Polls show both candidates virtually tied in this troubled corner
of America.
A group of African-American leaders is endorsing Republican Rick
Stream. One reason: Democratic hopeful Steve Stenger's support of
the prosecutor investigating the Ferguson police department, which
is under scrutiny after a white officer shot dead Brown, an
18-year-old African-American, in August.
That group accuses the county prosecutor Robert McCulloch of being
biased because he's too close to police. He couldn't be immediately
reached for comment, but has denied that is the case.
While the Republican will struggle in the heavily Democratic and
black North County area in and around Ferguson, the mere fact that
Stream is being taken seriously there shows the level of frustration
among African-Americans at local authorities.
Both candidates are white, as are the vast majority of the police
force and city council members in Ferguson, even though the town's
population of some 21,000 is two-thirds black.
Stream, a state representative for the mostly white suburb of
Kirkwood, promises to hire a diverse staff to run St Louis County, a
ring of suburbs including Ferguson that is home to 1 million people.
A quarter of the county is black.
"My administration and the boards and commissions that I have
control over will be 25 percent African-American," he said to
applause at a black church near Ferguson on Sunday. He told
worshippers he was inspired by watching Martin Luther King's "I have
a dream," speech on television as a boy in 1963 and said he prayed
for Brown's family.
Stream, 65, has been helped by a bitter primary fight between
Democrats which his current opponent Stenger, 42, won by beating
black incumbent Charlie Dooley, 66.
Stenger's team said the Democrats still enjoy solid black support.
The leaders backing the Republican "are a splinter group of
disgruntled Charlie Dooley supporters who do not represent the
majority of the African-American community,” Stenger spokesman Ed
Rhode told Reuters.
The dozen or so black leaders endorsing Stream have complained that
Stenger is an ally of prosecutor McCulloch. The prosecutor, they
contend, has been too soft on police in the investigation into
Brown’s shooting, which set off riots.
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African-American leaders have asked for a special prosecutor to
replace McCulloch, partly because his father, a police officer, was
killed on duty by an African-American man in 1964. McCulloch, in a
September interview with the Washington Post, said "The pain was
because I lost my father. It didn't matter that he was an officer."
St Louis is still on edge, waiting to hear this month if a grand
jury will indict Ferguson policeman Darren Wilson for killing Brown.
Stenger is probably still the slight favorite at Tuesday's vote.
"St Louis County is majority Democrat but after the shooting of Mike
Brown, it's up in the air," said David Kimball, a political
scientist at the University of Missouri-St Louis.
Black voters in St Louis County traditionally do not vote in local
elections in large numbers. Overall turnout in Ferguson's municipal
elections in 2013 was under 12 percent.
A stronger turnout at Tuesday's election might be a sign that
Ferguson's black residents dismayed by the killing of Brown could
sway the town's municipal elections next April.
Ted Hoskins, the black mayor of Berkeley, another St. Louis suburb,
and a Stream supporter, said a huge black turnout on Tuesday is not
needed as St Louis County usually votes around 55-45 percent
Democrat.
"We only need 5 points no matter what the turnout is," he said.
"What we want is that African-Americans should reap some political
benefits and if we can't do it with the Democrats we can't be worse
off with the Republicans."
(Edited by Hank Gilman)
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