Skip navigation
MSN.com
MSNBC News
U.S. News
Politics
Crime & Punishment
1906 Earthquake
U.S. Security
After the Storms
U.S. Life
Education
Environment
Race in America
Only on MSNBC.com
WP.com Highlights
Peculiar Postings

News Video
U.S. News
World News
Business
Sports
Entertainment
Tech / Science
Health
Weather
Travel
Blogs Etc.
Local News
Newsweek
Multimedia
Most Popular
NBC NEWS
MSNBC TV
Today Show
Nightly News
Meet the Press
Dateline NBC

  MSNBC Home » U.S. News » Hurricanes' Aftermath
Full coverageImagesVideoHow to helpFull coverage

New Orleans faces an election like no other

After Katrina, city largely divided over race, money, future
Image: New Orleans election signs
Alex Brandon / AP
Candidates for mayor of New Orleans have placed their campaign signs in front of an Uptown house in the Crescent City. The city's first major election since Hurricane Katrina struck is Tuesday.

NBC VIDEO
Launch
•Looking to the future
April 15: Some balloting is already under way in New Orleans as the city chooses the next mayor. NBC's Martin Savidge reports.

Nightly News


NEW ORLEANS - High heels echoing, Ruby Ducre-Gethers crosses the floor of her airy but unlivable home - ear on her cell phone, eyes on the workers replacing her flooded-out walls, and mind on payback at the ballot box.

Across town, Irma Williams says the election for mayor this Saturday isn't truly an election without her neighbors to vote - but she says it's past time for street lamps to work outside her temporary trailer.

Alex Beard wakes up a thousand miles away and reads the New Orleans newspaper online, following each day's campaign news convinced that the storm brought a chance to rescue the city he adopted and then reluctantly fled.

Some people in New Orleans are angry about the government response to Hurricane Katrina and want to render judgment as the city casts ballots for mayor, city council and most every other elected official, from sheriff to assessor. Many want to look ahead.

Race a focal point and dividing line
But trumping all that as Election Day approaches, race - and all the history that comes with it here - has become the defining line for this election, dividing the city by neighborhood and color.

Any verdict on Mayor Ray Nagin's leadership, or any of the proposals to move forward, has been swallowed up by recriminations, paranoia and anger. There is fear - and hope - that the city may elect its first white mayor in three decades.

The election on Saturday has been vehemently challenged by those who say it should be postponed until more of those who left in the city's diaspora - more likely black and more likely poor - can find their way back. But early voting, so far, mostly reflects the racial demographics of pre-Katrina New Orleans.

The logistics alone present an unprecedented challenge, like everything else that Katrina left behind - a hundred thousand voters or more scattered across the country, the mystery of how many will actually vote, and potential crowds and confusion if voters flock back to the city on Election Day itself.

'Everybody's in limbo'
This city is still trying to piece itself back together: huge piles of moldering debris wait uncollected at the curb, drivers creep past nonworking traffic signals or hit the gas and pray, the French Quarter's neon burns bright while many restaurants and hotels are sadly quiet.

"Everything is so broken and destroyed. Everybody's in limbo," said Mark Fowler, manager of an Uptown co-operative that helps musicians replace instruments and find apartments. "The city's been traumatized."

Half the city is homeless - living somewhere, maybe within a half-hour's drive, maybe across the country - making it a guess as to who will vote.

"This is the most unusual mayoral election in American history," said Susan Howell, a University of New Orleans pollster. "When have people in 50 states been able to vote for the mayor of one city? This is a logistical nightmare."

And one that's likely to be repeated, since the nonpartisan election is almost sure to narrow the crowded field of Nagin and 22 challengers to two front-runners. If no one gets 50.1 percent of the vote, the runoff will be May 20.

Nagin won in 2002 as a black candidate supported by the white business community. His toughest opponent was the black police chief.

Now, his most serious challengers are two white men. Pre-storm, blacks, with 70 percent of the population, were the decisive vote. The last white mayor, Moon Landrieu, stepped down in 1978.

 Related story

Interactive: New Orleans candidate profiles

A city divided
Everyone uses the city's geography to talk about race: Uptown and the French Quarter are the mostly white neighborhoods that survived with less damage; the Ninth Ward, Central City and New Orleans East are the majority black neighborhoods that suffered the storm's brunt.

"Right now, we have Uptown trying to reclaim its ideology," said Barry Ranski, an Uptown campaign worker bluntly laying out the mind-set of the scores of candidates who've jumped in for races far beyond mayor.

"When you take 65 or 70 percent of the citizens and displace them, they're not going to go through the hassle of registering absentee ballots."

At least that's the hope of some.

And others' fear. "The powers that be want black people out of here," said Beverly McKenna, publisher of the New Orleans Tribune, a newspaper that writes about black issues. "That's what's happening demographically, economically ... It's insulting how transparent it is."

Image: New Orleans resident
Cheryl Gerber / AP
Standing in her newly renovated home, New Orleans resident Ruby Ducre-Gethers says her vote will be based on how Hurricane Katrina was handled and candidates' plans for the future.

Beard thinks such sweeping denunciations are unfair. An art gallery owner, he sees a chance for the city, black and white, to recognize how badly it had failed over the past half-century.

"If you pull back the curtain at all, and say this has been an increasingly unsuccessful welfare state for 50 years, and a devastatingly unsuccessful one for 25 or 30 years - your timing lines up with the last white mayor of New Orleans. So it's a racist statement, how dare you," he said.

"But it isn't. Everybody's equally guilty, white and black."

He is voting absentee, even as he sold his gallery and moved his wife and young son to New York City. Is he coming back? Not right away. It depends on the vote and how the city recovers.

Nagin's white challengers say race doesn't matter.

  • Mitch Landrieu, the son of the last white mayor, brother to a U.S. senator and himself the lieutenant governor. He has reached out to those burned by Nagin's rebuilding commission, which proposed not rebuilding some low-lying neighborhoods. His family has traditionally reached across racial lines.
  • Ron Forman, who built a can-do reputation with his oversight of the city's Audubon Zoo and construction of a downtown aquarium. In the public arena for decades, he's made powerful alliances without ever going before the public for a vote. The city's newspaper, the Times-Picayune, endorsed him.

CONTINUED: Candidates play their cards


1 | 2 | Next >


Print this Email this
 MORE FROM HURRICANES' AFTERMATH
Katrina hero is indicted
. WP: In Texas, some still reel from Rita
. New Orleans faces election like no other
. Katrina hero is indicted
. Watchdog: Katrina criticism deserved
. Ex-FEMA chief won't work in La. parish
. New layer to hurricane response
. New Orleans dumping, not recycling
. Gulf braces as new storm season nears
. Rising from Ruin - Two towns on the mend
. Hurricanes' Aftermath Section Front
 

•Bomber kills 8 in Tel Aviv
•Why ex-generals are angry
•Far from ready for next 'Big One'
•Detainee's ties to Holloway unclear
•Two sex offenders fatally shot
•MSNBC-TV Question of the Day
•Video: Shocking celebrity lookalikes
•Video: 'Candy' punishes pedophiles
•Video: DEA officer shoots self, sues
•Olbermann previews 2006 baseball season
 Hurricane multimedia

MSNBC.com
 •Rising from Ruin
MSNBC.com follows two towns as they rebuild after Katrina. Follow their progress through on-going stories and citizen diaries.

 
 MAPS OF THE REGION
•Rita: sea-level, refinery and political maps
•Animations of potential Houston flooding
•Katrina flyover: Block by block
•New Orleans: Before and after
•Newsweek: The view from above
•NOAA's view of the devastation
 HURRICANE GUIDE

•What are they?
•Hurricane tracker
•By the decades
•Worst hurricanes
•Weather disasters
•How to wind-proof
•Evacuation tips
•Health and safety
•Post-storm checklist
•Federal response

 Most Popular
Most Viewed
•Detainee's connection to Holloway case unclear
•Gwyneth - she's not just like us!
•Bay Area far from ready for the next 'Big One'
•'Bored, lonely' man charged in horrific crime
•Suicide bomber kills eight in Tel Aviv
•Most viewed on MSNBC.com
Top Rated
•Legendary L.A. transit worker dies at 100
•Girl's heart re-started after transplant removed
•Feds: E-mails show improper ties to Abramoff
•A day after getting WWII medals, veteran dies
•Credit Cruncher
•Most viewed on MSNBC.com
Most E-mailed
•Gwyneth - she's not just like us!
•Bay Area far from ready for the next 'Big One'
•Boeing accused of using faulty 737 parts
•The Quest For Rest
•Obesity products help Americans live large
•Most viewed on MSNBC.com
 RSS FEEDS ON MSNBC.COM

Add these headlines to your news reader

•After the Storms
•Learn more about RSS


MSN Privacy | LegalFeedback | Help