New York – Chief Factor in Mayor’s Race: Bloomberg Influence

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    New York – The White House switchboard lit up with calls from Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg’s emissaries several weeks ago with a message that was polite but firm: The mayor is going to win re-election, they said. We think the president should stay out of the race.

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    Members of Mr. Bloomberg’s inner circle were especially worried because they knew President Obama planned to visit the region to campaign with Gov. Jon S. Corzine of New Jersey, and he would face pressure to support the Democratic candidate, William C. Thompson Jr., the city’s first black comptroller.

    At the request of the mayor’s aides, Geoffrey Canada, chief executive of the Harlem Children’s Zone, telephoned Valerie Jarrett, senior adviser to the president.

    “I know she is close to the president and has his ear,” said Mr. Canada, whose nonprofit group has received $600,000 in personal donations from Mr. Bloomberg.

    A close adviser to the mayor, who stayed neutral in the presidential race, described the campaign’s pitch to the White House this way: “He didn’t pick sides in your race. Don’t pick sides in his.”

    The president’s office agreed, and in early October alerted Bloomberg aides that it would offer only a halfhearted Friday afternoon endorsement for Mr. Thompson, and Mr. Obama did not campaign with him.

    In the race for mayor of New York City, there was one campaign on the surface. But there was a more dramatic effort, unfolding behind the scenes, that really mattered: ensuring, through money and muscle, that Mr. Bloomberg faced no serious obstacle to winning a third term.

    The critical moments were not widely watched debates or speeches, but triumphs celebrated privately inside the cavernous Midtown Manhattan headquarters of Bloomberg 2009: the elbowing out of Representative Anthony D. Weiner and the neutralizing of any powerful Democrat who could hurt the Bloomberg campaign.

    Underlying it all was a sophisticated strategy, and at times intimidating tactics, seemingly at odds with Mr. Bloomberg’s image as a nonpolitician, that his aides sketched out during a marathon meeting in the fall of 2008. It was a surgical, at times even brutal approach, but it seemed oddly detached from the mood of electorate.

    This account is drawn from dozens of interviews with top aides, consultants and friends of both candidates, most of whom spoke on condition of anonymity in order to talk candidly without inflaming two powerful public officials.

    In the days after the mayor had emerged, victorious, but badly bruised, from his fight to rewrite the city’s term limits law, Mr. Bloomberg and his three top deputies, Edward Skyler, Patricia E. Harris and Kevin Sheekey, gathered in the Staten Island room in City Hall and began to plot his campaign.

    They warned him that it would be entirely different from his campaigns in 2001 and 2005. “This will be really hard,” one participant said.

    Mr. Sheekey, the mayor’s political guru, urged him to quickly send a warning to potential challengers. He suggested recruiting a high-profile attack dog for the campaign and disclosing it to the press. The choice was obvious: Howard Wolfson, the combative former communications director for Hillary Rodham Clinton’s presidential run.

    Mr. Skyler suggested that the campaign be run by his best friend, Bradley Tusk, a former deputy to Gov. Rod R. Blagojevich of Illinois, who was leaving Lehman Brothers and eager to return to politics. Mr. Tusk spent weeks last fall helping Mr. Sheekey ram the term limits legislation through the City Council.

    Mr. Sheekey pushed what he called the Powell Doctrine — a burst of overwhelming force that would discourage anybody who was even thinking about taking on the mayor.

    Read the fully at the NY Times


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    14 Comments
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    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    Time for the Mayor to go:
    The fact of the matter is he has overblown the race sometimes even stating that he is 20 points ahead. (see the NY TImes article today) Spending 100 million dollars and squeeze out only 50,000 votes more than Thompson.
    The voters of NY said twice yes to term limits, and he went against the with of the voters. like ousted President Manuel Zelaya of Honduras.
    In fact most of New Yorker’s were so upset they didn’ t go out to the votes.
    He scared off all organazations by telling them I will win anyhow, if you don’t bring out th vote for me forget any help from the City. (Vouchers, Bike lanes …..)
    With his money he scared the hell out of a few good canditates of running for mayor. (Wiener, Kelly..) If they would know that the numbers are overblown they would stay in the race.
    Time for Bloomberg to step down!

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    Now they are coming out with this article when it can’t make a difference anymore. Typical NY times reporting.

    TicketBloomberg
    TicketBloomberg
    14 years ago

    Looser Bloomberg finally gets his ticket of 5 points & 100 million dollars.

    GOOD FOR HIM!

    What a looser!

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    The headline is not correct. It should read:
    Chief factor in mayor’s race: bloomberg COMMUNISIM.
    And president Abama should be ashamed of himself for letting money and power scare him off.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    its a little late for this article, shame.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    I personally think that mayor bloomberg is a good mayor on most issues reducing crime, quality of life, managing EXCELLENT the budget (better then a lot of mayors we had already, in one word serving as mayor & not for any political machine or ideology, so automatically hes doing whats good for the city without any other interest (excluding himself….., but that doesnt have really any effect on us)

    but im happy that he got his message, & turn down his Ego a little bit

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    Unfortunately, in America, money talks, and everything else walks…

    moshe der g
    moshe der g
    14 years ago

    i guess president obama is today haveing second thoughts about this

    had he campagined fro thompson hard thompson would have won and obama could have used this to show he still had magic. but he chose to go for corzine and that one lost..

    bh i am happy that obama did not win here

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    Golus!

    Nesanel
    Nesanel
    14 years ago

    Boruch Hashem, our Jewish brother, Mr. Mike Bloomberg will be the Mayor of New York City for another four years. The alternative, Mr. Thompson, would have been an absolute disaster, and was a poor choice for Orthodox Jewish voters despite being backed by several well-known, corrupt Orthodox Rabbanim and politicians. How quickly people in our community forgot about the “job” David Dinkins did when he was our Mayor? Mr. Bloomberg has kept our City clean, safe, and a wonderful place to raise children. To those who got mentally sidetracked with non-important issues such as parking tickets and food stamps, I strongly recommend that you park your cars legally, and that you look for jobs instead of relying on government-funded handouts. It is time for New York City and America to work towards being the great capitalist, money-making nation it once was, and that will not be accomplished voting for liberal socialists who are in the process of ruining the American way of life we grew up with.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    the city is much better off than it was 8 years ago