Posted on 01/15/2014 7:21:16 AM PST by SeekAndFind
As recently as 1998, New York States Republican party controlled the governorship, a United States Senate seat, and the mayors office in Manhattan. Today, it is greatly diminished, with its sole beachhead of influence in the state senate, where it shares a majority with four independent Democrats.
In contrast, the Working Families party (WFP), a 15-year-old left-wing, union-fueled group with just 20,000 members, now holds the whip hand over much of the dominant Democratic party in New York and is already spreading its wings to other states. The WFP not only was a major force behind Bill de Blasios victory for mayor last November; it dominated the rest of the election, too. They propelled all three citywide officials in New York City into office, and have a huge chunk of the city council allied with them, says Hank Sheinkopf, a leading Democratic consultant who has worked for Hillary Clinton. They are a real force.
In New York, the WFPs power is magnified by state laws that allow minor parties to cross-endorse major-party candidates, which has given rise to a number of influential third parties. (Incidentally, one such upstart, the Conservative party, provided the ballot line for WFBs mayoral campaign in 1965 and his brothers successful Senate campaign in 1970.) But cross-endorsements are especially crucial in New York City: Rudy Giuliani won the mayoralty in 1993 only by running on the lines of both the Republican party and the heavily left-leaning Liberal party. He rewarded the Liberals with patronage jobs and hefty pay increases for their teachers-union allies. Mike Bloomberg won in 2001 only by having both the Republican- and Independence-party lines, and in 2009 he even actively negotiated with Working Families for their endorsement, until his representative admitted the price was too high.
But Mayor de Blasio isnt going to have to negotiate with Working Families, because he is in large part their creation. He helped found the party, used the discounted services of their grassroots organizers to win election to the city council in 2001, and then won the citywide office of public advocate with their backing in 2009. Their agenda might as well be his: a new city-wide living minimum wage, tax hikes on upper-income New Yorkers, requirements that developers build affordable housing units on a massive scale in exchange for building permits, tougher rent controls, retroactive wage hikes for public employees, and severe curbs on the growth of non-union charter schools.
None of this should surprise anyone, Steve Malanga, an urban-affairs expert for the Manhattan Institute, says of the partys policies. Working Families, he points out, was founded in 1998 by hard-core union activists, from the Communications Workers of America, the United Federation of Teachers, and the New York chapter of the ACORN community organizing group.
New York political operative Bertha Lewis was the head of national ACORN when its employees were convicted of voter-registration fraud during the 2008 presidential campaign. She presided over its collapse in 2009 after a series of undercover tapes showed its employees in Brooklyn, Baltimore, and Washington, D.C., giving advice on how to hide prostitution activities and cheat the tax system.
But now, thanks to de Blasios victory, shes back in the saddle. Bertha Lewis is one of the citys most passionate and effective progressive leaders, and Im proud to have worked with her for years, de Blasio said during the 2012 campaign. On primary-election night last September, Lewis stood onstage next to de Blasio and told interviewers: Were baaaack. The right wing will have to deal with it.
She was one of the privileged few who attended de Blasios private midnight inauguration at his house in Park Slope on New Years Day, and is busy seeding his administration with her operatives. Our ties in the government run deep, she boasts. She also makes clear de Blasio is on a tight leash: When we disagree with Bill, were going to say it. Were not letting people off the hook.
When the ire of Working Families is aroused, it can be crushingly effective. In 2010, city-council speaker Christine Quinn was positioning herself to run for mayor as someone who could balance left-wing loyalties with a realistic approach to business issues. She opposed a controversial bill to mandate paid sick days at private companies because, she said, businesses are on the brink, and they fear that any new costs will put them under. Working Families leaders yelled betrayal and helped lead a left-wing attack machine against Quinn that eventually drove her into a poor third-place finish in the mayoral primary and helped defeat some of her allies in city-council races.
Working Families is now spreading into other states that allow cross-endorsements by minor parties, such as Connecticut. Its also trying to change laws in other states to allow cross-endorsements, also called fusion voting. In 2010, Democrat Dannel Malloy won the governors office in Connecticut by a mere 5,000 votes; he won 27,000 votes on the WFP line. He later fulfilled a key plank of the WFP platform by signing a paid-sick-leave bill into law.
But while it expands its influence, the Working Families party is coming under increasing scrutiny. In 2012, Brooklyn attorney Roger Adler, a Democrat, was appointed as a special prosecutor to probe allegations that Working Families had been manipulating state and city election law. Last year, a New York City grand jury issued subpoenas as part of an ongoing probe of the party and its tangled links with Data & Field Services, a company that provides campaign workers and organizers to candidates. Critics of WFP have charged for years that Data & Field Services (DFS) has provided heavily discounted consulting work for Working Families candidates, essentially giving them in-kind contributions without publicly disclosing it.
In 2010, Working Families agreed to settle a civil lawsuit on the issue but didnt admit wrongdoing, paying $100,000 for legal bills to Randy Mastro, a former Giuliani deputy mayor who brought the suit. It also signed a court agreement that DFS would end its association with the party. But in 2011, DFS filed an appeal with the court, saying it had to remain linked with Working Families by far its largest client or suffer extreme economic and logistical hardship. In April 2011, state-supreme-court justice Anthony Giacobbe held DFS in contempt for failing to follow through on its agreement to separate from Working Families.
Mastro has said the party claims it needs the DFSs people there so vitally, so close at hand that they need to be there operating in the same office space with the same people.
While legal investigations grind on, WFP is making progress elsewhere. It continues to perfect its Alinskyite tactics in New York: recruit activist leftists to run for office on the WFP line and the Democrats, help them raise money that can be generously supplemented by city financing, and make certain they change election laws in the partys favor. In 2005, WFP allies on the city council were instrumental in overturning a ruling by the citys independent Campaign Finance Board that restricted union political donations. Frederick A. O. Schwarz Jr., then the chairman of the Campaign Finance Board, complained that the changes create a gaping loophole for union contributions, undermining the contribution limits established by the Campaign Finance Act.
New Yorks loophole-ridden campaign-finance laws have been a happy hunting ground for Working Families for years. But now theres a new sheriff in town, unaffiliated with the de BlasioWFP cadre. The day before he left office as mayor, Mike Bloomberg announced a new head for the citys Campaign Finance Board: Rose Gill Hearn, a no-nonsense lawyer who formerly headed the citys watchdog, the Department of Investigations. She has been getting worms out of the Big Apple for years, the New York Daily News reported last year in an article highlighting her dogged investigation procedures.
Working Families may be at the top of New York City politics for now, but Hearn, and others, will be watching.
John Fund is a national-affairs columnist for National Review Online.
bullsh8
the nonworking families have taken over New Yawk, the ones that are feeding at the government trough
the nonworking “families” that have multiple kids by multiple non-present fathers
RE: the nonworking families have taken over New Yawk, the ones that are feeding at the government trough
We always have to remind ourselves of this — whenever a nice slogan, party name or government program is being presented, always think of the RESULTING OPPOSITE EFFECT.
Hence the
Department of (In)Justice
The Department of (No) Energy
The (Un)Affordable Care Act
The (non)Working Families Party
etc.
‘...Department of (In)Justice
The Department of (No) Energy
The (Un)Affordable Care Act
The (non)Working Families Party...”
Reminds me of the good old Soviet days, when men were men and commies were slime. Back them, a pretty solid indication of a corrupt communist government was provided by the term “democratic” somewhere in the state title.
Oh well, now, men are women and a quite ill-educated commie is our dork-O-dent.
Maria Shriver is on MSNBC and the three networks pushing similar ideas :
1) Mandated employer living wage
2) Mandated employer paid sick leave
3) Mandated employer family leave
4) Mandated employer child day care, or government paid
5) Mandated employer living wage equal base pay for sexes
(note that most of above is targeted to single moms)
She is telling woman to demand these from elected.
The unions are going to end up getting screwed by Mayor De Wilhelm. They have become the biggest marks in the country.
RE: 1) Mandated employer living wage
2) Mandated employer paid sick leave
3) Mandated employer family leave
4) Mandated employer child day care, or government paid
5) Mandated employer living wage equal base pay for sexes
________________________
And how big should your business be for all the above mandates to kick in?
I can’t stand to look at her.
Shriver doesn't worry about details, she's born rich and married rich.
She like other Dems have all learned to claim that :
1) It will be good for economy and the employers who must pay for it
2) It will be good for workers not getting the freebees (men in these cases)
Its the ‘everyone wins’ strategy, Obama used it to sell Obamacare.
Clearly she’s aged.
I been watching Shriver on this because what she is selling is scary.
Shriver was pitching this on network news yesterday and showcased an Hispanic single mom suing her employer for hiring more men than woman, which would be a natural response of any employer to many of the employer mandates she is pitching.
That won't be a problem for the progressives - they are already in the process of making it impossible for businesses with less than 50 employees to even exist. They just use Walmart as a strawman to pass legislation that does nothing to Walmart, but very successfully wipes out rebellious and uncontrollable small business owners.
The Left, in all of its forms, has dominated city politics, worldwide, from day one, so where’s the surprise? In the U.S., whenever Republicans did win any citywide races for political office, they were, mostly, RINO Republicans! I repeat: All cities, everywhere in the entire world, have been dominated by leftist politics, from day one onwards!
1) Mandated employer living wage
2) Mandated employer paid sick leave
3) Mandated employer family leave
4) Mandated employer child day care, or government paid
5) Mandated employer living wage equal base pay for sexes
All inevitable IMHO. It all polls so well the Pubbies are just waiting for the right time to cut and run.
In other words ACORN is running New York City and has a stranglehold on New York State.
It was slowing happening but it will happen sooner now
Like old Pappy said: “As long as larceny lives in the heart of humankind... there WILL be Democrats!”
Also... To paraphase the late/great Iron Lady: “When you promise to rob Peter to pay Paul, you can count on getting Paul’s vote... at least till Peter runs out of money.”
London had Ken "Red" Livingstone as mayor and survived
I have heard the Dems saying they think the GOP will cave on minimum wage, as GWB went along with raising it.
That one seems to poll high.
But, I hope not, states can and do set that themselves if they like the idea we don't need Federal big Mommy to impose it on states that dont,
The others certainly wont be passed by this GOP House. Wouldn't even be liked by the Chamber let alone conservatives.
The Democrats are his other party.
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