Showing posts with label Blasio. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Blasio. Show all posts

Sunday, December 29, 2013

Does de Blasio have Weiner to thank?


As New York Mayor-elect Bill de Blasio prepares to take office in a few days, a panel on CNN’s “State of the Union” on Sunday debated whether he has fellow Democrat Anthony Weiner to thank for his victory.


“I believe you could argue we have Bill de Blasio as the mayor because of Anthony Weiner,” said conservative commentator S.E. Cupp. “He really sucked a lot of oxygen out of Christine Quinn’s race and allowed Bill de Blasio to come up.”


The president of the liberal Center for American Progress disagreed.


“Yeah, he took momentum, but he took momentum from everybody,” Neera Tanden said. “I don’t think he had a political effect. I think he just took a huge amount of attention and moved away.”


Weiner’s mayoral bid was an attempted comeback from the explicit-photo scandal that forced him to resign from Congress in 2011. With new revelations this year, he ultimately took just 5 percent of the vote in the Democratic mayoral primary.


Meanwhile, de Blasio managed to knock off onetime frontrunner Quinn, the Democratic city council speaker and ally of Mayor Michael Bloomberg, and went on to a landslide win in the general election.


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POLITICO – TOP Stories



Does de Blasio have Weiner to thank?

Saturday, December 28, 2013

Clinton to swear in de Blasio as mayor

Bill de Blasio is pictured. | AP Photo

De Blasio will be sworn in with a bible once owned by Franklin Delano Roosevelt. | AP Photo





Former President Bill Clinton will lead the swearing-in ceremony for Bill de Blasio, who next week will become New York City’s first Democratic mayor in 20 years.


Set to become the city’s 109th mayor on Jan. 1, de Blasio said in a statement Saturday that he is honored to have Clinton and his wife, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, at the ceremony. The swearing-in will be performed with a bible once owned by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt.







De Blasio has a long professional history with the Clintons. He served as a regional director of the Department of Housing and Urban Development in the Clinton administration, and later worked as campaign manager for Hillary Clinton’s successful Senate bid in 2000.


De Blasio pulled off a landslide victory in the November mayoral election, beating Republican opponent Joe Lhota by 49 points. His progressive campaign focused on a class-based message, saying New York has become a tale of two cities — one city for the rich and another for the poor. His popularity has been widely seen as a rebuke of the city’s leadership under outgoing Mayor Michael Bloomberg.


The hour-long swearing-in ceremony will be performed Wednesday at noon on the steps of City Hall.


— Isaac Dovere contributed to this report.




POLITICO – TOP Stories



Clinton to swear in de Blasio as mayor

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

De Blasio Tops NYC Mayoral Race; Spitzer Loses



NEW YORK — After running as a hard-left populist who vowed to raise taxes on the rich in order to boost public education funding, New York City Public Advocate Bill de Blasio easily topped a field of competitors in the Democratic primary to succeed Mayor Michael Bloomberg on Tuesday.


With 98 percent of precincts reporting, de Blasio had 40.2 percent of the vote with former Comptroller Bill Thompson in second place at 26.2 percent. If de Blasio’s share of the vote holds at 40 percent or more, he will avoid a mandatory Oct. 1 runoff with Thompson.


In the city’s high-profile comptroller’s race, Eliot Spitzer’s political comeback attempt hit the skids, as Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer narrowly defeated the former New York governor, who resigned in disgrace in 2008 after being named a client in a high-end prostitution ring.


In his victory speech, de Blasio vowed “to offer an unapologetically progressive alternative to the Bloomberg era” and paused to acknowledge the 12th anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks just moments after the stroke of midnight.


De Blasio was able to coalesce his support when it counted most after running a distant fourth place for months. He is poised to become a strong front-runner against Republican businessman Joe Lhota, who held off a challenge from billionaire supermarket maven John Catsimatidis to win the GOP primary.


“I am so honored the primary voters have chosen me to be on the ballot this November,” Lhota said in his victory speech following the low-turnout Republican contest. “This is the first step toward continuing a strong future for our city.”


If de Blasio goes on to win on Nov. 5, as expected, he will become the first Democrat elected mayor in the liberal bastion of New York City since David Dinkins in 1989.


For months, Congressman Anthony Weiner earned outsized media attention that helped him skyrocket to the front of the pack shortly upon his unexpected entry into the race in April. But his support in the polls collapsed after revelations that he continued to engage in inappropriate online behavior even after resigning from Congress in disgrace for the same offense.


Weiner finished in a distant fifth place with just 4.9 percent of the vote, but he suggested in his concession speech that voters here may not have not seen the last of him.


“Now, sadly, we did not win this time,” Weiner said in his concession speech. “We had the best ideas. Sadly, I was an imperfect messenger.”


Sydney Leathers, a woman to whom Weiner sent lewd text messages and photos, didn’t help his cause, speaking out against him publicly. She even attempted to crash Weiner’s election night party and confront him, according to the New York Daily News and other outlets.


Spitzer’s effort to re-claim political office five years after his own embarrassing sex scandal fared somewhat better than Weiner’s. The onetime attorney general took 48 percent of the vote in the comptroller’s race. But it was not enough to defeat Stringer — a low-key, 20-year veteran of New York City politics, who accepted Spitzer’s concession call shortly after 11 p.m.


Stringer had appeared to be a shoe-in to become New York’s chief financial officer — until Spitzer unexpectedly entered the contest, backed by extensive media interest and initially encouraging poll numbers.


The self-funded Spitzer, however, apparently peaked too early.


In TV ads and appearances on the stump, Stringer made an issue of Spitzer’s character and questioned his fitness for office.


Despite his nearly universal name recognition, Spitzer appeared to suffer from lingering memories of his downfall in Albany — sparked further, perhaps, when the new chapter in Weiner’s scandal emerged this summer.


In the mayoral race, de Blasio was hardly a household name until a few months ago. But the New York public advocate was able to overcome his better-known opponents. Building upon a base of support among liberal Democrats and voters in the city’s outer boroughs that expanded rapidly after Weiner’s collapse, he surged past Thompson and the onetime front-runner, City Council Speaker Christine Quinn.


A former political operative who ran Hillary Clinton’s 2000 New York Senate campaign, de Blasio demonstrated his firm grasp of campaign strategy throughout the race’s final months, as he exploited Quinn’s close relationship with outgoing Mayor Michael Bloomberg to his advantage.


At every opportunity, de Blasio sought to distinguish himself from Bloomberg, as Democratic voters have increasingly soured on the billionaire mayor who has played an instrumental role in transforming the city through three terms in office.


De Blasio made a point of emphasizing his own mixed-race family, featuring in a memorable TV ad his teenaged, afro-sporting son, Dante, who touted his father as the only candidate who would end the controversial “stop and frisk” police tactic that has sparked a debate over constitutional rights and racial profiling.


Bloomberg generated headlines recently when he told a reporter from New York Magazine that de Blasio had run a “racist” campaign — a remark that appeared only to solidify the momentum that the Democratic front-runner had already generated.


Campaigning on the refrain that New York has become a “tale of two cities,” de Blasio paired his central platform of tax hikes on the rich with calls to expand low-income housing opportunities in a city that is a haven for the international elite.


But with a runoff still possible, Thompson suggested in his Primary Night speech that he was in no mood to give in, joining his supporters in chanting, “Three more weeks!” — a reference to the Oct. 1 face-off that may still await.


“Let me congratulate Bill de Blasio for running a good campaign — that’s something he knows how to do,” Thompson said. “But every voice in New York City counts, and we’re going to wait for every voice to be heard.” 




RealClearPolitics – Articles



De Blasio Tops NYC Mayoral Race; Spitzer Loses

Saturday, September 7, 2013

Decrying the "two New Yorks," de Blasio surges in mayor"s race


New York mayoral candidate Bill de Blasio participates in a march during the West Indian Day Parade in the Brooklyn borough of New York September 2, 2013. REUTERS/Eric Thayer

New York mayoral candidate Bill de Blasio participates in a march during the West Indian Day Parade in the Brooklyn borough of New York September 2, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Eric Thayer






NEW YORK | Sat Sep 7, 2013 9:02am EDT



NEW YORK (Reuters) – At a recent campaign stop near Central Park on the Upper West Side, New York mayoral candidate Bill de Blasio’s 16-year-old son, Dante, was stealing the show – and not for the first time.


A few weeks ago, Dante, who is biracial and sports a tall Afro, starred in a campaign ad about de Blasio’s opposition to stop and frisk, a police tactic that overwhelmingly targets young, black men.


The spot made Dante a minor celebrity and is credited with helping to catapult de Blasio into the lead among Democrats running for mayor of America’s largest city. A Quinnipiac poll this week had him ahead with 43 percent, with rivals trailing badly with about 20 percent.


“I’m glad I can help my dad any way that I can,” Dante told reporters as fans waited with camera phones for a chance to pose with him. Earlier that day, Reverend Al Sharpton, New York’s most prominent civil rights leader, said Dante had “the most famous Afro” in New York City.


Three days before the September 10 Democratic primary, the 6-foot-5 de Blasio is the man to beat, having soared past the race’s longtime front-runner, City Council Speaker Christine Quinn, a strong ally of Mayor Michael Bloomberg who would be the city’s first female and openly gay mayor.


De Blasio has also surpassed former City Comptroller Bill Thompson, who would be the second black mayor in this city of 8 million. The first, David Dinkins, served for one term in the early 1990s.


With front-runner status has come criticism. Quinn and Thompson have leveled a barrage of attacks, saying de Blasio’s record of accomplishment is thin and that he is better at complaining about the status quo than enacting change.


“You don’t want a mayor who is a pushover,” Quinn said at a recent debate. De Blasio “will say anything depending on whose vote he is trying to get,” she said.


As for the issue de Blasio talks about most often, raising taxes on the city’s highest earners to pay for universal pre-kindergarten, detractors call it unrealistic. Such a tax hike would require state approval, and Albany is unlikely to agree.


De Blasio has responded by saying that support for the idea from city voters will help force Albany’s hand, and that he is the only candidate to offer big and bold ideas to improve the lives of New Yorkers.


But political watchers say de Blasio has done a better job articulating a clear platform than his Democratic rivals.


Asked why they support him, his fans readily tick off his banner ideas: addressing economic disparity he calls the “tale of two cities,” the pre-school promise, reforming stop and frisk and preventing the shuttering of more hospitals.


Bruce Berg, a professor of political science at Fordham University, says de Blasio has been shrewd in slowly building up his liberal credentials, and emerged as the chief beneficiary after former congressman Anthony Weiner, once the race’s leading liberal, saw his support collapse in a lewd-picture scandal.


“Liberal voters who were backing Weiner are backing de Blasio,” said Berg. “And de Blasio appears to be the candidate who is peaking at the right time.”


In July, de Blasio was arrested during a rally in support of Long Island Community Hospital – one of six hospitals in the borough of Brooklyn that face the threat of closure. Twelve city hospitals have closed during the last 12 years and de Blasio has made it a major campaign issue.


“My campaign has been about making changes,” de Blasio said following another rally at the hospital on Friday. “It’s been about getting away from the status quo.”


THIRD-TERM OPPONENT


New York Democrats appear to be responding not just to de Blasio’s liberal, anti-Bloomberg message, but to his family, including his wife, Chirlane McCray.


“I like that his wife is African American,” said Shandera Jamison, a 26-year-old municipal worker, at an event in Harlem.


De Blasio, 52, grew up in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and moved to New York to attend New York University and later Columbia’s School of International and Public Affairs.


He worked briefly in the Clinton White House in the 1990s and later ran Hillary Clinton’s successful 2000 U.S. Senate campaign. A year later, he was elected to the city council.


Four years ago, when Bloomberg announced he would seek a change in the city’s term-limits law to run for a third term – and won the critical support of Quinn – de Blasio was one of the most visible opponents.


That fight, which Bloomberg won, elevated de Blasio’s profile and helped position him to run for public advocate – a small office with a $ 2 million budget that nonetheless offers ambitious politicians a high-profile pulpit.


De Blasio cast himself as a liberal counterweight to Quinn on issues like paid sick leave and stop and frisk.


For the moment at least, de Blasio is riding high.


At one event, he stood with one arm draped around his wife and the other around his daughter, Chiara, cracking jokes and making light of his family’s support.


“The family that campaigns together, stays together,” he said as her daughter happily rolled her eyes.


(Editing by Dina Kyriakidou and Prudence Crowther)






Reuters: Politics



Decrying the "two New Yorks," de Blasio surges in mayor"s race