Race For The Mayor Marcia, Alex and Pete: Stomping knows how to focus the issues to take steps to solve them. He has the skills we need to make Toledo pros- per in the `90s." Mr. Silverman descends from a line of Democratic Party activists, and his opponents openly criticize him as part of an old boys' network. Mr. Silverman, 37, says he believes in the city where he was raised. He left Toledo after college, opting instead for a law job in New York City. He always had his eye on politics, and he returned home in 1984 because he had enough of big city life and he felt he could more easily enter politics in his hometown. Four years ago, he won a spot on the city council. Since his return to Toledo, he has helped many small businesses raise capi- tal to survive. Stimulating small business, he says, is a necessary means for Toledo's future. "Toledo lacks leader- ship," Mr. Silverman says. "It faces the same problems as all other cities. The way to attack these problems is to focus on privatization, job creation and keeping our homes safe." This race holds many similarities to the Detroit mayoral race. Like Detroit, Toledo will be getting its first new leader in years. Also like Detroit, one of the Toledo hasn't had a strong-mayor form of government since 1937. UJA cabinet member Pete Silverman has his eyes on the new job. Pete Silverman: "We will combat crime." I oledo — Sixty miles south of downtown Detroit, Toledo rocks all summer long with ethnic festivals. Though the population is 330,000, the city — whose largest employer is the Jeep Cherokee and Wrangler plant — seems more like a small town. One area is filled with Americans of Polish and Hungarian descent. Other parts of Toledo attract Asians, blacks, Arab- Americans and 6,300 Jews who are scattered among the city proper and a hand- ful of suburbs. There can be four or five festivals on any given week- end day. This makes a prime breeding ground dur- ing political season — espe- cially now, when Toledoans are preparing to elect their first strong mayor in 55 years. After the November gen- eral election, Toledo resi- dents will bid farewell to its city manager form of gov- ernment. Instead, residents will begin to hold the first strongly elected mayor accountable for such prob- lems that mirror other urban dilemmas of the 1990s: making government work to create jobs and decrease crime. Pete Silverman, who serves on the Toledo City Council, thinks he can do the job. He is one of four mayoral candidates thrust into a Sept. 14 primary race so close that no pundit will dare speculate on a winner. Alex Silverman, age 18 months, is getting some early political training. He's been on the campaign trail for months, stomping along- side his mom, Marcia, for his dad, an attorney and a Jewish community activist who for seven years has served on the United Jewish Appeal Young Adult Leadership Cabinet. Pete Silverman also is on the board of the Toledo Jewish Home For Aged, and he serves on Toledo Federation committees. "Say vote for Daddy," Marcia Silverman tells their son en route to the Polish festival earlier this month. "Can you say it?" Alex, clad in a red, white and blue campaign T-shirt, just smiles. Pete Silverman parks the van, walks around, shaking every hand within his reach and engages festival goers in political conversation. Mr. Silverman is the only Democrat endorsed by the party in this nonpartisan race, in an area with histor- ical liberal political lean- ings. Other Democrats are vying for the seat, among them the former Lucas County Democratic chair- man, Bill Boyle, a self-made millionaire, and City Council Member Carty Finkbeiner. The polls list the front runners as Mr. Silverman, Mr. Finkbeiner, Paula Pennypacker, a Republican who is a former radio com- mentator, and Mike Ferner, a former union organizer who now is a full-time city council member. Eight candidates are in the first-round race. The top two primary vote getters will go on to the November election. "My challenge is getting through the primary," Mr. Silverman says. Like Detroit, Toledo — once strong because of man- ufacturing and the American automobile indus- try — is in a quandary. Foreign competition has forced the Toledo business community to diversify its economic base, slowly mov- ing the city away from its union-strong auto-depen- dent industry into the infor- mation age. "You used to be able to graduate high school and have a job waiting for you on the line at the Jeep plant," says Walter Webb, 34, an auto worker volun- teering on the Silverman campaign. "It's not true anymore. There are no jobs." He always had his eye on politics. Those who support Mr. Silverman say he is bright, articulate and idealistic, yet pragmatic with the strong business sense required to help stimulate the economy. "He's got good ideas," says Toledo resident Larry O'Neal. "Pete Silverman wants to revitalize the downtown, which is in a sorry state. At 5 o'clock, Toledo is dead. He wants to do something. He is sin- cere." Lucas County Democratic Chairman Michael Beazley says there are dozens of minor issues in this race. Crucial, he says, is finding a mayor who doesn't just sound good on paper. "Pete has the intelli- gence, the stability and the integrity to come to grips with the problems, and he The candidate schmoozes for votes. for daddy. major problems is keeping residents from moving out of the city because of high crime. In the last 20 years, Toledo's population has declined by 50,000 resi- dents. Demographers pro- ject it will lose another 40,000 in the next decade. "We need to have a com- munity that will be orga- nized and aggressive in working with the police to try to combat the crime," Mr. Silverman says. Among his ideas is beef- ing up community policing. Officers, in cooperation with city. neighborhoods, will walk beats. In addition, he says, Toledo must bring its 660-member police force up to 750. Pete Silverman's family doesn't spend much private time with him these days. Between work at the law firm, city council busi- ness and the campaign, his weekdays and weekends are filled. On the weekends, his wife and son often join him on the campaign trail. On Shabbat eve, he does not campaign. Friday nights are reserved for dinner with his family. He and his wife, a former television political reporter, met at a UJA Washington conference. Pete Silverman keeps kosher on and off the cam- paign trail, and though he is not completely observant, he is a member of the city's Orthodox congregation. He studies with Detroit's Rabbi Eric Krohner. ❑