2010, a group in London named Cornett the second best mayor in the world behind the mayor of Mexico City. That, at least, made Cornett the best mayor in the United States. Cornett chaired the U.S. Conference of Mayors. Along the way, he started sounding like so many of the politician­s Americans have come to loathe.

In a National Public Radio interview about sanctuary cities, Cornett claimed he did not know what a sanctuary city was and referred to illegal aliens as “undocument­ed citizens,” whatever that is. He has praised the work of the gun grabbing former mayor of New York City, Mike Bloomberg. He has been quick to sign on to frivolous documents that give mayors stature. One of those is getting him into trouble.

In the goodwill of being named the second best mayor in the world, Cornett added his name to the so-called “City Mayors’ Code of Ethics.” That code declares that “Mayors shall be free to oppose any laws of their cities and nations where such laws contravene the United Nations Universal Declaratio­n of Human Rights.” In other words, the mayor of Oklahoma City has agreed to put the decrees of the United Nations ahead of the laws of his city, state and country.

Those sorts of stunts and worldlines­s might sell well in the urbane hotspots of Brooklyn and Beverly Hills, but Oklahoma City is not a hipster capital or liberal utopia. Right now Oklahoma ranks highest only on incarcerat­ion rates in the United States, having just overtaken Louisiana. The state has some deep-rooted problems that the current crop of political leaders in the state have failed to address. Cornett, the standard-bearer for this crop of leaders, has been traveling the world basking in the praise of the world elite when more and more Oklahomans are going to jail.

These issues are cropping up because Cornett will face Stitt next week. The politics-as-usual crowd and a bevy of Oklahoma establishm­ent politician­s have lined up behind Cornett. They view him as the safe pick who will continue what they perceive to be steady progress by a steady hand. Cornett will sound the right notes, but everyone will know he is only giving lip service to the red meat demographi­cs of Republican politics. They fear that Stitt is a true believer in conservati­ve Americana.

Stitt has no political record to weigh him down. In normal times, that itself might be an anchor against him. But his opponents are left to attack him as out of his league and out of his depth with no experience. Stitt’s response can be that at least he did not sign up to put the internatio­nal community’s values ahead of American values, and at least he played no role in driving up incarcerat­ions as the only thing Oklahoma leads.

The current Age of Trump is disrupting much of American life. One of the benefits of that disruption is the entry into politics of new people forcing the status quo to adapt or get out of the way. More like Kevin Stitt and less like Mick Cornett would be a good thing.

 ??  ?? Erick Erickson
Erick Erickson

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