The Illusionist: Defensing Past and Future, Herenton Revises Reality 

Mayor Willie Herenton's "press briefing" with the assembled local media last Thursday can fairly be called a bull session -- in more senses of the term than one.

Though the news media themselves were among the targets of Herenton's j"accuse-- along with federal law enforcement and the local business establishment - the media members who sat in the Hall of Mayors for upwards of an hour with the mayor would acknowledge among themselves later on that they never had a better time.

For all his impassioned accusations of a serious conspiracy to bring him down, Herenton was in high good humor - a case in point being his implied threat, at the very end of his discourse, to run again. "I was thinking of retiring, but I must be doing something right," he jested, enjoying the tease as much as the reporters themselves did.

And there's the simple fact that Mayor Herenton makes for good copy. Nobody does it better - whether it's alleging a sexual blackmail plot against himself (election season 2007) or declaring himself a major prophet ordained for special vengeance missions by the Lord (January 1, 2004, and various points thereafter) or warring against his city council (for much of his fourth term) and the city school board (at various points from the second through fifth terms) or challenging a city council member to "step outside" a conference room (Brent Taylor in 2004) and a former heavyweight champion to step inside a boxing ring (Joe Frazier in 2006) or dancing a lively two-step in church that would be memorialized on YouTube or...

But there's no getting through such a list. And these, after all, are just some of the latter-day highlights from a public career that goes back for a turbulent half-century, through extended tenures as mayor, as schools superintendent, as teaching cadre and principal, and as a youthful Golden Gloves champion who still boasts, "Once I got my growth, I never got beat."

For better or for worse, Willie Herenton has become a figure of the first rank in Memphis political history. Arguably even the pre-eminent figure, out-shining his historic foils in the Ford family, together or singly, and rivaling even the great Ed Crump.

The mayor is now engaged in his most audacious effort ever - to revise history both backwards and forwards. At his Thursday media event, he made the extraordinary claim that he had never resigned - despite the incontrovertible and highly public evidence of his mid-March letter formally notifying CAO Keith McGhee of his intent to resign as of July 31.

Herenton maintained on Thursday that his statement had been qualified by "conditions" having to do with his opportunity to direct the affairs of Memphis City Schools, though no such conditions nor any reference to MCS are contained within his letter. The fact is, for a vital day or two, Herenton's interest in the vacant school superintendency had been a matter for speculation only, along with other hypothetical reasons for his departure.

Ultimately, the mayor made it clear that - the school board willing - he did indeed want to crown his career of public service by a triumphant return to MCS. His lobbying of board members and of local CEO's (whom he prevailed upon to endorse his candidacy for school superintendent) was an open and obvious affair. The problem was that, with the singular exception of maverick member Kenneth Whalum Jr., the board wasn't willing. Miami educator Kriner Cash, ungraciously dismissed by Herenton as a "third-rater," was hired instead.

The result? Herenton began to insist, as he did again on Thursday, that he had never even sought the school job!

His primary task on Thursday, however, was more pointed. Charging that the recent federal prosecutions of his former protégé Joseph Lee and others were but political assaults on blacks in general and himself in particular, Herenton was clearly organizing his base in advance of a rumored future indictment relating to city contracts awarded to mayoral associates.

In essence, the mayor was daring the feds, who have just lost two public-corruption cases in a row, to proceed in the face of a daunting political scenario he has now prepared in advance. Having altered the past, Herenton has now gone to work on the future - revising the circumstances of reality in two directions at once.

The ancient Greeks had a word for that - hubris. You can look it up. In the lexicon of history, it keeps close company with that well-known biblical warning about the pride that goeth before a fall.

Comments (15) RSS

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This is the major reason we left Memphis almost ten years ago. We saw the writing on the wall and the mayor has proved us right. How a person can say he would retire then when he doesn't get his way change his mind and now say he didn't say he would retire is mind blowing. Well, Memphis, welcome to the mayor you keep voting in and voting in and voting in.......

Posted by southernman on | Report this comment

Obama - Herenton for President / Vice-President

Posted by Toast on | Report this comment

Southernman, if you moved out of Memphis, then you have no real right to complain about what goes on here. When you cut and run to Mississippi, you gave up the right to vote against Herenton. If you're so happy down there, why do you and others like you feel the need to keep putting Memphis down?

Posted by TennesseeDrew on | Report this comment

Since he submitted that resignation, is Herenton bound to leave? Or can he legally get out of it and stay in office after July? Nothing would make me happier than to see this self-assured fool gone from office.

Posted by wittnower on | Report this comment

I was born and raised in Memphis and still have family there. But even if that were not true, the wonderful part of living in this country is freedom of speech. So I have the right to bash football teams, presidents and mayors. Ain't America great!!!!!!!!

Posted by southernman on | Report this comment

DSM Criteria for Narcissistic Personality Disorder: DSM Criteria A pervasive pattern of grandiosity (in fantasy or behavior), need for admiration, and lack of empathy, beginning by early adulthood and present in a variety of contexts, as indicated by five (or more) of the following: 1. has a grandiose sense of self-importance 2. is preoccupied with fantasies of unlimited success, power, brilliance, beauty, or ideal love 3. believes that he or she is "special" and unique 4. requires excessive admiration 5. has a sense of entitlement 6. is interpersonally exploitative 7. lacks empathy 8. is often envious of others or believes others are envious of him or her 9. shows arrogant, haughty behaviors or attitudes

Posted by geraldo on | Report this comment

southernman, just because you can say something doesn't mean you should. It's better to keep your mouth shut and have some people think you're a fool than to talk and remove all doubt. I'm just saying that you're one of those stereotypical DeSoto County people who moved away and then complain. Instead of staying and fighting, defending your neighborhood, you cut and run for the 'burbs like a coward. Then you won't shut up about it. If you're so friggin' happy, just live in DeSoto County, shop at Wal-Mart and enjoy it. God Bless America!

Posted by TennesseeDrew on | Report this comment

As a part-time Memphian (I have a place in Midtown) I simply can't wait until Herenton is gone. Last Thursday is a prime example. Herenton is shady, overtly racist and clearly a total narcissist (see above post). We don't need crap like that. We DID need a MCS superintendant who is at least semi-compitent and not politically connected. Indict Herenton on corruption, please, Feds!

Posted by vwdan on | Report this comment

Barack Obama + Herenton? No way!!! Why taint an otherwise winnable campaign with Herenton. I'd rather see a crack whore share the ticket with Obama. Obama+Hillary!!

Posted by vwdan on | Report this comment

I think that Southernman was just expressing his incredulousness about how this fool keeps getting elected. I too find it incredible that this moron keeps getting elected. I have lived in a lot of different cities and observed some crazy political climates but Memphis and their bufoon mayor - King Willie, take the cake. One day they will be free of his childish behavior - hopefully sooner than later.

Posted by skeeterbuglet on | Report this comment

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