Mr. de Blasio argues that Ms. Quinn and
Mr. Thompson have been either unwilling or unable to sufficiently
challenge the legacy of the mayor and the city’s corporations over the
past decade. .....Mr. de Blasio’s message, despite the excitement it has drawn from
liberal luminaries like Alec Baldwin and Howard Dean, has alarmed many
business leaders and Bloomberg aides.
Describing what he calls a “tale of two cities,” rife with inequalities
in housing, early childhood education and police tactics, he promised
those gathered at the Brooklyn bar that this year’s mayoral race was
“going to be a reset moment. A major reset.”
Mr. de Blasio can barely contain his fury over
what he sees as the central contradiction of the Bloomberg years: a
mayor who routinely unleashed the power of government to change New
Yorkers’ personal behavior repeatedly balked at harnessing it to change
their economic circumstances. “You can see it; there is a bright line,” Mr. de Blasio said. “On health
and the environment, he is Franklin Roosevelt. On economic justice,
he’s Adam Smith. He turns into a free marketeer.”
.... NY Times
Today's NY Times had an intriguing pro de Blasio
article with a nice photo of him, his wife and State Senator from Harlem/Upper West Side, Bill Perkins (our hero years ago for challenging the charter school lobby with a full day of hearings).
Now that Anthony D. Weiner’s campaign has imploded, Bill de Blasio,
the public advocate, is drawing new energy and voter interest to a
candidacy that presents the most sweeping rejection of what New York
City has become in the past 12 years — a city, he says, that is defined
by its yawning inequities. “We are not, by our nature, an elitist city.... “We are not a
city for the chosen few.” It is the campaign season’s riskiest calculation: that New Yorkers, who
have become comfortably accustomed to the smooth-running, highly
efficient apparatus of government under Michael R. Bloomberg, are
prepared to embrace a much different agenda for City Hall — taxing the
rich, elevating the poor and rethinking a Manhattan-centric approach to
city services.
And there has been favorable coverage of de Blasio's wife, Chirlane McCray. Interesting development, especially for educators with the UFT making a desperate push for Bill Thompson, an historically flawed candidate being run by people like Merryl Tisch and Al D'Amato.
Add the recent Wayne Barrett revealed stuff about Thompson connections to the guy who destroyed Bed-Stuy Interfaith Hospital. Plus Thompson's jumping on the "stop and frisk" bandwagon when he saw that Weiner was way more popular amongst black votes than he was. [I don't have time to find all these links on ed notes but the always reliable RBE at Perdido Street School has most of them:
Plus some of his great commentary on the race in general.
Mulgrew Stumping With Thompson, Attacks Weiner/Spitzer
RBE at one point said that Thompson was as bad as Quinn.
I imagine the business community, Bloomberg hacks and much of the press will engage
in an all out assault to make sure Thompson and not de Blasio gets into the
runoff with Quinn. But they can't be seen openly to be on the same side of the UFT - which readers of Ed Notes full well know has been my claim all along - so they will obfuscate and attack Thompson in mild ways.
I know there are aspects of de
Blasio's history as president of the District 15 School board
pre-mayoral control that may come up. His interesting marriage where his wife is black and a former lesbian seems to be playing well at this point --- will she get the black and gay vote for Bill?
de Blasio talks about the free-market concept pushed by Bloomberg and just about all the candidates that if an institution can't stand on its own feet it should close. He seems to be for doing what it takes to keep health care institutions open.
In a mayor’s race crammed with celebrity razzle-dazzle, historic
candidacies and tabloid turns, a gangly liberal from Brooklyn is quietly
surging into the top tier of the field by talking about decidedly
unglamorous topics: neglected hospitals, a swelling poverty rate and a
broken prekindergarten system.
One very interesting point is that the page one article continues on a page with this article about a Bronx park and compares it to the funds going to the HiLine (
For Decades, Fighting to Rescue a Bronx Park From Disrepair).
“This is a disgrace,” Mr. Diaz said. “We still haven’t seen what we were
promised. The time has come and gone. And that’s only talking about
capital improvements. When you look at park rangers, comfort stations
and other amenities, we seem to be shortchanged.”
The city’s Department of Parks and Recreation portrays Playground 52
as an example of good policy and volunteerism. When asked about the
poor conditions, Zachary Feder, a department spokesman, said designers
were working on plans to build a skate park and renovate a basketball
court. The scope of further renovations would be determined after a
public hearing. Mr. Feder said the playground was cleaned daily by
department crews, who also swept water off the courts. But numerous
visits over the last several months showed the opposite.
“If this was downtown, this would be fixed A.S.A.P.,” said Dayshawn
Holmes, 14. “That’s where the money is in New York. They don’t care
about us playing basketball here. Downtown, they’d have glass
backboards.”
You mean a city official lied to the reporter about cleaning the park? Shocking.
The de Blasio article makes much the same point:
Zoning changes have encouraged sky-piercing condominiums with
multimillion-dollar price tags, but Mr. Bloomberg vetoed a bill
requiring paid sick leave for working-class New Yorkers. By the city’s
own measure, 46 percent of residents are poor or near poor, but the
mayor scoffed at plans to compel companies that receive city subsidies
to pay higher wages.
While a social justice oriented group like MORE at this point is not focused on the mayoral election (given its tiny size and outreach MORE's opinion or actions are irrelevant) my sense has been both inside MORE and amongst outraged teachers generally, was that John Liu followed by de Blasio were the best choices for UFT members. With Liu gaining no traction, many pro-Liu educators are moving to de Blasio.
Now I know that even internal critics say that the UFT is also social justice. But its choice of Thompson given de Blasio's social justice oriented positions shows which side the union leadership is on. Our point has been that only of the union strongly allies itself with community forces does it have a chance to resist the ed deform attacks. The Chicago TU is under assault, as it has been for 15 years, but they only have a chance to survive through their organizing efforts both internally and externally. Right now even with lots of flaws, de Blasio might be the candidate to bridge those gaps though I don't trust him either in the long run if he gets into office.
In a city that is endlessly congratulating itself for its modern
renaissance — record-low crime, unmatched crowds of tourists, streets
refashioned in European style — a day on the campaign trail with Mr. de
Blasio is a reminder of unaddressed grievances and glaring disparities.
And this is not just about the poor, but the working middle class.
A young husband and wife, both employees of the city, told of their
shock at being unable to afford a home in the Crown Heights section of
Brooklyn, an evaporating refuge for middle-income buyers. “Now even the
gentrifiers are getting priced out by gentrifiers,"....
Do inequalities that affect most of the kids teachers have to deal with interest teachers in terms of getting into a battle to improve the lives of our kids? Their living conditions affect our teaching conditions is clear to everyone. But what can we do about it? We know that E4E and TFA say we can overcome poverty with good teaching and ignore outside factors. Where MORE differs is that we say YES to good teaching -- not by the way the test-driven teaching E4E and TFA support, but engage in both a fight to give us the rights as teachers to make judgements and teach the whole child, while also engaging in the broader struggles.
An open attack on the Bloomberg negatives will gain and lost people. A perusal of the NY Times metro article today has some interesting stuff about the state of Bloomberg's city in the outer boroughs where de Blasio is aiming his arrows.
At the heart of Mr. de Blasio’s appeal, according to interviews with his
supporters and political team, is a willingness to deliver an
unvarnished and unstinting critique of the Bloomberg era in spite of
polls that show a majority of New Yorkers believe the city is heading in
the right direction under the mayor’s leadership.
It is a strategy, he said, that hinges on a pervasive sense that, for
all of New York City’s bike-path charms and pedestrian plaza allures,
its denizens are deeply uneasy about inequalities that remain unchecked
by City Hall.
.... wherever Mr. de Blasio travels these days, resentments toward Mr.
Bloomberg’s New York tend to tumble out of voters’ mouths. A woman
stopped to rail against wealthy foreigners who are buying luxury
apartments, but rarely inhabiting them. “We don’t want to be like those
European cities where rich people fly in once a year and nobody really
lives there,” she told him.
A man who is H.I.V. positive complained to Mr. de Blasio about the
absence of a rent cap on housing for AIDS patients, which he said left
him homeless.
A student lamented the city’s class stratification, saying that the city
“needs a mayor for the 99 percent, not the 1 percent.”
Inside Mr. de Blasio’s campaign, aides talk about the need to
simultaneously recognize Mr. Bloomberg’s triumphs, on issues like the
smoking ban, and tap into a widespread desire for a change. “The remedy
verses replica theory,” as one adviser put it, speaking on the condition
of anonymity because the adviser was not authorized to disclose
strategy.
Mr. de Blasio’s campaign platform is unabashedly interventionist and
progressive. His most eye-catching plan would raise the income tax rate
to 4.3 percent from 3.87 percent on earnings of over $500,000, to pay
for universal access to prekindergarten.
Now, an overcrowded system leaves tens of thousands of lower-income
residents without access to full-day programs, setting back the early
education of a generation, Mr. de Blasio argues. The campaign says the
11 percent increase in the marginal tax rate would amount to about $2,120 for a family earning $1 million.
In conversations with voters, Mr. de Blasio argues that Ms. Quinn and
Mr. Thompson have been either unwilling or unable to sufficiently
challenge the legacy of the mayor and the city’s corporations over the
past decade.
But his determination to emerge as the unrivaled liberal in the race has
entailed a moral showmanship that may repel as many voters as it
endears. He was arrested a few weeks ago during a sit-in to protest the
latest closing of a city hospital.
“That,” Mr. de Blasio said of his arrest, “is certainly not in the Michael Bloomberg playbook.”