Someone else said it better than I could hope to, in this note I got the day after Grant's letter appeared:
I just wanted to say how much I appreciated today's entry on your blog. Right way, wrong way. [9-25-08] I believe, too, that freedom of the press applies to everybody. There are a lot of people in our society that don't think very clearly, but they still have a right to speak. As my friend from college days used to say, "Everyone is entitled to their own ridiculous opinion." The main problem with democracy is that the will of the people is rarely going to be a clear consensus. And I'm not sure the cream always rises to the top. But it's still the best system around!
I was thinking of what you said as I was reflecting on Charles' letter yesterday. I don't agree with him. And I don't think he's being entirely honest with himself. With his knowledge of history ... and human nature ... he has to be aware of the advantages of the Council-Manager system of government, as opposed to the outdated and awkward Commission form. And he knows they deliberately shut out the input of the local electorate in order to proceed with their own willful program ... and he knows it's not right!
But I can't help but like the man. He is smart, and articulate, and I believe he has a good heart. You're right, I believe he thinks he is serving his community to the best of his ability. I wonder if he knows how much I wish I could keep him on there. He's the only one of the four that has the savvy for a position that aims at vision and policy for the future. And the only one that would be capable of writing a letter in defense of the Council's presumptuous ways.
I have to work to take him down if we can, because I believe the need for a strongly-defined charter is so critical for this city right now. But I think I'd actually miss having him on that Council. I just wish he'd held his ground when he first opposed Barlow's bold gambit.
I, too, don't think Grant is being very honest with himself. And, I've felt this way about him for a while. Like this writer, I'm sad that Grant appears to be taking the path of least resistance in fulfilling his duties to council. He readily admitted in his letter that he chose to vote with the three remaining councilors, even though he originally argued otherwise. He doesn't say he changed his mind, he just says he voted to go along with the majority:
I am sure my fellow councilors will remember my speaking at length at one of the first meetings of the new council in favor of staying the course [allowing the already in-place Charter Review Committee to continue their work to its conclusion and acting upon their decision], but a majority was in favor of terminating it. I then voted with the majority to try to maintain the harmony within the council, rather than start off with a schism, and in my opinion we have gradually progressed since then, in terms of our collective functioning, although we still have some way to go.
(I can assume that by progress toward collective functioning, Grant refers to his continued votes with the majority. And, I can also assume the "some way to go" would be a reference to Mayor Peterson who continues to be the lone holdout against the "majority" of three plus Grant in many votes. But, I digress.)
Grant doesn't say he changed his mind about the decision regarding the Charter Review Committee; he just decided to vote with the majority to avoid a "schism." This doesn't take a lot of fortitude and it doesn't take any integrity. Morten, Locke, and Barlow made up the majority Grant mentions and they would have carried the motion without Grant's vote. (Mayor Peterson was against disbanding the Charter Review Committee and managed to stick with his decision.) The Morten-Locke-Barlow-Grant majority, by the way, was in favor of disbanding and/or ignoring the Charter Review Committee's year of hard work and subsequent recommendations, and avoiding a public vote, because it clearly identified a type of government they were not interested in: Council-Manager.
This disappoints me tremendously because I always thought, as did the person who wrote me about Grant's letter, that Grant could be counted on for his integrity. Someone who votes to go along with the crowd isn't what I look for in an elected official and, like the writer above, I'm working to see Grant replaced this time around, if for nothing other than this clear admission that he just wants to get along.