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All Muck Is Local: Earning Votes and Stripes in Milwaukee

In an election season when the electorate is passionately debating the relative merits of change, experience and straight talk, Milwaukee’s 6th District gave their one-term alderman, Michael McGee, a plurality of their votes in a 9-candidate race last Tuesday. He will face Milele Coggs in the aldermanic runoff in April.

What’s so unusual?

McGee is running his re-election campaign from his jail cell. He was arrested last May, and is still behind bars. Charged with 12 counts of election fraud, bribery and contempt in the state court and nine federal counts, which include bribery and extortion, he faces a theoretical, though unlikely, 115-year sentence if convicted of all the felonies. Though he posted bond on the state charges, the judge in the federal court is holding McGee without bail because he was allegedly intimidating witnesses even from prison in order to influence their testimony. McGee could take office from jail if elected, because his trial dates are after this April’s runoff. If convicted as a felon, he would be removed from office.

Last April, McGee survived a recall election with 64 percent of the vote against seven challengers. Yet a month later he was arrested for conspiring with two friends to murder a man for $3,000. Their conversations were captured in the course of a federal investigation of McGee’s alleged demand for bribes in exchange for help in obtaining a liquor license. Since the tape also revealed the gang later agreeing to give the victim a mere “head-busting," in which they would “beat” him “down,” “peel back [his] wig” and “sew his cap together,” — all for $1,000 — the charge was reduced to substantial battery.

Nothing — not allegations of shaking down business owners, buying votes, soliciting bribes, nor restraining orders, three arrests in a year and a half, nor threatening to kill his extramarital pregnant girlfriend — seems to dissuade McGee’s faithful supporters.

"I think he's a nice person, and I think he's been railroaded. I don't think he can do as good of a job in prison. But I think if he'd been a white man, he'd already been out of jail," says one voter.

McGee’s district is largely African-American. After last May’s hearing, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported that McGee’s supporters feel that “the case is weak and shows that the government targets leaders who represent the underclass.” As he was led handcuffed into court, several of his supporters in the packed courtroom raised closed fists.

McGee's attorney on the state charges, Glenn O. Givens, says that McGee is the target of a trumped up, racist prosecution. Or, as he put it during a hearing last spring, "It was the government that actually committed the crimes that Alderman McGee is charged with."


2 Comments

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Seems to be a step of logical progression.
We have national elected criminals now who should be in jail, so why not start the race from jail?
Doesn't seem to be much of a difference anymore,does it?

As a native Milwaukeean, I was so surprised to see Mike McGee mentioned on TPM, I had to register and comment.

Missing in this article is the context that Milwaukee is the most racially segregated city in the country. As this article says, McGee's constituents are mostly African-American, but one might as well say that he represents the black neighborhood. Racial tensions are incredibly high in this city and its surrounding suburbs, and those in the more comfy positions usually aren't too shy about expressing their disdain for certain sides of town and their citizens. One local AM radio "personality" is still on the air after using the term "wetback" a couple of years ago (he did serve a suspension, but his first on-air words after coming back were a very, very snarky "Buenos dias").

Basically, while the city has a solid progressive reputation, racial tensions are still incredibly high. One of the ramifications of being denied bail (while other less-black politicians are granted it) is that his district now has no formal, consistent representation on the common council. Which, as one might imagine, can really piss off an already maligned demographic. Oh, and the prosecuting attorney just happens to be a member of the Federalist Society.

This is not to dispute the seriousness of the charges against McGee, but people are taking notice of some of the differences between his prosecution and those of Caucasian politicians who have been found guilty for other crimes. I've always read McGee's continued electoral successes less as direct support, and more as a thumb to the eye of the white establishment. But that's just my view.

More here, from the (more sympathetic) local alt-weekly's article before the primary.

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