🚸 SoupNutz Exclusive

So here’s the setup.

The texts were obtained through FOIA. One party is Mayor Jim Paine. The other is Bruce Barron. And once you add the local family tree, the whole thing starts looking less like civic housekeeping and more like one of those petty municipal revenge plots that would’ve made a great side story on Dallas.

Two bobblehead figures of men in suits holding hands, each with glasses and similar hairstyles.

Because the Chamber is run by the brother-in-law of Councilor Brent Fennessey. Brent, unlike half the council’s usual collection of nodding dashboard (Tylor “Bobblehead” Elm, Lindsey “Open Meetings” Graskey, Nick “Lockstep” Ledin, Garner “Garnished” Moffat, and Ruth “Rubber Stamp” Ludwig) bobbleheads, has actually tried to keep Mayor Jim in check once in a while. So when the mayor is texting about reshaping tourism oversight in a way that puts the Chamber in the crosshairs, people are going to see what they see.

No, that does not prove retaliation.

But politically, it lands like retaliation wearing a fake mustache.

🎯 The Quote That Blows the Door Off

This is still the line that hits hardest:

“I need to appoint someone from that industry and I’d like it to be you.”

That’s not public process. That’s casting.

That’s not “let’s hear from the community. ” That’s “I’ve already got Act One blocked out, now I need a supporting character.”

And when that line comes from Mayor Jim Paine to Bruce Barron, the tourism commission stops looking like a naturally evolving public reform and starts looking like something assembled in private, then rolled into public view like it just hatched on its own.

That dog won’t hunt.

💸 The Money Talk Wasn’t Subtle

Then you get the quote every taxpayer wants on a bumper sticker:

“What did Superior get in return?”

Beautiful. Direct. No garnish.

Because that’s the actual question when public-facing tourism money starts floating around the Chamber orbit and the public return looks fuzzier than scrambled Cinemax in 1992.

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Then comes the other haymaker:

“Oversight comes with public funding.”

Exactly right.

That line is not radical. It’s basic. If public money is involved, public scrutiny comes with it. That’s not anti-business. That’s the cover charge for touching taxpayer cash.

Which is why these texts matter. Not because asking questions is bad. Asking questions is the job. It’s the way this appears to have been lined up — privately, strategically, and with the mayor already picking players — that makes it smell like more than clean reform.

🎭 The Public Meeting Looks Like the Last Scene

Then we get the line that should have come with a laugh track:

“I tried to pull out accusatory language.”

Oh good, so it was accusatory enough that it needed a trim.

That’s not spontaneous citizen enthusiasm. That’s message control with a fresh coat of municipal beige.

The public meeting, then, starts to look less like the place where minds were changed and more like the place where the already-written script got its table read. The audience got invited. The actors already had notes.

That’s the problem.

Not conversation.
Not oversight.
Not reform.

Just Choreography.

🧨 Why the Fennessey Angle Matters

Here’s where the local soap-opera wiring matters.

The Chamber is run by the brother-in-law of Brent Fennessey, and Brent is one of the few councilors who hasn’t treated Mayor Jim like the sun king of Superior, then this whole thing takes on a different color. The move may have been sold as tourism reform. The optics say it also conveniently put pressure on an institution tied to one of the mayor’s political irritants.

Again, careful with the facts.

That is an appearance problem, not a proven motive.

But appearance is not some minor footnote in politics. Appearance is the whole ballgame when trust is already hanging by a thread over a frozen pothole.

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❄️ Icy Sidewalks and Even Colder Politics

This is how local trust gets kneecapped.

Not with one giant scandal.
With insider texting.
With preselected allies.
With polished talking points.
With “good government” moves that somehow always seem to land on the neck of the same people.

Teachers give more than they get. Regular city workers grind for every dime. Then the political class starts staging little Broadway revivals about “oversight” and “accountability,” and somehow the fallout always lands where the mayor’s critics happen to live.

Funny how that works.

🎤 Final Crossing Signal

Maybe this was all noble. Maybe it was all clean. Maybe it was just a giant coincidence that the mayor was privately shaping a process that happened to splash all over a Chamber tied to one of the few councilors willing to check him.

And maybe New Coke deserved a second chance.

A more believable read is this: the FOIA texts make the tourism commission push look less like organic reform and more like a polished political hit dressed up in khakis and civic jargon.

That’s why taxpayers should care.

Because once City Hall starts looking like it’s workshopping outcomes before the public meeting even starts, the “public” part  is just theater.

TDC_Chamber_Text_Messages

#ClownCouncil

#TaxpayerSideEye

#CityHallCircus


Disclaimer

This article is satirical commentary based on FOIA-obtained text messages identified here as involving Mayor Jim Paine and Bruce Barron, along with the stated context that the Chamber is run by the brother-in-law of Councilor Brent Fennessey. It does not assert proven retaliation or make independent findings of criminal or civil wrongdoing. It addresses the appearance, optics, and political implications raised by those facts. Teachers and regular city employees deserve credit for doing the real work, while public officials deserve scrutiny when public business starts looking like a private strategy session.

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