Posted on Fri, Oct. 10, 2003
By WILLIAM BUNCH, MENSAH M. DEAN & JENICE M. ARMSTRONG
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But four days into the furor over the FBI bugging of Street's office, one thing is clear: With little hard information about what the feds are actually looking at, the episode is instead becoming a prism through which Philadelphians are channeling their broader anxieties about national politics and race.
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"There's no doubt in my mind that having finished in California that the Republican Party has turned its attention to one of the biggest elections in this country, and that's the Philadelphia mayoral election," said Joe Quinones, co-chairman of the Coalition of Politically Concerned Professionals, a new civic group.
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Leon Williams, a political activist and former candidate for district attorney, said he's spoken with black voters - "people on the sideline, people who are on the fence, people who had a few complaints about John Street, who are now saying, 'Look, we have to stand behind him.' This is more than John Street. This is the federal government coming here in a city where blacks make up the majority, where the will of the black people is going to determine who wins, and now they're coming here, bugging people, trying to win this election."
Fattah said the government has a long history of investigating black mayors, noting that FBI records detailed 20 years of wiretapping and other probes of Detroit's first black mayor, Coleman Young, yet Young was never charged with any crime.
more:
http://www.philly.com/mld/philly/news/local/6978899.htmmy comment: Can you say, COINTELPRO?