Pubdate: Tue, 25 Jun 2002 Source: Miami Herald (FL) Copyright: 2002 The Miami Herald Contact: http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/262 Author: Brad Bennett DANIA MAYOR: UPROAR IS ABOUT POWER When Robert Chunn's supporters asked him to run for a spot on Dania Beach's City Commission, some say the city's power brokers only wanted to dilute the black vote. But Chunn, a former drug user turned community activist, may have surprised even his staunchest supporters with his showing at the polls in the March 2001 election. He parlayed his anti-drug message into the second-highest vote total in last year's election -- which meant that he automatically would be the city's mayor the second year of his term. Apparently stunned by his success, some of his supporters asked him not to accept the mayor's post, arguing that Chunn, a welder with no high school diploma and no political background, needed more experience before taking on the city's highest elected position. Now, charges of racism are flying, pitting former friends and allies against each other. Chunn, who is black, recently accused two white city board members of using a racial slur, once at a City Commission meeting and once last year at a liquor store. But, the controversy is more about power than race, Chunn said. He says his refusal to go along with a request from longtime power brokers to bypass the mayoral post has put him in the hot seat. Now, he is fighting back. "It's not just about black and white," he said. "It's about anyone who doesn't go along." He accuses one of his biggest supporters, community activist Sophia Steele, of making racist comments and of participating in a plot to prevent him from taking his rightful place as mayor. Steele denies that she ever made racial slurs and believes the city -- 23.7 percent black -- should have a black representative on the commission. She says her only concern is that Chunn, a political novice, needed more experience and training on the commission before taking the mayoral seat. "There is no racial issue," said Steele, 62. "He's trying to make his own racial issue . . . Why would the white people put him there if they were racial? I support him 110 percent. That's why I worked so hard for him. But I could not support him being mayor not being qualified or [having] enough government experience." Chunn says Steele gave him a slightly different explanation. "What she told me is I wasn't qualified. I wasn't capable," Chunn said. "She told my wife that. She never said anything to me about me learning how to do anything. If she had put it like that, that would have kind of made sense." Chunn said Steele only wanted him to run in order to defeat another black candidate, former Mayor Bobbie Grace, who lost by only six votes. "She wanted to try to use me," Chunn said. "That was the plan. It wasn't my plan." Grace, who served on the commission from 1989 to 1996, said she also believes that Chunn's supporters only wanted him to run to split the black vote. "He was used, and I think he knows that he was used," Grace said. "Now I think they regret it. But it's too late now." Members of the black community threw their support behind Grace. Chunn, on the other hand, got much of his support from whites. Some black residents say Chunn is now getting his just desserts for helping whites defeat a black candidate who worked hard to improve Dania Beach's struggling, predominantly black west side. Grace said Chunn's only work in the black community was with Turn Around Dania Beach, of which Steele is now the coordinator. "There hasn't even been a lot of sympathy for him," said Robert McCoy, who lives above his barber shop on Northwest First Street. Now, "he's reaping what he sowed." Even so, "There is no place in society for bigotry or racism," Grace said. "If it attacks one group, it attacks all groups. And we don't need that. Especially when we're trying to build and mold a community of leaders." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake