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Philadelphia


November 30, 2006

How The Game Is Played


Over in corrupt and content Philadelphia, Milton Street, the free-loading and influence-peddling brother of outgoing mayor John Street, is getting indicted on federal corruption and tax evasion charges. My favorite charge involves Milton shaking down an apparently none-too-bright airplane contractor for $80,000 in exchange for the promise of a $3.2 million contract that, as it turns out, didn't exist.

This is the most fun since the FBI bugged Street's office during the 2003 election, which had the perverse effect of increasing black turn-out and helping Street win re-election. I wrote a dispatch that year from Philly that detailed a radio debate (with traffic and weather breaks on the twos), when his opponent accused him of running a pay-to-play administration, and Street cheerfully agreed that contributors to his campaign “have a greater chance of getting business from my administration… there are these rules that have been informally accepted in this country for as long as there’s been government, as long as there’s been patronage. That’s how the game is played."

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November 07, 2006

Quick Hits-Election Day Arrives


We'll begin sifting through the electoral ashes tomorrow. In the meantime, a handful of quick hits—

  • Evan Weiner runs through the gory details of arena and financing referendums in Seattle, Sacramento and Ohio and explains why election day has become one of the biggest days in the sports year.
  • Otis White offers another take on stadium deals (scroll down a bit), and at the top of the page, a Plunkitt-esque telling of how gerrymandering in Philly led one rep. down the road to sin and jail.
  • Joel Koktin on what's wrong with California's Prop. 1B, the transportation bond measure. Around D.C., counties give up on their states and begin funding their own transportation projects.
  • Chicago scores federal funds to try out merit pay for teachers. More here and here.

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    October 23, 2006

    Monday Quick Hits—Proximity for Better or Worse


    —Congrats to the Tigers for the win last night, but the World Series won't help Detroit very much, and the Super Bowl back in February didn't either.

    —More coming this week on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange's purchase of the Chicago Board of Trade to create the world's biggest exchange.

    —Old fashioned physical proximity still matters in Silicon Valley, while Wall Street looks to Pennsylvania to back up, spread out and spread risk. (More at WallStreetWest.org).

    —Speaking of spread-out New York, Brookings finds exurbia ascendant north of the city.

    —On the left coast, Witold Rybczynski looks at San Francisco and when bad architecture happens to good cities.

    —Back East, The Boston Globe is on track for its first unprofitable year ever, and Julia Vitullo-Martin compares Philadelphia to Boston and finds Philly's culture wanting. (Of course Boston being THE university town, with a built-in high tech sector as such, also helps).

    —And Harry Siegel in the New York Post on how Governor Pataki and his fellow incumbocrats hollowed out New York's GOP.

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