Reuters
Newly elected Mayor Bill de Blasio and Public Advocate Letitia James.

After Years on Sidelines, NYC Liberals Retaking Control

With Bill de Blasio taking office as mayor in January, New York City appears poised for a resurgence of liberal policies.

After 20 years of Republican leadership, not only will America’s largest city have the most liberal mayor in a generation, helping him implement change will be a progressive-leaning City Council and a longtime liberal ally in the new public advocate.

The city was governed for the last 12 years by Michael Bloomberg, a political independent who was first elected as a Republican, and for eight years before that by Republican Rudolph Giuliani.

To observers as well as Democratic legislators, the last election marked a major change in New York City politics, with a new breed of highly liberal politicians ready to enact a series of progressive policies that would have been dead on arrival under Bloomberg or his predecessor Giuliani.

“It’s seen as an opportunity by progressives to do something different,” said Douglas Muzzio, an expert on New York City politics and a professor at Baruch College at the City University of New York. “People projected their frustration, their anxiety, their expectations, their dreams on Bill. In that sense it wasn’t dissimilar from the 2008 election of Obama. Now he’s got to deliver.”

Pledging to address the gap between the rich and poor that grew wider as the city prospered while those at the bottom of the economic ladder struggled to pay for basic services such as housing and mass transit, de Blasio won a resounding victory in November with more than 70 percent of the vote.

Over the last decade, apartment rents in New York City increased about 44 percent and the cost of a monthly subway card rose by 60 percent.

De Blasio has vowed to set a new tone at City Hall, and his agenda includes reforming police tactics, offering universal access to early childhood education, expanding the city’s paid sick leave rules and improving the living standard for the 46 percent of New Yorkers at or below the poverty line.

“I would definitely define this as a movement,” said progressive Democrat Laurie Cumbo of Brooklyn, who was elected to the City Council in November. “This idea that somebody has to be on the bottom so somebody can be on the top, which is somewhat of a global business model, doesn’t have to be that way.”

Playing it Differently

The shift in tone in city government is already apparent.

Earlier this month, the City Council took the rare step of rejecting a rezoning of Manhattan’s East Side, delivering a blow to Bloomberg and developers who had forcefully backed the plan.

Then, the city’s mass-transit agency announced it was cutting its planned fare increases for 2015 and 2017 by nearly half. The agency cited an improved fiscal outlook, but Gene Russianoff, a lawyer and the spokesman for the New York Public Interest Research Group’s Straphangers Campaign, said he saw the move as reflecting a changed political climate.

“They realized in the current political atmosphere it’s unsustainable to raise the fare a lot every year,” Russianoff said. “Bloomberg’s attitude was, ‘Everything goes up.’ I think de Blasio will play it differently.”

One early test for left-leaning politicians will be the race for the next City Council Speaker. Progressive members of the council, who saw their numbers double from 10 to 20 in November, have formed a Progressive Caucus and vowed to vote as a block for the next speaker.

“The mayor-elect has been very clear about his top priorities and they all line up very well with the goals of progressives in the Council,” said Councilman Brad Lander, a co-chairman of the Progressive Caucus.

On many issues, the liberals will find an ally in the city’s next Public Advocate, former councilwoman Letitia James. While James and de Blasio endorsed one another for the respective posts during the campaign, the new public advocate has pledged to keep rigorous checks and balances on the mayor.

James, a champion of minority and women’s rights, vocally opposed big development in her section of Brooklyn during her 10 years in the City Council, including the Atlantic Yards development and the recently opened Barclays Center, home to the Brooklyn Nets professional basketball team.

As liberals prepare their political wish lists, the city’s Republicans, outnumbered six-to-one by Democrats, are wary.

“We’ve had 20 years of success under Republican mayors,” said Manhattan Republican Party Chairman Dan Isaacs. “Improved safety, crime is down, business and real estate is thriving. But in some ways we were victims of our success. It’s hard to impart to people that the gains we’ve made could be lost very quickly.”

Muzzio said the challenge now is maintaining the progress logged under Bloomberg while making the city more inclusive.

“Bill isn’t a bomb-thrower,” he said. “There’s going to be a lot of continuity with Bloomberg. There has to be.”

12 Comments

  • Moishe

    Hashem help us all …NYC is going to become Sodom and Gomorrah. The Liberals have taken over.

  • CHLEAKS.COM

    “I would definitely define this as a movement,” said progressive Democrat Laurie Cumbo of Brooklyn, who was elected to the City Council in November. “This idea that somebody has to be on the bottom so somebody can be on the top, which is somewhat of a global business model, doesn’t have to be that way.”

    Jealousy: Cutting the Baby In Half
    http://whoisshmira.wordpress.com/2013/11/29/jealousy-cutting-the-baby-in-half/

    The rice will get poorer and the poorer even poorer.

  • The truth can be frightening

    The truth is they never really lost control. Nanny Bloomberg was& is a Liberal by definition the only difference now will be we wiil have a protege of David Dinkins the worst mayor in Nyc & fellow communist in office & we will be returning to high crime days. remember the Slogan fight crime dump Dinkins? I predict it will be renewed with the phrase boot Bill!

  • Funny but sad

    This has got to be the dumbest thing i have ever read there is only on way to make every one equal and that is by lowering the standerds of the high class the problem with that is who will Stimulate the econamy once no one has any more money to spend this place is turning into communist russia

  • lISTEN UP!!

    i agree with #1 and also this gives anti semites like miss cumbo a chance.

    get ready for a mosque to be built near the freedom tower

    with ahavas yisroel we can bring the geulah and by pass this mess!!

  • declasse' intelelctual

    watch your wallet–all of the new mayor’s ideas involve taxes such as the universal early education and so forth. Do not forget, he has endorsed the attack on Bris-Milah.

  • Realist

    I love to see all of the liberal bashing by CH’ers. I don’t love them myself. However, the biggest complainers are the ones benefiting from the liberal government programs. Don’t bite the hand that feeds you!

    • Milhouse

      If the burden of taxes and regulation wasn’t so high, more people could earn a living. If someone breaks your leg and then calls an ambulance, or steals your wallet and then gives you $20 for cab fare, you don’t owe them gratitude.

  • Dr. Jeff

    With Obama, the Democrats and other self styled Liberals have shown their true anti Semitic colors. Any Jew who votes for any Liberal, Progressive or Democrat is voting to destroy Israel and make Jews 2nd class citizens.