The Mayor and the Mob. David Samuels. William O’Dwyer was a decent man, or so many New Yorkers believed. After his first term as mayor of New …
Mario Matthew Cuomo (/ ˈ k w oʊ m oʊ /, Italian: ; June 15, 1932 – January 1, 2015) was an American lawyer and politician who served as the 52nd Governor of New York for three terms, from 1983 to 1994. A member of the Democratic Party, Cuomo previously served as Lieutenant Governor of New York from 1979 to 1982 and Secretary of State of New York from 1975 to 1978.
· John V. Lindsay (served January 1, 1966 to December 31, 1973 - Republican/Liberal 1966-69; Liberal 1969-70; Democratic/Liberal 1970-73) Abraham D. Beame (served January 1, 1974 to December 31, 1977 - Democratic)
· Issac Wright Jr. is running for New York City Mayor. (Image: Twitter/@RealBlackLives) Issac Wright Jr., whose life story is the basis for ABC ‘s ‘” For Life,” officially announced his plan ...
1977 New York City mayoral electionCandidateEd KochMario CuomoPartyDemocraticLiberalPopular vote717,376587,913Percentage50.0%41.0%1 more row
Abraham David Beame (March 20, 1906 – February 10, 2001) was the 104th mayor of New York City from 1974 to 1977....Abraham BeameSucceeded byEd Koch36th and 38th New York City ComptrollerIn office January 1, 1970 – December 31, 1973MayorJohn Lindsay22 more rows
John Vliet Lindsay (/vliːt/; November 24, 1921 – December 19, 2000) was an American politician and lawyer. During his political career, Lindsay was a U.S. congressman, mayor of New York City, and candidate for U.S. president. He was also a regular guest host of Good Morning America.
Herman Badillo (pronounced bah-DEE-yoh; August 21, 1929 – December 3, 2014) was a trailblazing Puerto Rican politician who served as borough president of The Bronx and United States Representative, and ran for Mayor of New York City.
Eric AdamsNew York / MayorEric Leroy Adams is an American politician and former law enforcement officer. He is the 110th mayor of New York City. Adams served as an officer in the New York City Transit Police and then the New York City Police Department for over 20 years, retiring at the rank of captain. Wikipedia
Crime rates in New York City had started to drop in 1991 under previous mayor David Dinkins, three years before Giuliani took office.
New York City Mayor. Served as Mayor of New York City from 1965 to 1973....John Vliet Lindsay.Birth24 Nov 1921 New York, New York County (Manhattan), New York, USABurialMemorial Cemetery of Saint John's Church Laurel Hollow, Nassau County, New York, USA2 more rows
Liberal Party of New YorkJohn Lindsay / PartyThe Liberal Party of New York is a political party in New York. Its platform supports a standard set of socially liberal policies: it supports abortion rights, increased spending on education, and universal health care. Wikipedia
December 19, 2000John Lindsay / Date of death
December 3, 2014Herman Badillo / Date of death
The Great MigrationSeveral factors contributed and led to what came to be known as "The Great Migration" of Puerto Ricans to New York. These were the following: the Great Depression, World War II and the advent of air travel.
18. What was the impact of practices like “Literacy Tests” in shaping Puerto Rican voter participation? The Literacy Tests, made it very difficult for Puerto Ricans to register to vote. They had to read a chosen paragraph in English.
In December 1949, the Brooklyn district attorney, a squeaky-clean family man named Miles McDonald, began investigating a bookmaker named Harry Gross.
As Brooklyn’s district attorney between 1940 and 1942, O’Dwyer earned a reputation as a crime-busting hero —a brave former cop who had the courage to take on the mob.
In Kansas City, arrangements were made by Tom Pendergast, a one-time alderman and Democratic Party chairman who ran a large-scale patronage operation, controlling elections, government contracts and more. Nor was the spirit of cooperation between violent criminals and politicians confined to local politics.
Labor unions, a key part of the Democratic Party base, often employed the mob as muscle, an arrangement pioneered in New York City in the 1920s by the crime boss Arnold “the Brain” Rothstein. Versions of this structure were found in other cities, too.
Yet he proved to be quite comfortable in the role of glad-handing frontman for a network of corruption that gave the crime bosses and their political partners a stranglehold over the city’s economic life. From the waterfront docks that handled more than $7 billion a year in shipping, to the trucks that moved meat and produce to the city’s stores, to the beat cops who routinely tolerated crimes like illegal betting and prostitution, to the courts that seemed incapable of convicting the city’s most violent criminals, to the waterfront unions that forced their members to turn over as much as 40 percent of their pay, syndicates worked with the city’s political, law enforcement and union leadership for their own benefit at the expense of the city and its people.
In 1944, President Roosevelt recognized O’Dwyer’s service by appointing him as his personal representative to the War Refugee Board, a job with ambassadorial status. It was no surprise when O’Dwyer, who ran for mayor against LaGuardia in 1941 but lost, finally recaptured New York City for the Democratic Party in 1945.
During the war, O’Dwyer was awarded a general’s star for investigating corruption in Air Force contracts . As Roosevelt’s under secretary of war Robert Patterson wrote in an internal letter, “Bill O’Dwyer, I firmly believe, has done more than anyone else to prevent fraud and scandal for the Army Air Forces.” In 1944, President Roosevelt recognized O’Dwyer’s service by appointing him as his personal representative to the War Refugee Board, a job with ambassadorial status.
See also: 1977 New York City mayoral election. Two years later, Cuomo ran for Mayor of New York City at Carey's urging. Incumbent Mayor Abraham Beame was very unpopular and Cuomo was one of five major challengers to Beame in the Democratic primary.
In 1974, he ran for Lieutenant Governor of New York on a ticket headed by gubernatorial candidate Howard J. Samuels, and both won the nomination of the Democratic State Committee at the party convention. But their entire ticket, including the nominees for attorney general and U.S. Senator was defeated in the Democratic primary election: Samuels by Rep. Hugh Carey of Brooklyn, and Cuomo by State Senator Mary Anne Krupsak .
Cuomo was re-elected in 1986 against Republican nominee Andrew P. O'Rourke by 64.3% to 31.77%. He ruled out the possibility of running in the 1988 presidential election, announcing on February 19, 1987, that he would not run, and then going on to publicly decline draft movements in the wake of Gary Hart 's withdrawal following the Donna Rice affair.
With the recession aiding Democratic candidates, Cuomo beat Lehrman 50.91% to 47.48%. Cuomo actively campaigned for Walter Mondale in the 1984 presidential election, and was named on Mondale's list of vice presidential candidates.
In 1982, Carey declined to run for re-election and Cuomo declared his candidacy. He once again faced Ed Koch in the Democratic primary. This time, Koch's support for the death penalty backfired and he alienated many voters from outside New York City when, in an interview with Playboy magazine, he described the lifestyle of both suburbia and upstate New York as "sterile" and lamented the thought of having to live in "the small town" of Albany as governor, saying it was "a city without a good Chinese restaurant". Cuomo won the primary by ten points and faced Republican nominee businessman Lewis Lehrman in the general election. With the recession aiding Democratic candidates, Cuomo beat Lehrman 50.91% to 47.48%.
Cuomo was followed as Secretary of State by Basil Paterson .
Cuomo first became widely known in New York City in the late 1960s when he represented "The Corona Fighting 69," a group of 69 home-owners from the Queens neighborhood of Corona, who were threatened with displacement by the city's plan to build a new high school.
During the period of governance by the Dutch West India Company, New Amsterdam had Director-Generals. In 1665 Thomas Willett became the first person to have the title of mayor. All mayors before 1822 were appointed. Until 1822 it was done by the Council of Appointments.
New York City has never had a female mayor . The first woman to run for the office was Cynthia Leonard .
In just five years from 1969 to 1974, the city lost over 500,000 manufacturing jobs, which resulted in over one million households being dependent on welfare by 1975. In almost the same span, rapes and burglaries tripled, car thefts and felony assaults doubled, and murders went from 681 to 1690 a year.
By the conclusion of the 1970s, over a million people had left the city.
In 1977, New York experienced a 25-hour citywide blackout that led to looting and arson. When all available police were ordered to duty, 40% of the off-duty force refused to show as a result of the escalating animosity between the police union and the city. National Archives and Records Administration. 40 of 41.
Dilapidated side streets like these were common in 1970s New York. National Archives and Records Administration
Arson became a major problem in the 1970s in New York, rising from just 1 percent of fires in the 1960s to over 7 percent of fires in the 1970s. The New York Times
Depopulation and arson also had pronounced effects on the city: abandoned blocks dotted the landscape, creating vast areas absent of urban cohesion and life itself. Today, we look at 41 poignant photos that capture a New York City on the brink of implosion:
Reeling from a decade of social turmoil, New York in the 1970s fell into a deep tailspin provoked by the flight of the middle class to the suburbs and a nationwide economic recession that hit New York’s industrial sector especially hard.
Rudy Giuliani as Mayor of New York. Giuliani resigned from his prosecutor position in January 1989 and began campaigning for mayor of New York City. Despite narrowly losing that year to Manhattan Borough President David Dinkins, who was sworn in as the city’s first black mayor, he eked out a victory in a 1993 rematch.
State and city legislators refused to consider his request, however, and on January 1, 2002, billionaire businessman Michael Bloomberg replaced him as mayor. Giuliani’s book, Leadership, came out that year, and he founded a security consulting firm called Giuliani Partners. On March 8, 2002, he received the Ronald Regan Presidential Freedom Award from Nancy Reagan.
President Donald Trump’s transition team hired Giuliani as an adviser in January of 2017, and he was hired as one of Trump’s personal lawyers in April of 2018.
Giuliani also stirred up controversy by dismantling an affirmative action program for minority and women contractors, trimming hundreds of thousands of New Yorkers from the welfare rolls and trying to defund the Brooklyn Museum because of an exhibit he considered anti-Catholic. Recommended for you.
During his eight years in office, violent crime was cut roughly in half and murders went down an astounding 67 percent.
Nonetheless, some New Yorkers opposed his abrasive style of governing. Giuliani ran for president in 2008 but dropped out after disappointing showings in the first few primaries.
Rudy Giuliani, Attorney to Donald Trump. Rudy Giuliani (1944-) served as the Republican mayor of New York City from 1994 until 2001. A prosecutor by trade, he presided over steep declines in both violent and quality-of-life crime.
Bilott sought help with the Tennant case from a West Virginia lawyer named Larry Winter. For many years, Winter was a partner at Spilman, Thomas & Battle — one of the firms that represented DuPont in West Virginia — though he had left Spilman to start a practice specializing in personal-injury cases. He was amazed that Bilott would sue DuPont while remaining at Taft.
The Lawyer Who Became DuPont’s Worst Nightmare. Rob Bilott was a corporate defense attorney for eight years. Then he took on an environmental suit that would upend his entire career — and expose a brazen, decades-long history of chemical pollution.
The farmer, Wilbur Tennant of Parkersburg, W.Va., said that his cows were dying left and right. He believed that the DuPont chemical company, which until recently operated a site in Parkersburg that is more than 35 times the size of the Pentagon, was responsible.
J ust months before Rob Bilott made partner at Taft Stettinius & Hollister, he received a call on his direct line from a cattle farmer. The farmer, Wilbur Tennant of Parkersburg, W.Va., said that his cows were dying left and right. He believed that the DuPont chemical company, which until recently operated a site in Parkersburg that is more than 35 times the size of the Pentagon, was responsible. Tennant had tried to seek help locally, he said, but DuPont just about owned the entire town. He had been spurned not only by Parkersburg’s lawyers but also by its politicians, journalists, doctors and veterinarians. The farmer was angry and spoke in a heavy Appalachian accent. Bilott struggled to make sense of everything he was saying. He might have hung up had Tennant not blurted out the name of Bilott’s grandmother, Alma Holland White.
The property would have been even larger had his brother Jim and Jim’s wife, Della, not sold 66 acres in the early ’80s to DuPont. The company wanted to use the plot for a landfill for waste from its factory near Parkersburg, called Washington Works, where Jim was employed as a laborer.
Written by Tara Strand on April 22, 2021. Mesothelioma specialist and thoracic surgeon Raja Flores has entered the New York City mayoral race. Dr. Flores is the Chair of the Department of Thoracic Surgery at Mount Sinai Medical Center. With his bid for mayor, he hopes to continue serving the public.
The 2021 mayoral race is already a very crowded field. Currently, there are more than 40 candidates running. The next race milestone is the Democratic and Republican primaries on June 22. Dr. Flores runs on a platform of safety, economic opportunity and equality.
In 2010, Dr. Flores was named the Chief of Thoracic Surgery at Mount Sinai Medical Center. Today, he is the chair of the department.
“Raja Flores is a son of New York City. He’s lived his life in awe of our city and those who call it home …. Raja understood the New York hustle from a young age.”. – RajaFloresNY.com.
In New York City, community boards help to deal with zoning matters, city budgets and municipal services. This ensures the interests of each neighborhood are represented by the elected city government.