Thursday, September 26, 2024

What’s wrong with New York’s mayors?

Presented by Citi: Tomorrow’s conversation, tonight. Know where the news is going next.
Sep 26, 2024 View in browser
 
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By Calder McHugh

Presented by Citi

Eric Adams exits Gracie Mansion.

New York City Mayor Eric Adams exits Gracie Mansion today. | Stephanie Keith/Getty Images

INDICTED — Late Wednesday night, Eric Adams became the first New York City mayor to be indicted while in office.

When the 57-page indictment was unsealed today, it detailed a litany of alleged wrongdoing largely related to Adams’ connections to Turkish officials. He accepted illegal donations to his mayoral campaign and lavish gifts, including regular free travel on Turkish Airways. Part of the indictment includes an explanation from the mayor that his “first stop is always instanbul [sic]” while traveling due to the favorable treatment he got from the country.

In a press conference today that was held outdoors and routinely interrupted by hecklers, Adams brushed off the idea that he would resign, instead insisting that the charges against him are based on lies and are politically motivated — sounding eerily similar to other recently indicted politicians, including Donald Trump and Bob Menendez. “I always knew that If I stood my ground for New Yorkers, that I would be a target — and a target I became,” Adams said in a statement.

While Adams has the distinct dishonor of being New York’s first sitting mayor to be indicted, his recent predecessors in the office haven’t exactly covered the office in glory of late. Bill de Blasio launched two quixotic and doomed primary campaigns since he left office — for president and a seat in the House — and then posed for a glossy photoshoot in the New York Times with his wife to announce their separation. Michael Bloomberg did his best Brewster’s Millions impression, burning through hundreds of millions of dollars in record time in his own doomed bid for president. Rudy Giuliani, himself a former presidential candidate, was embarrassed in a Borat film, organized perhaps the most infamous press conference in American history at Four Seasons Total Landscaping and just today was officially disbarred in Washington, D.C.

So, what is it about the office that makes them crash and burn? And why do the mayors of the biggest and most important city in the country keep falling flat on their face — either in office or afterwards? To get a better understanding of the history of the office and what’s going on right now, Nightly spoke with Vincent Cannato, a professor of New York City history and the author of The Ungovernable City: John Lindsay and his Struggle to Save New York.

This conversation has been edited.

What is it about this job that seems to invite corruption?

Part of it is just local politics in general, where the mayor is much closer to contracts inspections and the police, where all this corruption begins to happen. And most of Adams’ advisors were his very, very close friends — there was not a lot of daylight between him and his top aides. Then when you have a city as large as New York, those opportunities are going to be much larger than, let’s say, in Schenectady or Utica.

When he was first elected, Adams was regularly discussed as a national Democratic star waiting in the wings, one who could potentially be a counterweight to some of the more progressive forces in the party. 

I think there was a lot of stuff written about Adams around the last election that was wishful thinking. I think people wished that Adams was someone they wanted — they created an image (and he helped that along) of this moderate, former cop who’s not buying into the progressive wing of the Democratic party. There wasn’t a lot of evidence that that’s who Adams was. That’s not to say he was a huge left winger, but he’s just not hugely ideological. What we’re seeing now is the fruits of that — why become mayor? You’re becoming mayor for a different reason.

How much do local issues in New York matter nationally, and how much is New York’s mayor thinking about local issues vs. national issues?

New York mayors are not just people looking to pick up garbage. They have an eye on what’s going on nationally and also internationally. But in the last 20 or 30 years, there has been a greater nationalization of politics in that sense. And both de Blasio and Adams, I think, had eyes much more on national affairs in different ways.

But yeah, the mayor of New York has rarely been a parochial figure. Most of their work was city based, but most of them had a larger national profile. The problem is, at the end of the day, a good New York mayor is going to probably focus on local stuff more.

When’s the last time New York had a truly parochial mayor?

[David] Dinkins (New York’s mayor from 1990 to 1993) in some ways was the most recent one. Vincent Impellitteri (1950-53) was kind of an accidental mayor, and then Abe Beame (1974-77) would be another one. And I don’t mean parochial in a negative light, by the way.

That’s a vanishingly small number. Can we talk a little more about why that is? What’s the size of the stage as mayor of New York, and why have all of New York’s recent mayors used it as a launching pad to attempt to have a national political career? 

You’re mayor of eight million people — that’s bigger than a lot of states. So you represent more people than a lot of senators and governors, who are notorious themselves and looking in the mirror and seeing a president, so it’s not unusual for New York mayors to also see themselves as larger figures. But the history of New York mayors going on to higher office is pretty abysmal, but that doesn’t stop them from trying. Having said that, I could be wrong but I don’t think Adams had any national political ambitions.

Why can’t New Yorkers find a mayor that they like? 

I think the mayor has largely been unpopular since Bloomberg’s last term — so the end of Bloomberg, de Blasio and now Adams.

The city’s changed tremendously in the last 30 or 40 years. There was generally a trend in New York City politics, where you had Tammany Hall and the Democratic Party, which controlled much of the city politics into the 60s. In the 70s and lingering into the 80s, there was still a Democratic machine. And then there was a counterforce, which was the reform forces, business forces that every generation or so would be able to capitalize on the mistakes and corruption of the Democrats and come in.

So, you had that sort of back and forth for much of the 20th century, and that’s completely broken down. There is no more Democratic machine. The city is still a very Democratic city, but there isn’t really a strong party structure in the city. And there’s no reformers left; the business community isn’t really interested in city politics anymore.

There’s a lot of flux, a lot of change and a lot of uncertainty in city politics, so you get de Blasio and Adams, who are both kind of free agent Democratic types with a very narrow coalition; de Blasio’s was on the left and Adams’ is closer to the center. But both coalitions are pretty unstable, and both men have pretty serious personal and political flaws.

So what comes next for Adams? What does the political scramble look like if he resigns, or in next year’s mayoral election? 

There aren’t a whole bunch of wealthy contributors or party bosses who can get together and say, ‘Time is up. Eric, step aside.” So that’s going to be a harder sell. The other thing is, Trump has also been indicted, and Bob Menendez in New Jersey, and I think the playbook has been to keep fighting. There’s less upside to resigning, and you fight as far as you can. I’m assuming Adams will do the same thing.

I don’t think he’ll be a viable candidate for reelection. He could try. And then it’s going to set up a fight between Andrew Cuomo and then [Brad] Lander or whoever’s going to represent the left.

You see Cuomo, the former governor, as the most likely representative of that center-left that we’ve talked about?

I don’t personally see anybody else who has a high enough profile in the city. If you look at most of the high-profile politicians, they’re mostly coming out of the progressive left. There’s no other political candidate or businessperson who’s going to come in from the center who’s going to attract the same attention. Cuomo has many of his own flaws, so I’m not convinced that he would win, but he’s entering a pretty uncrowded lane.

So you’d have another person who resigned political office in New York amidst scandal, attempting to resurrect his career in the midst of a different New York politician’s scandal. 

I’m guessing that if someone talked to Andrew, he would probably regret that he stepped down, that he didn’t hold on more and try to fight it out. I think if you’re Adams and you’re looking around, you’d say Cuomo shouldn’t have stepped down.

But Adams’ biggest problem, looking from afar, was that he was never particularly engaged in city government. He liked being mayor, and I think he kind of just pawned off the operations of the city to a small coterie of friends. That administration did not bring in the best and the brightest — de Blasio, I think, had much more talented people than Adams does.

Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Reach out with news, tips and ideas at nightly@politico.com. Or contact tonight’s author at cmchugh@politico.com or on X (formerly known as Twitter) at @calder_mchugh.

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Nightly Road to 2024

FILIBUSTER FAN — Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell lambasted a proposal from Vice President Kamala Harris to eliminate the filibuster to pass abortion rights legislation — warning Democrats that they will rue the move when Republicans next control Washington. “What they want to do is break the institution in order to achieve what they want to achieve,” he said in an interview today.

McConnell spoke two days after Harris told Wisconsin Public Radio that “we should eliminate the filibuster for Roe” — in other words, changing the Senate’s rules to exempt a vote to restore the abortion rights guarantee under Roe v. Wade from the chamber’s usual 60-vote threshold for legislation.

STAFFING SHORTAGE — Former President Donald Trump’s campaign scrapped plans for an upcoming outdoor rally in Wisconsin after the Secret Service said it did not have the personnel needed to secure the site, multiple sources told CBS News.

The rally was set to take place outdoors at an airport on Saturday, but Trump will instead deliver remarks at a smaller indoor arena in Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin. The Secret Service said it was short-handed due to the ongoing annual meeting of the United Nations General Assembly in New York. The service is responsible for providing security for foreign dignitaries while they are in the U.S.

A senior Secret Service official briefed on the planning for the Wisconsin rally said the agency was “never configured to provide such an elevated level of protection for an increasing number of protected.” The official was granted anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.

AROUND THE WORLD

President of the Palestinian National Authority Mahmoud Abbas addresses the United Nations General Assembly.

President of the Palestinian National Authority Mahmoud Abbas addresses the 79th session of the United Nations General Assembly today. | Frank Franklin II/AP

U.S. VS. THEM — President of the Palestinian National Authority Mahmoud Abbas sharply criticized the United States government at the United Nations General Assembly today, pointing to U.S. vetoes of Security Council cease-fire resolutions.

Abbas’ speech highlighted the growing isolation of the U.S. and Israel on the world stage and denounced the U.S. government for wielding its veto power to vote down Security Council resolutions calling for a cease-fire to Israel’s war in Gaza. Earlier this year, the U.S. was the lone “No” vote on a resolution to grant Palestine full membership to the U.N.

“We regret that the U.S. administration, the largest democracy in the world, obstructed three times [a] draft resolution to the Security Council demanding Israel observe a cease-fire,” Abbas said before the General Assembly.

Abbas criticized U.S. military aid to Israel and called on the international community to impose sanctions, while thanking the vast majority of member states for supporting its bid to become a full member of the U.N. “The American people are marching in the streets, in these demonstrations, and we are grateful to them,” Abbas said.

 

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RADAR SWEEP

PENCIL IT IN — For over 100 years, Shelbyville, Tenn. has been known as “The Pencil City” by virtue of pencil-wood mills taking over much of the industry in the town that’s about 60 miles south of Nashville. And even as pencil factories have shuttered throughout the United States, Shelbyville still has one of the last few that are operational — churning out the graphite and wood sticks. It’s a process that’s both automated and somewhat bespoke, as the quality of one pencil can differ significantly from another depending on how it’s produced. For Smithsonian Magazine, Danny Freedman went deep into one of the last pencil factories in America and explored how the pencils get made.

Parting Image

On this date in 1969: A young man is taken from scene of demonstration near the Federal Building in Chicago, where construction workers confronted a group demonstrating against the trial of eight charged with conspiring to incite mob action during the Democratic National Convention.

On this date in 1969: A young man is taken from scene of demonstration near the Federal Building in Chicago, where construction workers confronted a group demonstrating against the trial of eight charged with conspiring to incite mob action during the Democratic National Convention. | Charles Knoblock/AP

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The new Citi GPS Report, Future of Healthcare, sheds light on key strategies that could revolutionize our healthcare system – such as reorganizing how healthcare is delivered, leveraging data-integrated digital technology, and addressing medical issues more proactively.

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