Posted on 01/01/2015 9:49:48 AM PST by SeekAndFind
When television showed police turning their backs on Mayor Bill de Blasio recently, many viewers instinctively rotated in their chairs along with the police.
After all, Mayor de Blasios pandering to race-oriented special-interest groups has appalled many voters. More than half of New Yorkers recently told Quinnipiac pollsters that they disapprove of the way the mayor handles the police department. The next move, a strike by the policemen, may already be underway informally: Summonses and arrests have dropped dramatically since the murder of two patrolmen by a man who had said he would put wings on pigs. And if the police formalize and escalate their strike to make their point that de Blasio is anti-police, many New Yorkers will likely back them up.
But they shouldnt. Thats the takeaway from a similar labor action, the Boston police strike of 1919.
The stories of New York today and Boston after World War I have some similarities. In Boston in 1919, the policemen also had compelling reason to complain: Inflation had climbed wildly after World War I, but police pay was not keeping up. Strapped after the war, the authorities neglected upkeep of police-station houses, which were becoming unbearably filthy. In at least one house, vermin actually chewed on officers helmets. Back then, as now, authorities agreed to serious negotiations with the police. The man at the top of the chain of command, Governor Calvin Coolidge, was famous for his ability to get along with just about any ethnicity, including the mostly Irish Catholic patrolmen. One of the few differences between Boston then and New York now was that in Boston the police commissioner reported to the governor, not the mayor.
When the policemen walked out in Boston, riots ran wild, with looting and fighting all across the city. In response, Coolidge called out the National Guard. The guard did not approach the troublemakers gingerly: In a famously controversial move, soldiers rounded up gamblers on Boston Common. Coolidge was a Republican, and Mayor Andrew James Peters, a Democrat, was furious. Yet Coolidge delved into the law books and quoted chapter and verse to make clear that he, not the mayor, was in charge. Coolidge backed up Police Commissioner Edwin Curtiss decision to fire the striking policemen.
Critics outside Boston also were not placated. President Woodrow Wilson had openly shown favor to Samuel Gompers, the labor leader with whose union the Boston police had affiliated. Gomperss American Federation of Labor was famously moderate, and conventional wisdom said public officials should befriend Gompers, or else the hardcore union, the Industrial Workers of the World, would win a greater following. Yet when Gompers, de Blasiolike, made a plea for moderation and more negotiation, Coolidge simply hardened, wiring, There is no right to strike against the public safety by anybody, anywhere, anytime. Then, as now, it was tough for a politician to make such a categorical statement, especially when Wilson was close to Gompers. Coolidge feared the price he would pay for his stance would be to lose the gubernatorial election two months later.
This line has reverberated down the years. And as it turned out, Coolidges disciplined reaction to the Boston police strike played out well for him and the country. After Coolidge took his stand for what he called the reign of law, others followed him. Though some Irish voters fell away, other citizens replaced them and Coolidge was reelected. Indeed, voter admiration for Coolidges hard line proved national, rendering the Bay State politician material for a national ticket overnight. The shocked governor himself later acknowledged this: No doubt, Coolidge wrote in his autobiography, it was the police strike of Boston that brought me into national prominence. And now even President Wilson backed Coolidge up.
The very next year, the Republican ticket of Warren Harding and Coolidge defeated Democrats James Cox and Franklin D. Roosevelt. Most important, Coolidges policy became national policy. Public-sector strikes became less frequent following the Boston episode. So did industrial strikes. The relative rarity of such strikes in the 1920s contributed to the decades prosperity.
What the 1919 Boston strike story reminds us is that policemen cant be policymakers. The policy has to come from the government. Those who back the beleaguered police of New York today do so only because they happen to share the policemens policy position. Besides, as many New Yorkers are telling themselves, New York is such a safe city now that a police strike wont automatically lead to bedlam or even theft. New York crime always goes down, runs the line. The collective amnesia is partially understandable. Many demonstrators were toddlers when the mayor who did the most to make the city safe, Rudolph Giuliani, took office.
Its important for the same people to ask themselves: What if the police were taking the position that their pay should be tripled? Standing with the police can be standing against common sense or the law.
The real quarrel this time lies with Mayor de Blasio. And the real problem is that voters who dislike the mayors policy are not campaigning to get the mayor to change his position. Instead, news events are allowed to drive policy, with each side desperate to catch the other in a gotcha snapshot of killing or wrongdoing. The longer-term damage of letting incidents drive policy is that voters forget that they have power to change the situation. Voters could, for example, call their representatives and take their fight to City Hall. De Blasio might tell these critics that it would be political suicide for him to support anyone but minorities in New York. But again, de Blasio might be wrong in his estimate. He might gain votes that would offset any he lost. And of course, decisions should not merely be about votes.
If voters doubt that Mayor de Blasio will ever change his policy, they should concentrate on electing a new mayor, as happened when voters chose a law-and-order candidate, Giuliani, over the incumbent conciliator, David Dinkins, in 1993. Giuliani doesnt look like Silent Cal, but his law-and-order policy certainly benefited the city. Indeed, the legacy of the Giuliani policy is one reason the city feels comfortable telling itself that a New York temporarily without police is a New York that can be safe.
Amity Shlaes chairs the board of the Calvin Coolidge Presidential Foundation and serves as presidential scholar at Kings College.
There should not be a NYC police strike for one reason. At this point in the city’s course of events, there should BE no police to strike. There should be moving vans with former police and their families headed to non liberal states to restart their lives.
Period.
The NYC situation isn't clearly a labor dispute, though I suspect the ongoing labor negotiations between the police unions and the city government are playing a role here. What's happening in NYC today is the result of the city's mayor going out of his way to undermine the police department -- not by underpaying them, but by criticizing them and questioning the legitimacy of the work they do.
And after the assassination of two police officers by a mutant who was motivated by one of the controversial situations that was behind the mayor's hostility to the NYPD, the NYPD personnel have every reason to steer clear of any unnecessary encounters with the public.
This is why the NYPD will always get more support from the public today than the Boston police department got back in 1919.
The BPD struck over wages and the like. Bloody Bill de Blasio is supporting and meeting with lying miscreants that call for the killing of cops at random.
A mass resignation and departure of even a small fraction of the NYPD would be enough for the Feds to step in and Federalize the remaining elements of the NYPD.
The “civilian national security force”, as well armed and as well trained as the US Defense Department, was one of the things the Current Occupant called for prior to his coronation in 2009.
Why would the non-liberal states want them? These are people who were willingly part of one of the most anti-freedom governments in the USA (e.g. NYC and the non-existent 2nd amendment) Let them stay in NYC and reap the harvest of liberalism that they are the enforcment arm for - or at least they were until it turned and bit them.
The police are not on strike. This article is idiotic.
Wilhelm is in a unique position not normally faced by politicians in his position...he is married to a minority member.
Quite the reverse is happening with deBlasio and the police. To the people who pay the taxes and still make up a majority the police are the heroes and any "tough" action the elected Marxist POS may try will blow up in his face. Totally different situations based on totally different character of the men involved.
Yes this article misses the mark by a wide margin.
They should still leave and go somewhere so NYC suffers the consequence of their liberal voting, just as the rest of us suffer the consequences of the abject morons that keep voting for RINOs ‘no matter what’. DAILY. WE don’t have to take them but they should leave.
Shame on Amity. Wrote a good book about the depression. But when she says “What the 1919 Boston strike story reminds us is that policemen cant be policymakers.”
Nobody is saying the police get to be policymakers. But in return, the policymakers do not get to literally side with, give comfort to, and support the enemy who revel in its lawlessness.
She is dead wrong. And if she thinks what New York needs is the national guard in the streets to teach the cops a lesson, she’s batty.
It is so ridiculous this analogy. Calvin Coolidge didn’t say the cops were steeped in centuries of racism and that he needed to warn his non Irish Catholic how to act in front of the police. Calvin Coolidge would not join with people who block traffic and create an atmosphere where killing the police is cool. Calvin Coolidge didn’t hate the police; Commissar Wilhelm/Big Bird deBlasio does!
There is no right to strike against the public safety by anybody, anywhere, anytime.
Does this include the Mayor and his actions that were a strike against public safety by encouraging this murderer that his cause was righteous?
Exactly like being gunned down by people the mayor is egging on to do so.
“If voters doubt that Mayor de Blasio will ever change his policy, they should concentrate on electing a new mayor, as happened when voters chose a law-and-order candidate, Giuliani,”
Hey Amity, how does that happen when the cops cheerfully go about business as usual, like nothing is wrong? The slowdown is what has made the average New Yorker get it that something is seriously wrong.
Besides, im not sure how much is deliberate, and how much is a natural result on cops being very cautious and methodical to avoid ambushes. It isn’t business as usual, and so the parking ticket numbers and peeing in public numbers will reflect that. Is the “drunk” pissing on a wall a set up to another ambush?
Id love to see Amity and her big talk go patrol the streets just one afternoon on Queens and see how much big talk we get. National Review spewing crap. Sad to see Buckleys mag go that route.
Voters can't fire him for another three years, and he won't resign!
Bad policing is like bad doctoring, bad lawyering ... and bad governing -- New Yorkers won't experience the result until it's too late.
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