The media loves to go to places like Birmingham, Newark or Flint and then try to indict us for our "apathy" and for not caring about how badly the people live. But the Democrats they keep electing are why they live that way.
Here's what's happening in Birmingham.
Birmingham City Council President Johnathan Austin, fresh from winning re-election to the council's highest office, this week ordered that all four members of the council who voted against him must move out of their offices at City Hall, and into other spaces on the corridor.
But at least two council members – Kim Rafferty and Valerie Abbott – balked.
"I respectfully decline the reassignment of my office and staff," Rafferty wrote to Austin Wednesday.
Abbott wrote that she will "not cooperate."
And all of a sudden duly elected council members were squatters. In their own offices
This morning Council Administrator Cheryl Kidd, on orders from Austin, began the process of having the council members moved out. Kidd sought Public Works employees to physically clear out the offices so Austin supporters Sheila Tyson and Lashunda Scales could move into the spaces deemed more prestigious. Councilmen Jay Roberson and William Parker also were asked move, meaning that all council members would have to move, whether they wanted to or not.
The mayor's office, which has authority over Public Works and other city workers – including the locksmith – instructed employees to disregard the order.
Austin has his own history of trouble with the law.
Birmingham City Council President Johnathan Austin was arrested on a DUI charge in Mountain Brook, authorities confirmed.
The arrest happened Dec. 19, 2014 but was not made public until today. Mountain Brook police officials said all arrest reports are furnished to the media upon request, and no one requested the report until today.
Birmingham is doing well under this type of management.
Birmingham runs in the middle of the pack in a ranking of "concentrated poverty" released today by the Brookings Institution Metropolitan Policy Program.
Concentrated, or extreme poverty, is a neighborhood (U.S. Census Bureau tract) where at least 40 percent of the people live below the poverty line.
Today's ranking finds the Birmingham metro area at 42nd out of the 100 largest U.S. metro areas in the share of the metro's poor population who live in those extreme-poverty tracts. Some 10.9 percent of the metro area's poor people lived in those tracts, a percentage that did not change appreciably from 2000 to 2005-09.
Must be the fault of the GOP.