- BIG NEWS:
- Civil Rights
- |
- The Oscars
- |
- NFL
- |
- Tiger Woods
- |
From the beginning, Mayor Bloomberg has depicted last year's decision to loosen term limits as the City Council's idea. When in the late summer of 2008 he first publicly floated a trial balloon about seeking a third term, he did it by saying he'd have to "seriously think about" running if the Council decided to upend the two-term constraint. When he formally threw his weight behind the revision last October, he said he'd run again "should the City Council vote to amend term limits." And earlier this yearjust before he angrily called a reporter a "disgrace" for daring to ask about the rationale behind the extensionthe mayor said: "The rationale for extending term limits is that the City Council passed it."
The facts that the Council had considered changing term limits for years only to be shot down by the mayor, that the city's elite rallied around the extension last year only because it bore the mayor's imprimatur, that the newspaper editorial pages backed the move after their owners dined with Hizzoner, that the mayor's people called in nonprofits they'd supported to testify in favor of the law, that the mayor's law department weighed in in favor of the Council having the right to reverse two referendathose were mere details, according to this telling.
The Council was driving; Mike just grabbed hold of the bumper.
What's especially funny about that notion is that in his two terms as mayor, Bloomberg hasn't exactly been deferential to the city's legislature.
As City Limits reported in April, Bloomberg has vetoed 52 bills during his mayoralty. That appears to be far more than any recent mayor. The Daily News reported in 2001 that in the first seven years of his mayoralty, Rudy Giuliani vetoed 28 bills. The pace of vetoes accelerated in Rudy's last year, but by mid-2001 The New York Times was reporting that the City Council "has overridden roughly two dozen mayoral vetoes in the Giuliani years, considerably more than during either the Dinkins or Koch administrations."
Bloomberg vetoed more frequently in his first term, when he and then-Speaker Gifford Miller had a contentious relationship, than in his second, when he and Speaker Christine Quinn were often allies.
A few highlights: In 2002, Bloomberg vetoed a measure that barred the city from giving grants or contracts to predatory lenders. The following year, he vetoed a bill to tighten restrictions on lead paint. In 2004, the veto pen was used on a measure requiring more reporting of school violence. A 2006 bill to require schools to provide broader translation services for parents to talk to teachers? Untersagt! (That's German for "vetoed," I think). When the Council sought to ban aluminum bats in 2007, Bloomberg threw a four-seam veto. And last year the mayor tried to kill a bill "prohibiting landlords to discriminate against tenants based on lawful source of income."
The Council has overridden Bloomberg at least 49 times. But the fact that most vetoes were overridden doesn't capture how many bills never saw the light of day because their support was shy of a veto-proof majority. Nor do they reflect legislative dance steps like last year's move by the Council to split an e-waste bill into two parts so the mayor could sign one containing aspects he liked and veto the other, which encompassed policies he opposed.
And while it's a mayor's right to veto things and a Council's right to override, Bloomberg has gone to court to erode the second right. In 2006, the state's highest court ruled that, even if his veto is overridden, Bloomberg can choose to not enforce a law that he thinks conflicts with the U.S. or state constitutions.
The Council doesn't even merit much attention from the mayor. According to Kevin Sheekey's appointment schedules (obtained via a Freedom of Information Request), Bloomberg's top political operative and deputy mayor for government affairs met with fewer than half the Council's members in 2008. He huddled with Speaker Christine Quinn or her staff 35 times last year, met four times with Brooklyn Councilman David Yassky, three times with Simcha Felder (also of Brooklyn) and twice with Queens' Melinda Katz. He had single meetings with 15 members. Most of the meetings happened around the time of the term limits vote.
This record makes it hard to believe that Bloomberg would sit on the sidelines and let the City Council lead the way on probably the most significant decision of his term.
What's more, the record reflects an important trend during the Bloomberg mayoralty: Over the past eight years, the balance of power in City Hall has tipped decidedly to the west wing (where the mayor's offices are).
Whoever wins in November, the mayor's power could grow further in 2010. A charter revision commission might eliminate the public advocate and/or borough presidentsoffices with little juice now, but who form at least a shadow of a counterbalance to the chief executive. Bloomberg has consistently cut the budget of the public advocate, the official whose top job is to watchdog the mayor.
Of course, there's no guarantee that Bloomberg's Democratic opponent, Bill Thompson, would reverse the expansion of mayoral power if he prevails at the ballot box. Once you're in the big chair, things look different. Many were sure that Barack Obama would abandon the Bush administration's autocratic legal positions in national security cases. They've been disappointed. George Washington got the King of England off our backs, but apparently preferred the title "His High and Mightiness" to "Mr. President." Power does that sort of thing.
Christine Pelosi: A Family Values Approach to Marriage Equality
After marriage equality lost a bruising California campaign, one question stood out: where are the gay families?
Dan Pashman: The Mike Bloomberg Diet
Mayor Bloomberg is turning his own self-loathing on the rest of the city. He's asking us to pay for his gustatory transgressions. Bill Clinton felt our pain. Bloomberg wants us to feel his.
Alan Singer: Bloomberg School Deform #1
No school district anywhere in the United States where the student population is overwhelmingly drawn from poor families has been "turned around."
Daniel Collins: Two Ways Of Looking At New York's Runoff Election
The Working Families Party wants New York to believe that it can make or break a Democrat running in a tough primary, and that therefore everybody had better treat their issues, and opinions, with extreme respect.
Michael Bloomberg - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
NYC's Bloomberg well ahead in mayoral race: poll
Al Gore Praises Bloomberg From the Rooftops
Chris Whalen to Bloomberg: Shut Up
NY Politicos: Bloomberg Wrong About Marriage Equality's Chances
Want to reply to a comment? Hint: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to
More proof of the elitist nature of Mayor M. Bloomberg. Acts like he can buy his way back into the good graces of the very public he defrauded by overturning a public referendum to limit NY's mayoral term to two.
This is exactly why our family which is in the 95th percentile of income in this country cannot afford to rent let alone purchase a two or god forbid a three bedroom apt in a respectable neighborhood in the city. This guy is not good for the the common man in NY, only for the rich and wealthy. He wanted to clean up NYC so he allowed rents to fly out of control so only the upper 1-2% can easily afford to live and play here. ("And last year the mayor tried to kill a bill "prohibiting landlords to discriminate against tenants based on lawful source of income.")
The only thing Bloomberg represent is his own self interest. I am not upset because he is indecently wealthy. We should all be so comfortable. It is that he actually believes he can hypnotize the NY voting populace into reelecting him because he can spend insurmountable mountains of cash on Madison Ave who will create smoke and mirror magic and spin his charm into a THIRD term.
I really hope he fails by not allowing ourselves to be coned by this dog and pony show.
You must be logged in to comment. Log in or connect with