Posted on 07/09/2008 5:54:28 PM PDT by neverdem
Throughout his political career, whenever anyone called him a liberal, Ed Koch would always respond: Yes, Im a liberal, but with sanity. The eventual mayor of New York City first demonstrated that sanity in the Democratic Party reform movement of the early 1960s, when a group of prestigious New Yorkers led by former first lady Eleanor Roosevelt and Senator Herbert Lehman booted the party regularsthe so-called machine politicians who had dominated the Democratic Party for decadesfrom power. As a young soldier in that movement, Koch ousted the head of Tammany Hall, Carmine DeSapio, from his position as Democratic district leader in Greenwich Village in a party primary.
Now, some 45 years later, Koch is calling for another reform movement, another injection of sanity into New York politics. In a recent radio commentary, Koch declared what most New Yorkers already know: their state government has become a laughingstock. In the last year and a half, the states two top elected officials, Governor Eliot Spitzer and Comptroller Alan Hevesi, were forced to resign. Meanwhile, the highest-ranking Republican in Albany, Joe Bruno, is retiring under the pressure of a federal investigation, while his Democratic counterpart, Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver, remains in thrall to special interests ranging from the trial bar to public-sector unions.
Facing this dismal scene, and in an attempt to dislodge the party regulars, Koch is calling for a new third party to run against both the Democratic and Republican machines that dominate Albany. He envisions such a party led by a small group of reform-minded New Yorkers of sufficient reputation to match the status of Roosevelt and Lehman in their day. Only such a noteworthy, nonpartisan group, bent on restoring democracy to the Empire State, could hope to garner enough attention to overcome the two major parties enormous and entrenched electoral advantage. Its a quixotic idea, for sure. But to anyone who has watched the Democrats and Republicans thwart previous reform effortseven as polls show that New Yorkers scorn their own governmentit may be no more unrealistic than trying to change the two parties from within.
Koch knows that the entrenched interests that currently rule the state grew, ironically, out of the reform movement that he helped spark decades ago. One of that movements leaders, New York City mayor Robert Wagner, had turned to government employees as allies in his battle against the political machine. In return for their support, Wagner began granting them the right to organize into unions that could collectively bargain for benefits. Most political leaders had opposed public-sector unions in the past, reasoning that unlike the private sectorwhere unions might show some restraint, since demanding too much would price themselves and their companies out of businessgovernment was a monopoly not subject to marketplace pressures.
Now granted the power of political organizations, the public-sector unions soon undermined the very reform movement that they helped spawn, becoming the 800-pound gorillas of state and local government. They used their organization to drive spending on pensions, salaries, and benefits and to punish politicians who dared defy them.
When the reform movement defeated the political machine, it left a power vacuum at the neighborhood level, where previously the clubs and district offices of groups like Tammany Hall had controlled politicsand had often delivered local services to residents. As Daniel Patrick Moynihan noted in a Commentary article at the time, liberals are not neighborhood people. The reformers didnt replace the old clubs with new ones that served local interests. Into that void stepped a new kind of power, unanticipated at the time, but unleashed by the Johnson administrations federal War on Poverty: the government-funded neighborhood activist or community organizer. The social-service groups formed by the activists became the voice of the people in many neighborhoodsand their leaders became politically powerful because they could deliver votes the way that a Tammany Hall district leader once did.
Soon, cadres of politicians in the state legislature and city councils owed their elections to the foot soldiers and organizational savvy of public-sector unions and government-funded social-service activists. Its no surprise that the government these politicians have given us has been spendthrift and ineffectiveconstantly expanding salaries and pay for government workers, heavily funding social programs of dubious value that rarely seem to solve the problems theyre designed to address, and ensuring that other social programs, like Medicaid, are far more expansive and costly in New York than elsewhere. The consequence has been bad and expensive government, a double whammy for New Yorkers.
When you understand the roots of todays dysfunction, you appreciate why its been so difficult to reform state politics, and why Kochs idealistic vision of a new party born of reform-minded pols is appealing. To be successful, though, such a party would have to steer clear of issues that inevitably divide bipartisan coalitions, including social issues like abortion, and focus instead on reforming the mechanics of government to make it more democratic. That would mean ending the legislatures control of redistricting and putting the power to draw political boundaries in the hands of nonpartisan panels, as other states have done. It would mean passing property-tax reform that offered some formula to control state spending, as well as reforms that prohibited politicians from making end runs around voters in order to put the state more heavily into debt. It would also mean limiting politicians ability to use the budgets of state authorities and agencies to pile up earmarks and award noncompetitive contracts to favored groups.
Who would join Koch in such a coalition? Among active politicians, there arent many who have fought the states new political machines and have the credibility or name recognition to form a party. On the Democratic side, one thinks of Nassau County executive Tom Suozzi, who unsuccessfully challenged Spitzer in the Democratic gubernatorial primary and recently headed up the commission studying property-tax reform. Attorney General Andrew Cuomo has also shown a streak of independence early in his tenure as the states top lawyer. On the Republican side, there is, of course, former New York mayor Rudy Giuliani, who battled often (and occasionally successfully) with the special interests that not only rule Albany but also hold enormous power in New York City. John Faso, who ran unsuccessfully against both Hevesi in 2002 and Spitzer in 2006, has always been a voice of sanity in Albany. Among independents, current New York mayor Michael Bloombergs technocratic, businesslike approach to government would also fit well.
Of course, Giuliani and Koch have warred nastily in the past. Cuomo and Suozzi probably see Spitzers resignation as an opportunity for each of them to run for governor, which would hardly motivate them to undermine the Democratic Party. And there arent a lot of other choices in the state. Its hard to imagine, for instance, that New Yorks U.S. senators, who hold such power in Washington by virtue of their party position, would be eager to give up their Democratic affiliation and bolt to a new party.
In other words, Kochs idea is impractical, unrealistic, and unworkable. And given the mess that is New York politics, it may still be the states best hope.
Steven Malanga is senior editor of City Journal and a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute. He is the author of The New New Left, a collection of his City Journal essays.
it may be the only way to get someone who is not a democrat in NY
Sorry Ed. I love you but a third party would only be successful if its leadeship was not interested in using tax dollars to support their lifestyles. In NY that political animal is as extinct as (fill in any appropriate extinct species).
Good luck to Koch with that! Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver
is as bad as it gets.
I may not have agreed with Ed some time on may issues, I respect the man for his ability to speak his mind and stick to it and the reasons behind it. Sounds like a good idea, don’t think it will be anything close to conservative but anything right now would be an improvement
I don’t recall giving permission for this Quixotic quest! LOL.
(It was about some question he didn't understand on Church teaching that he mentioned as an aside to a caller on his WABC radio show, probably early 90s.)
Don’t you have to have 2 parties before you can have 3?
this is not a viable way to get someone in NY who isn’t a democrat.
the only viable way would be for the state GOP to get its act together, which at this point may not be a viable way...
Koch isn’t the first, or the fiftieth, to get this idea in NY State, which is rife with corrupt dumb third parties
New York already has several parties in addition to the Democrat and Republican parties: the Conservative Party, the Working Families Party, the Independent Party, the Libertarian Party, to name a few.
To be fair and not create a center party of fickle swing voting politicians it would be better to divide the political spectrum into 4 parties, not 3. From left to right the top vote getters would likely be the Socialists, Democrats, Republicans, and Conservatives. A law that reserved a small but equal fraction of the seats to the top 4 vote getting parties might induce that. Or a public campaign finance law that granted equal amounts to the 4 top parties would help. I’m not a fan of public financing but we need some incentive. Monopolies of any kind are bad and duopolies not much better.
**Dont you have to have 2 parties before you can have 3?**
2 parties in NY would be nice. actually there are .. Liberal, Left of Liberal, Moderately Right of Stalin, and Stalin is a Rightwinger Party.
I today have seen Liberal and Sanity in the same sentence. Who’da THUNK it?
but the chance the state GOP will get its act together is...nil.
And if the best they can do is the idea of Rudy for governor then it is no different than a 3rd party.
What he is talking about is actually a reform of the Democratic Party. NY is Governed by down-state Democrats and the Public Sector Unions mentioned here. SEIU and CSEA are more powerful than any elected group. THey will use their muscle and money to kill any reform which hurts their interests.
I want Rudy to go far, far away. Maybe Mexico or Qatar, where I understand he has clients
NY certainly shouldn’t be governed from upstate, which is basically a dying money sponge
New York liberals are generally more pragmatic & sane than far left West Coast hippie types
btt
NY Upstate is dying because we are supporting a NY City designed welfare, tort, environmental, public sector system in an area without the population and tax base to support it.
Take the NY State laws on brownfields, for example. There is extreme liability placed on new owners for any environmental issues on the land, regardless of who caused it. This is fine in NY City, where developers can/will pay to clean up marginal land (NY City never had heavy industry anyway) given they can build 40 story condos on it later. Here in Upstate though, no one in their right mind would consider trying to renovate old industrial land of any kind. Same with the Wicks law designed for the benefit of downstate-run unions.
Same with the NY State Power authority that uses Upstate hydro-power to fund NY City Public housing at greatly reduced rates
There are a million examples.
What would be best is if Upstate and the Counties of NY City could be completely seperated into different entities. Make NY City a district, like Washington DC.
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