Perdido 03

Perdido 03

Monday, September 16, 2013

Fred Dicker Says Cuomo And De Blasio Won't Get Along

From Fred Dicker's radio mic to God's ears:

Gov. Cuomo and all-but-certain Democratic mayoral candidate Bill de Blasio are on a collision course certain to explode next year — over taxes, class warfare, charter schools, and Brooklyn’s Long Island College Hospital — if de Blasio is elected mayor, insiders agree.

What’s more, the widely made claim that Cuomo and de Blasio will, despite their differences, get along well because they’re old friends and political allies dating back to de Blasio’s days working for Cuomo, then the federal housing secretary, is false because the two “have had serious tensions over many years,’’ said a source who knows both men.

“Things aren’t all love and kisses between the two of them. There’s a lot of history there,’’ said the source.

While aides to Cuomo insist the relationship with de Blasio is close and supportive dating back to their work together the late 1990s, the source said Cuomo had done little to help advance de Blasio’s rise from City Council member to public advocate — even when that help was desired and could have been important.

De Blasio’s left-of-center campaign platform, which has frightened many in the city’s business community, calls for higher taxes on the wealthy, more subsidies for the State University’s money-losing and, in the state’s view, unneeded Long Island College Hospital, and, in a position favored by the United Federation of Teachers, hostility toward charter schools.

By contrast, Cuomo, elected as a “moderate’’ Democrat in 2010 and facing re-election next year, claims to favor tax cuts and efforts to reverse the state’s notorious unfriendly-to-business climate, while backing the state Health Department’s goal of eliminating unneeded hospital beds.

Cuomo has also infuriated the UFT by championing education reform, having just recently urged the “death penalty’’ for failing public schools.

“If de Blasio is mayor the sparks will fly in January when he tries to get his agenda including a tax hike on the wealthy passed the governor and the Legislature and finds he can’t,’’ said a longtime lobbyist who represents New York City interests.

Added another Albany insider, “De Blasio is in the Barack Obama, left-of-center mold, while Cuomo has presented himself as a Bill Clinton-type more moderate Democrat. It’s definitely a clash of claimed philosophies.’’

Ironically, Republican mayoral candidate Joseph Lhota, whom Cuomo once chose to head the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, is widely viewed as closer to the governor’s positions than de Blasio is.

I don't want de Blasio working with Cuomo - because if de Blasio is working with Cuomo, that means he's selling out working class and middle class people to the 1%, just the way Cuomo has.

Sure, I want de Blasio to get his tax hike from Albany so he can apply the money to universal pre-K and after school programs.

But I don't want him to get that tax hike while caving on other issues like hospitals, charter schools, affordable housing and the like.

You can bet that if de Blasio is working well with Cuomo, it means he's caving in to Cuomo on those issues, not the other way around.

So I'm happy to see an adversarial relationship between the two here.

It means somebody's saying "No!" to Cuomo.

God knows, that hasn't happened too often in the past three years.

Dicker says even though Cuomo and Lhota are closer in ideologies than Cuomo and de Blasio, Cuomo is expected to endorse de Blasio as soon as the vote count is complete.

I say, Cuomo should endorse Lhota.

That would be better for all involved.

Let's dispense with the sham that Cuomo is a "Democrat" once and for all and let him put his true face out to the public.

Won't happen, of course, but it would be the best thing for all of us.

4 comments:

  1. "Added another Albany insider, “De Blasio is in the Barack Obama, left-of-center mold, ......"

    Hmmm, what planet is this Albsny insider on?

    Our Corporate paid for and owned president .....sure as heck hope that DeBlasio doesn't do an Obama.

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    1. I know, I know. Who in their right mind thinks Obama is a liberal? Corporate sell out through and through.

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  2. Let's keep in mind that a politician is a politician. deBlasio does not walk on water nor have Disney bluebirds singing around his head. We can only cross our fingers and hope he sends charters either packing from co-locations or charges them a significant rent.

    If you saw the speech, deBlasio praises the governor, but what happens in public and in private, we shall see. I supported de Blasio and will continue to do so, but after my disillusionment with other Dems, especially those who turned their backs on teachers, I can only hope for the best.

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    1. I totally agree with you. I simply meant that if de Blasio and Cuomo are on good terms and working together, it probably means that de Blasio has caved to Cuomo, since Cuomo seems to think he is too important to ever cave to anybody else on policy or issues.

      BTW, I fully expect de Blasio to sell us out a la Obama.

      The thing is, we know that Thompson, with Tisch as his co-chair, would have been a disaster for us.

      And Quinn and Weiner would have been even worse.

      Liu would have been great but there was no chance.

      That leaves de Blasio.

      His laid out a pretty progressive agenda to run on.

      We can try and hold him accountable to that if and when he sells it out.

      As always, hope to be wrong.

      I hope there is no sell out.

      But it pays to be cynical about these matters.

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