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New York's Loneliest Liberal
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Ruth Messinger, the favorite
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to become the Democratic nominee for mayor of New York, is being treated here
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as a kind of anthropological curiosity. After Messinger gave a major address a
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few weeks back, the Daily News sardonically endorsed her as the "Mayor
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of Mars," observing with a characteristically light touch that her speech had
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furnished evidence of life on "the Red Planet." Messinger hasn't just lost the
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Reagan Democrats who read, or at least edit, the city's tabloids. A recent poll
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found Mayor Rudolph Giuliani beating her by 18 points. Among Jews, bearers of
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the New York liberal tradition that Messinger represents, Giuliani leads by the
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staggering ratio of 79-to-21.
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You have
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to pity Messinger--first because the brand of liberalism she is identified with
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was the universal philosophy of the city's elite until a few years ago, and
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second because nobody's listening to the second thoughts she's been having
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about it. A couple of weeks ago, Messinger gave a speech before a business
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group, in which she proposed to reduce the city's budget by $1 billion, to
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force work-rule changes on unions, to permit private contractors to compete
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with city agencies--the kinds of innovations common in Republican-dominated
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cities like Indianapolis and Phoenix. She even said, in what passes in politics
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for a mea culpa , "You learn a lot in two decades, and I have." The
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New
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York
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Times editorial page applauded, but nothing
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Messinger does will remove the scarlet L from her brow. Ed Koch, the former
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mayor, says, "I believe in epiphanies," but adds that when he looks at
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Messinger, he sees a younger version of Bella Abzug, the hat-wearing,
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megaphonic incarnation of the New York Left of the previous generation.
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That's fatal, and a bit unfair. Messinger is actually not
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that kind of New Yorker--she can keep her hands in her lap when she
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talks. She's a child of the middle class who attended Brearley, New York's most
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rarefied girls' school, and Radcliffe, from which she graduated in 1962. She
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has a master's in social work. Messinger is widely respected for her
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intelligence, her studiousness, her belief in the fine distinction. But there's
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something of the killjoy in her. She's brisk, and pinched, and a bit
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censorious--you have the feeling that she has a moral position on, say, French
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food.
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Messinger's supporters claim that she's been typecast based on her milieu--the
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predominantly Jewish Upper West Side--rather than her beliefs. The problem with
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this is that Messinger has a history of beliefs that look rather embarrassing
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in retrospect. In 1979, while a member of the City Council, she hosted a
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coming-out-of-jail cocktail party for John R. Hill, who had murdered a
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corrections officer on the first day of the Attica riots. In 1984, she returned
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from a trip to Sandinista-led Nicaragua to assert that women there
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"participated in everything" and were "ready to die for this freedom."
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In the City Council, Messinger was generally
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considered a staunch voice for tenants, for children, for the homeless and the
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poor. In the mid-1980s, she proposed extending rent control from individuals to
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businesses, a suggestion very few real-estate developers have forgotten. In
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1981, she endorsed Frank Barbaro, about the closest thing the city has recently
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had to a Democratic Socialist candidate for mayor. She consistently argued for
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more spending, even as it was becoming clear that the Wall Street boom of the
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'80s was flattening out.
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Of
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course, practically everyone, including Koch, wanted to spend more than the
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city had--that's what it meant to be a New York liberal. In The Future Once
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Happened Here , historian and polemicist Fred Siegel quotes Mayor Robert
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Wagner, circa 1965, as saying, "I do not propose to let our fiscal problems set
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the limit of our commitments to meet the essential needs of the people of this
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city." The problem, as Siegel notes, is that the definition of "essential
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needs" grew exponentially, forcing New York and other cities not only to raise
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taxes but to scant such traditional services as parks and sanitation in favor
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of a whole new range of social services.
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By the time David Dinkins became mayor in 1989, this kind
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of spending had made New York ungovernable. The economy was dead, the budget
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was in perpetual crisis, and crime was shooting through the roof. Dinkins did
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nothing to reverse the trend, and in 1993, four prominent Democrats, including
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Koch and Robert Wagner Jr. (son of the former mayor), abandoned Dinkins in
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favor of Giuliani. Dinkins was New York's first black mayor, and his election
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had been heralded, by Messinger among others, as the dawn of the Rainbow
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Coalition. It turned out to be the last gasp of traditional liberalism.
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Crime, and
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a broad sense of civic disorder, probably had more to do with Dinkins' defeat
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than spending did. But Messinger, like Dinkins, cannot find a way of sounding
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convincing when she deplores crime--she has spent too many years thinking about
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it as a civil-rights and civil-liberties issue. Nor can she bring herself to
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say that Giuliani was right about the merits of arresting low-level offenders
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and cracking down on "quality-of-life" violations.
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Dinkins lost to Giuliani by only four points.
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Now it appears that many of the Jewish liberals, Catholic union members, and
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Hispanics who had stuck with Dinkins are going to decamp in favor of a
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Republican with the personal appeal of a Torquemada. A Giuliani victory by more
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than, say, 10 points is bound to be seen as a repudiation not merely of
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Messinger but of everything she stands for. But the truth is that urban
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liberalism is not as bankrupt as the election is making it appear. Reformers
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such as Harvey Robins, a former top Dinkins aide, and Ray Horton, an
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independent budget monitor, have been arguing that the city could save billions
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of dollars by targeting long-standing perquisites--such as the endless array of
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paid holidays for city workers or large amounts of down time for cops and
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teachers--then investing the savings in parks and libraries and in restoring
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the city's neglected neighborhoods. They have made plausible arguments for
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raising some taxes and lowering others.
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Messinger has at least been
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alluding to the new reformist thinking, while Giuliani merely mocks
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good-government proposals as so much eyewash. In fact, in a truly remarkable
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public-relations coup, the mayor has managed to gain a reputation as a pitiless
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reformer without reforming anything except the Police Department. He has
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disappointed conservatives by treating rent control as part of natural law, and
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by making no serious inroads on the city's bloated labor costs. To hack away at
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the mayor's reputation, Messinger has recently taken to issuing press releases
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with headlines like "He Just Keeps Lying ... And Lying ... And Lying ..." But
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it doesn't seem to matter. Messinger can't break Giuliani's stereotype, or
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break out of her own.
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