One of the "changes" I particularly welcome about President Obama is that he comes from a big city, Chicago. (He also gets points for growing up in Jakarta and Honolulu.) That's rare, since Americans seem to prefer their presidents with a Jeffersonian mind-set, hailing from Plains, Georgia, or Hope, Arkansas. We haven't had a real city President since John Kennedy, Boston man, and before that I can only think of that brassy New Yorker, Teddy Roosevelt.
If Obama gets the city agenda, so are cities getting their act together in a more effective way. One particularly encouraging formula comes from the Brookings Institution and its Metro Nation program. Seattle, incidentally, is fully on board with this agenda, and Mayor Greg Nickels has hosted Brookings' chief spokesman for the initiative, Bruce Katz, in town. Further, Nickels is the incoming president of the U.S. Conference of Mayors, which gives him a big seat at the White House urban table. (It probably doesn't hurt that Nickels was born in Chicago and still has relatives there.)
What is a Metro Nation? (Besides being an awkward neologism?) It reformulates the nation as a series of metropolitan regions, including suburbs; and it talks about cities as economic generators (as they surely are), not as down-on-the-heels places that can't pay their whopping welfare bills. Here's how Brookings puts it:
Metropolitan areas drive our nation’s long-term prosperity. To propel the U.S. economy into the 21st century, the nation should reform the way we invest in human capital, infrastructure, innovation, and quality of place—the fundamental assets that concentrate in our metropolitan areas. The president-elect has a chance to rethink the way we build roads and rails. Rather than wastefully dividing up the spoils, the benefits would reverberate nationwide.
Obama has said he will form a new Office of Urban Policy to coordinate this kind of re-investment. Seattle Deputy Mayor Tim Ceis says that Nickels' office is deeply engaged in pushing for this new approach. Ceis says that the infrastructure spending that is sure to come as part of economic recovery should not spread dollars all over the states, as is usually done (to gladden each and every Congressperson), but instead should be invested strategically in leading metropolitan regions, according to their job-building strengths. Seattle, for instance, might be a place to invest in global health and green technology. The point is to think of cities as dynamos powering the nation into a new prosperity, not just big pits to soak up social service funds.
This is pretty thrilling stuff. The cities position themselves as more than center cities, thus assembling a potent political coalition. They talk economic revival, the order of the day. And they're dealing with a President who gets what's exciting about cities. In this light, there's something highly encouraging that Obama so loves Chicago that he's busy lobbying for Chicago to get the 2016 games, and loves hanging out in his Hyde Park neighborhood, eating at diners, and wearing his Cubs baseball cap. He can't be all bad.
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Comments:
Posted Tue, Nov 25, 9:22 a.m. Inappropriate
Since Metropolitan Seattle is such a financial powerhouse that means you can cover the costs of the Viaduct replacement and the 520 Bridge, yes?
Posted Tue, Nov 25, 9:49 a.m. Inappropriate
If the money that leaves the city to be spread around the state was kept in Seattle, then yes. The mayor was lamenting that very thing about 6 months ago, having to have to go to the state, via the taxing authority of the county, so he might use some of the money that leaves the city, only if somebody in another part of the state thinks it's a good idea.
I completely agree with him.
Posted Tue, Nov 25, 10:20 a.m. Inappropriate
President Ronald Reagan seemed to have thrived for decades in urban Los Angeles and was far more successful than anyone ever could imagine. Obama's Chicago community organizing in a town known for cold, wind, crime, corruption, and machine politics falls far short of Reagan. Anyone who bowls 37, confuses Kansas City and St. Louis, and thinks he's been to 57 states had better understand that being 'urban' means Quit Smoking and that no Q/A sessions are 'above my pay grade'.
Posted Tue, Nov 25, 12:25 p.m. Inappropriate
Obama does love Chicago, but that doesn't make him a Cubs fan. That's a White Sox cap he's wearing, and that's the only cap that a self-respecting resident of Hyde Park or the entire South Side would wear. (Sign in a South Side bar: My favorite teams are the White Sox and whoever's playing the Cubs.)
A metropolitan perspective is all for the best when it comes to public policy, but that still doesn't erase all neighborhood rivalries!
Posted Tue, Nov 25, 12:37 p.m. Inappropriate
Ronald Raygun lived in a house with a gate and security in LA and DC. He thrived, good for him, the rest of us, not so much.
Posted Tue, Nov 25, 9:03 p.m. Inappropriate
f.d.r. seemed pretty cosmopolitan, no?
Truman was from Kansas city and grew in the job.
Ike was cosmopolitan in a grand army way.
bush seemed to need to play the hick though his father was comfortable on the grand stage.
Chicago, Chicago Chicago means a lot of corruption both high and low... Penny Pritzker a bundler for Obama had to take herself out of the running for a cabinet post, presumably Obama knew she would, since that family just has huge dirt on its business history... whether you can do anything about the blight in American cities under present and near future circumstances except more vacuous expressions of hope??? this kind of blight is really uniquely American compared to Europe, it indicates the degree to which this is a third world country.
Posted Wed, Nov 26, 4:30 a.m. Inappropriate
We not only have a President elected from a big city, we have all those blue states that elected him from far more urban places than the red states that backed McCain.
We also have a Congress controlled by Democrats who tend to represent more urbanized interests - the Speaker from San Francisco and a Senate Majority Leader, who may live in rural Nevada, but comes from Las Vegas.
The leadership of the country now has an urban mid-west/western tilt that should represent the values of the new urban West better than at any other time in our history.
This is exciting.