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Commentary: Black Leaders Have Failed To Protect And Promote Interest Of Those They Represent

Mike Jones, addressing the County Council earlier this year
Jason Rosenbaum | St. Louis Public Radio
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St. Louis Public Radio

The following was written for the St. Louis American, which posted it on Aug. 14.

I got a call Monday from the Political EYE to discuss the murder of Michael Brown. I know that's a harsh judgmental description of this tragic event without benefit of all the facts and any official findings, but as a product of the sixties I know you don't always need a weatherman to know which way the wind is blowing.

The basis of our conversation was what did I think about the situation from the perspective of someone who has spent 35 years in public life and who is retiring at the end of this year? More specifically, what would I say to the men and women protesting this tragedy?

A fundamental truth I have learned in these past 30 years is usually people fail because they focus on the wrong thing. We obsess about the tactical, who did it and when did it happen, and we completely ignore the strategic, what are we doing and why?

It's the difference between chess and checkers or the good hustler's critique of a bad hustler: "he plays for the hundred and misses the grand every time!"

My view is the circumstances that created the events that resulted in tragedy of Michael Brown's much too early death can be placed squarely at the feet of black leadership, or I should have said at the failure of black leadership to fulfill the only moral imperative of leadership – protecting and advancing the interest of the people you lead.

I say this not from the perspective of some uninvolved third party, but as a member of that leadership for the last 30 years. Now there are a lot of African-American suits that will disagree, but that doesn't stop it from being true. There will be an official report of who did it and what happened, but real questions for us revolve around why? And by “why?” I don't mean the Ferguson policeman who pulled the trigger, but why could Ferguson, and by inference all of St Louis, be a place where the conditions that produce these outcomes take root and flourish?

The political negligence of black leadership over the last 30 years has produced an existential threat to the black community that calls our very existence into question. While Michael Brown was literally lost to us Saturday afternoon, how many thousands of young black men and women are we figuratively losing every day to poverty, drugs, violence and failing public schools?

There are major organs in the human body that make life possible, but as crucial as they are we can live without some and some can be replaced when they break down. These organs could not function for us without the blood that carries oxygen and other vital nutrients that allow these organs to do what they need to do. When blood no longer reaches the organs, they fail.

Politics is the art and science of acquiring and using power to make public policies that will benefit you and your community.

Don't ever believe that nonsense that right-wing hucksters and hustlers sell scared working-class white folks that government is your problem and the free market is the rapture. Every successful economic activity requires the support of public policy. If government isn’t important, why do the rich and privileged spend so much money to control it? To protect and advance their wealth and privilege, that's why. Politics is to the health of a community what blood is to the body: essential.

I want to make an important distinction between government programs and public policy. A program is just that, but public policy defines the rules of the game, and he who makes the rules always wins the game. It's one of those things you can count on, like the sun coming up in the east.

Every major issue facing the black community has a solution, and implementing that solution begins with a change in public policy. A change in public policy requires control, or at least major influence on government. That requires power – that's politics!

The reason the Ferguson Police Department looks (97 percent white) and functions the way it does is public policy. If the government of Ferguson looked like the Ferguson community (67 percent African-American), it could have had a different police force.

I say “could,” because in St. Louis African-American leaders are no guarantee of better public policy for the black community. It's what I call the fallacy of the politics of melanin; you can no longer afford to assume that ethnicity equals political allegiance or competence.

Competent public leadership is not showing up in church praying and giving speeches for the benefit of TV cameras. It requires showing up every day, educating and organizing the community to protect and advance its interest. It means when you're in the room you represent the interests of the people who sent you, not acquiescing to the wishes of those you are negotiating with.

Why my generation’s failure to provide public leadership is so stunning is because all of us owe whatever we’ve become to the leadership and political activism of those who came before us. We are fruit of their struggle and sacrifice, and unfortunately it’s a bitter fruit. Upon giving up this seat, my advice to the next generation of leaders is: be leaders! The community we leave you is a testament to what happens to a people when leadership fails to perform.

Use my time in the seat as a warning, and not an example. We lost our way long before we lost Michael Brown.

Mike Jones is senior policy adviser for County Executive Charlie Dooley and a member of the State Board of Education.