New York – Giuliani’s Fiery Rhetoric Clouds Legacy Of ‘America’s Mayor’

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    FILE - In this Nov. 28, 2006 file photo, former New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani gestures while speaking at the Riga Conference, on the sidelines of a NATO summit, in Riga. Giuliani was lauded for driving down crime and for his leadership after the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, but he has since transformed from moderate Republican mayor of an overwhelmingly Democratic city to right-wing hero. (AP Photo/Virginia Mayo, File)New York – A fully unleashed Rudolph Giuliani, free of electoral concerns and financial worries, has relentlessly criticized President Barack Obama in recent weeks, questioning the commander in chief’s love of country while placing the blame for much of society’s ills at the front door of the White House.

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    But those same inflammatory views that have been eaten up by some conservatives are significantly out of step with the prevailing political views of liberal New York City. And experts suggest they could further muddle Giuliani’s complicated legacy in the city he led for eight years, including in its darkest hours.

    “Giuliani has gotten more brazen in his rhetoric but his target audience is now the far right,” said Jamie Chandler, a political science professor at the City University of New York. “He’s no longer interested in wide appeal.”

    Always outspoken, Giuliani’s transformation from moderate Republican mayor of an overwhelmingly Democratic city to right-wing hero — one that first accelerated during his ill-fated 2008 presidential bid — was arguably never more apparent than last month when he took the stage at a fundraising dinner in Manhattan to benefit likely GOP presidential candidate Gov. Scott Walker of Wisconsin.

    “I do not believe, and I know this is a horrible thing to say, but I do not believe that the president loves America,” said Giuliani, who arrived unannounced and was unaware there were reporters in the room. “He doesn’t love you. And he doesn’t love me. He wasn’t brought up the way you were brought up and I was brought up through love of this country.”

    Giuliani — who, in a less publicized outburst, shouted “Mr. President, wake up. Come off the golf course” at an Arizona speaking event the week prior — did not back off his remarks even after they created a firestorm, dominating headlines nationally for days.

    Last week, Giuliani appeared on a New York radio show and suggested that Obama should be held responsible for disturbing events ranging from the violence that erupted in Ferguson, Missouri, after a police officer was not charged for shooting an unarmed man to a teenage brawl at a Brooklyn McDonald’s.

    “It all starts at the top. It’s the tone that’s set by the president,” the ex-mayor said.

    Giuliani’s incendiary comments angered many in the city he still calls home, including the current occupant of City Hall.

    “I find it a cheap political trick for Rudy Giuliani to question our president’s love of his country,” said Mayor Bill de Blasio, a Democrat, the day after Giuliani’s remarks at the Walker fundraiser. “That is stooping very, very low, even for him.”

    Repeated requests for an interview with Giuliani were declined and a spokeswoman for the former mayor said Giuliani will spend the rest of March traveling overseas.

    Giuliani, a former U.S. Attorney, was elected mayor in 1993 on a pledge to slash the city’s sky-high crime rate. That year, 1,946 people were murdered in the city. In 2001, Giuliani’s final year in office, that number shrank to 649.

    Giuliani was largely praised for the drop in crime but remained a divisive figure. His no-holds-barred defense of the New York Police Department, often at the expense of minority communities, drew sharp criticism. A possible Senate run was abandoned due to a cancer diagnosis. And after years of public battles and a very messy public separation from his wife — which resulted in him moving out of Gracie Mansion, the mayor’s official residence — his poll numbers sunk and many New Yorkers were eager for a change at City Hall.

    But then, one clear September day just a few months before he was to leave office, two planes flew into the World Trade Center.

    In the hours after the attacks, with President George W. Bush largely unseen, Giuliani became the face of the nation’s grief. His leadership — both inspiring and compassionate — over the following weeks was widely lauded, earning him the nickname of “America’s Mayor.”

    But his relationship with the city would soon change again.

    Giuliani played a key role in the 2004 Republican National Convention, held at Madison Square Garden, which re-nominated Bush, a deeply unpopular figure in New York. And he shifted right on a number of issues — including gun control and public funding of abortions — during his failed run for president four years later.

    Though his future electoral prospects vanished, he remained a conservative darling, a frequent guest on Fox News and a sought-after member of the political speaking circuit. He is a partner in a law firm and his consulting firm, Giuliani Partners, has significant international business. In 2007, the last time Giuliani disclosed his assets, he reported a wealth of more than $30 million.

    Now, he appears motivated by a need to stay relevant within the Republican Party and to keep driving clients to his business. But it’s also not just Giuliani who has changed since he left office.

    Thanks to wave of new arrivals (in part drawn to the drop in crime he helped create), New York has become a younger, more diverse and more liberal city. Meanwhile, much of Giuliani’s former political base — older, conservative, ethnic white voters — have either moved away or died.

    A pair of 2013 polls starkly displayed New York’s complex feelings for Giuliani. In one, Giuliani was named the city’s most successful mayor of the last 50 years. In another, a vast majority of voters said they would not vote for any candidate Giuliani endorsed.

    That fall, the GOP candidate Joe Lhota, a former Giuliani deputy mayor, was routed by de Blasio. Giuliani was only used sparingly on the campaign trail.

    Some pundits feel that Giuliani’s recent comments have cemented his dual legacy — while he could not be elected today, his performance after September 11 will always be honored.

    “His current behavior brings back memories of Giuliani being a polarizing and racially divisive figure,” said Kenneth Sherrill, political science professor emeritus at Hunter College. “That is why it was so remarkable that he became such a unifying figure after 9/11. I think he’ll be remembered for both the good and the bad.”


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    9 Comments
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    puppydogs
    puppydogs
    9 years ago

    Clouds his legacy?? If anything it makes it stronger.

    I am proud to say I was a citizen when he was the Mayor of NYC

    Avrohom Abba
    Avrohom Abba
    9 years ago

    Mr. GIULIANI is 100% correct, and many United States citizens know it!
    It’s a pleasure to listen to him because he speaks the truth.
    Mr. Obama is trying his best to weaken and embarrass this country. He does that because he feels this is a racist country, and that’s his revenge.
    It would be a dream come true if Mr. Giuliani would be our president.
    On and on dear Mr. Giuliani!!!

    9 years ago

    Mayor Giuliani speaks the truth. The looney-left is consumed with climate change and political correctness as their main issues. The rest of the country is worried about open borders, terrorism, the economy and health. obama is on the golf course too busy to worry about anything but his game. To those of you who voted for obama twice: Idiots!

    Speaksoftly
    Speaksoftly
    9 years ago

    If anyone can remember the dark days of the Crown Heights riots and the death of Yankel Rosenbaum, they will have to be honest and say that Mayor Giuliani was a transformative historical figure. There would be no Village, and Brooklyn Heights or any of the newly gentrified neighborhoods where the young,liberal but historically ignorant techies and couple are settling. The streets were dark,dirty and dangerous and the city’s future was bleak. Rudy’s harsh words and strong actions ultimately benefited everyone – ask any minority property owner in Harlem or Greenpoint. The truth is, the truth sometimes hurts and if the White House and its supporters are stung by his words, perhaps it’s because they are on target.

    thegreatone
    thegreatone
    9 years ago

    The AP with all these professors they are quoting as smart as they are they are either lying or clueless. Rudolph Giuliani was one the greatest best mayors new york had.
    Before Giuliani NY was in shambles. Citizens and business fled nyc.Thanks to him getting rid of crime people became millionaires investing in real estate.

    9 years ago

    I’m curious to know where the questionable term “America’s Mayor” came from? He is not my Mayor, any more than he is anyone else’s Mayor, pertaining to those who didn’t live within the five boroughs of NYC, from 1994-2001. I believe that his so-called leadership on 9/11/01, and in the three months following that date, were way overblown by the news media. What exactly did he do at that time, outside of having some photo sessions with firefighters and rescue workers at Ground Zero? The fact of the matter is that he became annoyed at the NYC Firefighters, when they requested additional overtime for the amount that they were spending at Ground Zero, during recovery operations. He slashed their overtime requests. When they protested at the site, he had NY’s Finest arrest them! It looked really nice on nationwide television, to see NYC cops arresting NYC firefighters at Ground Zero! Shame on Guiliani for mistreating the NYC firefighters, after what they went through!

    TexasJew
    TexasJew
    9 years ago

    I’m convinced Obama is not 100% loyal to America. He has another 16 months to further destroy us.
    Stop him now.

    SandraM
    SandraM
    9 years ago

    Love Gulianni. Greatest mayor of NYC. Would have been a great president too, if not for the extremists in the Republican party.
    He has courage and leadership, and US pride, something that Obama does not possess at all.