ATLANTIC CITY -
Talk about shuffling the deck.
In an unexpected
outcome, voters replaced two-term incumbent and Gov. Christie foe Mayor Lorenzo
Langford with an openly gay Republican who rides a bicycle to work and whose
current job is with the state board that oversees the governor's Tourism
District.
"Atlantic
City is amazing at how it reinvents itself," Mayor-elect Don Guardian said
Wednesday in a bit of understatement to supporters and media at his Atlantic
Avenue headquarters.
The 60-year-old
Guardian, an Eagle Scout who came to Atlantic City from Bergen County to be an
executive with the local Boy Scouts, has spent 20 years as head of the city's
Special Improvement District, a division of the Casino Reinvestment Development
Authority, which oversees the state Tourism District.
Langford, who
referred to the establishment of that district as "apartheid," and
who feuded with Christie to such an extent it was mocked on Saturday Night
Live, has been a longtime fixture in city politics. He saw himself as a
defender of neighborhoods in a town dominated by casinos.
Langford did not
respond to a request for comment Wednesday, and Guardian said he had not spoken
with him. Langford conceded to supporters Tuesday night.
As for Christie,
he said Wednesday: "I'm grateful that Lorenzo Langford is gone, and that
should be no shock to anyone. I think he's been a negative force for Atlantic
City."
The supporters who
celebrated Guardian's win Tuesday night at the Tun Tavern were a diverse cross
section of the current makeup of Atlantic City, including Pakistani,
Bangladeshi, and Vietnamese shop owners, Latino teachers and casino workers,
young entrepreneurs like Mike Hauke of Tony Baloney's, and African Americans who
broke ranks with Langford to work for Guardian. Many boasted of working until
all hours of the night, knocking on doors day after day. The campaign
registered 800 new voters.
"We worked
for months," said Saleh Ahmed, a Bangledeshi owner of the Body Oil &
Variety store on Atlantic Avenue. "I know Mr. Guardian is the best man for
the job."
Guardian said he
would add "10 or 12 languages" to city websites in deference to the
city's immigrant population and would streamline permitting to encourage
development.
He vowed better
relations with the state, and with casinos, including the Borgata, which
recently won a major tax-appeal case and is now owed a potentially devastating
refund of more than $50 million from the city.
Guardian said the
Borgata and seven other casinos had reached out to him Wednesday in a spirit of
detente. "We need to be back at the table," he said. Guardian said
the Borgata had initially proposed a less costly settlement that the city
rejected.
Guardian's other
ideas include a revival of Kentucky Avenue, the historic center of African
American culture in the city, to become like Beale Street in Memphis, and
transforming another part into an international street bazaar.
He acknowledged
more sobering problems, including a bottoming-out casino industry; the
continuing impact from Hurricane Sandy, which he called devastating; and a
recovery complicated by undocumented residents, illegal apartments, and
poverty. "I visited homes that have no floors and no ceilings, and all the
people asked me was not to report them," he said.
Despite electing a
Republican mayor, voters nonetheless returned three Democrats to City Council
at-large seats, all of whom received more votes than Langford. Unofficial
results had Guardian with 3,066 votes, or 50.14 percent, to Langford's 2,904,
or 47.49 percent. The last time the city had a Republican mayor was in 1990,
with James Usry.
"I think it
was the perfect storm of incidents that hurt the mayor," said Kaleem
Shabazz, a public relations officer in Atlantic City who voted for Langford. He
cited the Borgata ruling and a verdict against the city in a lawsuit by its
ex-police chief.
"Once you get
to a third term, people get wary," Shabazz said. "Everybody can see
the [Special Improvement District] is well-run. Now people will look to see if
he can expand that to neighborhoods."
Some longtime
Langford supporters worried about people's jobs in the city, and that Guardian
would leave them out of his plans. Some even worried he would end or change
popular concerts at Gardiner's Basin.
"That's just
the state taking over our city," said Jamil Abdullah, 25, of the city's
Westside section.
But Guardian said
he had no plans for layoffs, and would try to reduce the number of city
employees through attrition. He said he would seek sponsors for the concerts,
held in his inlet neighborhood.
Guardian said that
despite his employment, he was not a secret candidate of Christie's, and had
never met the governor, which Christie confirmed.
He vowed to bring
his attention to detail and improvement to the rest of Atlantic City. "I
see my job as mayor as being outside, walking seven days a week at night,
walking your neighborhoods," he said.
The bow-tied
Guaradian arrived at headquarters Wednesday in a jitney. He plans no fancy
inaugural ball on New Year's Day after being sworn in. His campaign said he
would attend Mass at St. Michael's, then take a cavalcade of jitneys to the
Ducktown Tavern, where the party will be held in heated tents.
He will end his
employment with the Casino Reinvestment Development Authority before taking
office.
Judah Dorrington,
daughter of Atlantic City African American pro-hockey pioneer Art Dorrington,
who took Guardian door to door in her mostly black Westside neighborhood, said
the gathering at the tavern showed a new Atlantic City: "a multicultural
town working together."
Said another
business owner: "This is a stay of execution for the city."
Source: Philly.com
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