Editorial Peters Best Choice In 14th District Primary A s it zigs and zags through Detroit and Oakland County, the newly constituted 14th Congressional District is the very defi- nition of "gerrymander." Responding to Michigan's 2010 U.S. Census population decline and constrained by requirements from the Voting Rights Act to preserve majority-minority districts, the Republican-controlled state Legislature was required to eliminate one congressional district. It opted for the one served by two-term Democratic incumbent Gary Peters. Peters chose to seek re-election in the 14th District because it contains the largest chunk of his former constitu- ents. But the game of congressional musical chairs wasn't over. Looking at the new congressional district maps, Democratic incumbent Hansen Clarke recognized that the largest piece of his old 13th District was also in the 14th District. And Democratic incumbent John Conyers saw that the largest swatch of his old 14th District was now in the 13th District. So they switched, moving Clarke into a head-on primary Aug. 7 with Peters, Southfield Mayor Brenda Lawrence and lesser-known candidates, former state representative Mary Waters and attorney Bob Costello. How unfortunate that three of the Michigan Democratic Party's lead- ing younger lights are jammed into one congressional primary race while three of its octogenarian stal- warts, John Dingell, John Conyers and Sander Levin (with 134 years of cumulative congressional service) continue to cling to the torch that must be passed to a new generation of Democrats. 3 Possibilities For the Jewish commu- nity and its 14th District residents, Lawrence, Clarke and Peters understand its issues and needs. In Lawrence, the com- munity has a friend who walks comfortably and con- fidently among its religious and secular, old and young. Her many years of service to Southfield, as a member and president of both its Board of Education and City Council, coupled with 10 years in the mayor's chair, have prepared her for higher office. The Democrats have done a poor job finding opportunities for Lawrence on a larger electoral stage. She used questionable calculus in running for Oakland County executive in 2005 and was buried by Republican incumbent L. Brooks Patterson. Her decision in 2010 to accept her party's lieutenant governor nomination for the dead-on- arrival gubernatorial campaign of Virg Bernero guaranteed another landslide loss. And now, against congressional incumbents with hefty war chests, she is putting herself in a no-win situation again. In Clarke, the community has an only-in-America tale of hardscrabble life, mixed with Ivy League education (he defeated fellow Cornell classmate Ann Coulter for student body president) and sprinkled with support for his family from members of the Jewish community. Known as a grassroots cam- paigner and Detroit advo- cate, Clarke developed a credible record in the state House and Senate. Following an unsuccessful 2005 effort to win the Detroit mayoral primary, he toppled long- serving Democratic Congresswoman Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick in the 2009 13th District primary. Clarke has developed a reputation on Capitol Hill as a hard worker and a dreamer ... at times, too much dreaming in the face of bare-knuckle politics. He is capable of bridging the decades-old divide between the city and the suburbs, though recent allegations that he is "not black enough" point to yet anoth- er self-destructive black-on-black rift in Detroit. For those who track votes on bills and resolutions relating to Israel, Clarke (unlike Conyers) is count- ed as a friend of the Jewish state. As the only candidate who has actually represented portions of the Jewish community in Congress, Peters has developed a four-year record that ought to resonate with primary voters. He has been solid on the domestic issues that matter most to Democrats, including job creation, separation of church-and-state, equal rights, immigration reform and an overhaul of the healthcare system. And Peters has been steadfast in strengthening the strategic relation- ships between the U.S. and Israel. Knowing that the new district requires a representative who can bridge Eight Mile Road, Peters has energetically cultivated and built relations with Detroit residents, pastors, businesspeople and labor leaders while still managing a busy schedule that keeps him in close touch with his current constituents. While Clarke and Lawrence are qualified to represent the entire 14th District in Congress and are models of public service, Peters has earned the right to represent the newly drawn district in Congress and to continue serving its Jewish constitu- ents. We recommend a vote for Gary Peters in the Aug. 7 Democratic pri- mary. Commentary Saving The DIA 0 ne of the great assets of Detroit is the number of quality world- class cultural institutions that are so readily accessible to each of us. Our Detroit Institute of Arts is a prime example and has over its his- tory helped make Detroit the rich and vibrant community we all love. The DIA is widely rec- ognized as one of the top six comprehensive fine arts museums in the United States. It ranks with such institutions as the Metropolitan Museum in New York, the Art Institute of Chicago and the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston. However, in these turbulent economic times, we can't afford to take the DIA for granted. Together, we have an opportunity to put the DIA on sound financial ground for generations to come. For most of its existence, the DIAs financial model has included substantial support from public funds. From 1893 through the mid-1970s, that public support came solely from the city of Detroit's general fund. Then, in the 1970s, when the city started experiencing financial pressures, the state of Michigan stepped in with a major appro- priation that recognized the value to the region and the state of hav- ing this internationally renowned facility in our community. In the early 1990s, that state support started eroding; today, the DIA receives no public support. Elimination of all public funding for operations has isictsc— ,‘, • The DIA on Woodward Avenue required the museum to turn almost entirely to the private sector, an operating model that would not be sustainable for the DIA or any other of the world-class institutions noted here. The DIA has tightly managed its expenses in the face of the elimination of governmental subsidies. In early 2009, the institution reduced its workforce and its operating budget by 20 percent. Because of the high fixed costs required to main- tain the facility and protect the art collec- Saving The DIA on page 28 July 19 • 2012 27