Ed Koch, the Iconic New York City Mayor Credited With Reviving the Big Apple, Dead at 88
The mayor who "gave New York City back its morale"
Ed Koch, the iconic New York City mayor and central figure in the Big Apple's comeback from the urban crisis of the 1970s, passed away this morning from congestive heart failure at the age of 88.
Taking office in 1978, Koch inherited a city with a soaring murder rate, a declining population, and on the brink of bankruptcy. He quickly gained a reputation as "liberal with sanity" for his willingness to stand up to special interests, including the city's powerful municipal unions.
Koch's brash showmanship and upbeat demeanor helped dispel the sense of inevitable decline that had taken hold of New York City by the late 1970s.
Nick Gillespie sat down with "Hizzoner" back in April 2011 for a wide-ranging discussion about his time in office, his sexuality, the years he spent living in a rent-controlled apartment, and much more.
Here's the original text:
In 1978, New York City was crumbling and the leading indicator of America's seemingly irreversible decline. The South Bronx, once a thriving middle-class neighborhood, had became a national symbol of urban horror. From 1960 to 1980, New York's murder rate tripled. Out-of-control spending had brought the city to the brink of bankruptcy, leading to a state takeover of its finances. The city's subway was plauged by crime, graffiti, and equipment breakdowns.
On July 13th, 1977, the city reached its nadir when a 24-hour blackout gave way to mass looting. Bushwick, a working-class neighborhood in Brooklyn, was practically burned to the ground.
Then in 1978, Edward Irving Koch became New York's 105th Mayor.
A veteran congressman from Manhattan, Koch's chutzpah was exactly what the city needed. A self-proclaimed "liberal with sanity," Koch took on special interests, he put the city's finances back in order, and showed that it was not only possible to govern but to have fun doing it.
Koch gained a national reputation by being the quintessential New Yorker: A Bronx-born ethnic whose disparaging remarks about life outside the city may well have sunk his 1981 bid for the governor's mansion in Albany. Long presumed to be gay, Koch kept mum about his personal life while pushing for social tolerance. His symbolic and practical role in the Big Apple's multi-decade renaissance is as huge as his appetite for publicity.
Since losing his bid for a fourth term in 1989, Koch has been a tireless dilettante. He's written books and hosted his own radio show. He was Judge Wapner's first replacement on the People's Court. He started a nonprofit to clean up corruption in the state capital. He turned his passion for film into an avocation as a movie reviewer, first for a community paper called the West Side Spirit, and now on the YouTube Channel, The Mayor at the Movies.
Reason.tv's Nick Gillespie sat down with Mayor Koch at his office in Midtown in April 2011 for a wide ranging discussion about rent control, the Tea Party, Donald Trump, his sexuality, whether Gov. Andrew Cuomo coined the phrase "Vote for Cuomo not the Homo," his memories of World War II, and how he "gave New York City back its morale" (as the late Sen. Daniel Moynihan put it).
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What a shame. I always really liked Ed.
Yep, he was a true relic, one of the last of the sane democrats left. I imagine he probably found the Obamites to be the revolting cretins that they are.
Always like Ed Koch for his candor and the respect he treated alternative views. Also he called Jimmy Carter a miserable human being, which is doubly good in my book.
Apparently the A.M. Links died with him. Speaking of death, the Sandy Hook Children's Chior will be singing the national anthem at the Superbowl. I want to know if the Whitehouse had anything to do with it.
*choir*
If there's anything that grinds my gears it's a god damned children's choir.
What a puntastic name, Ed "Loves The" Koch, RIP... not that i know much about this dude.
Including how to pronounce his name: "Kotch", not "Kock".
A veteran congressman from Manhattan, Koch's chutzpah was exactly what the city needed.
WTF? When was Koch's chutzpah elected to Congress?
I guess he's no longer doin' too well. Or is it too early?
If I ever use the phrase "passed away" for "died," pass me away.
Yeah, "passed away" is a particularly vulgar euphemism which has no place in a wholesome Libertarian magazine.
I hereby cancel my subscription.
Heard on Bloomberg this morning that Koch had the actual "Nuts!" note from Bastogne framed in his office.
Beyond awesome.
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Tam usually gets it right. However, in this case, I think it's worth lamenting that NYC's former leaders weren't absolute statist narcissists with napoleonic complexes, desiring rule over those outside of their jurisdiction. Koch definitely wasn't "great" by mayoral standards, but he's several orders of magnitude better than its more recent mayors.
I no longer even travel to NYC anymore.
I am going to deviate from party line a bit here and say that while I liked Ed Koch as a person, I don't think he was that great as a mayor. He may have been about as good a mayor as will ever be elected in NYC, unfortunately, but that doesn't necessarily make him a "good" mayor.
Under Koch, the city was still dirty, dangerous, and suffering from a severe homelessness problem. He was a bit too law-and-order for my taste, but it didn't seem to have much effect on crime. He was not great at handling racial issues; I appreciate his bluntness and honesty, but I'm not sure he had the tact to manage a racially diverse population like NYC's.
I think the handling of the AIDS crisis was also a mistake: the city closed the gay bathhouses to try and stem the spread of AIDS (like gay men were just going to stop having sex? Hell, it probably just sent the whole scene underground, where it was that much harder to reach) and then the straight sex clubs had to be closed too, despite not having been linked to the spread of AIDS, because it would be discriminatory to only close the gay ones!
His real highlight was on budgetary issues, since we might have ended up like Detroit without him.
That lede doesn't do justice to Nick's interview with Koch. Really enjoy NG's ability to balance diplomacy with candor and aggressive questioning.
The 2011 interview was excerpted on NPR this morning:
YouBet: Bess Myerson outs Ed Koch post mortem http://littlebiggy.org/viewSubject/4755909
@ 07:30 in... "enter DELICATELY"?!?! New Yorkers should be so lucky.
You should have also mentioned WHY NYC stumbled towards bankruptcy. I diagnosed that years before that: then-Mayor John Lindsay caved to any and every wage and benefit demand from any and all unions during his time in office. They were doomed to bankruptcy after the second or third round of "negotiations."
Rest in peace, Ed, but you were a true nanny-stater, just like the current Mayor. I'm SO glad I don't live under a regime like that!
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Census reports of 2010 show that 2.6 million people live in Brooklyn, but as a born resident it is plain to see that those figures are grossly underestimated. The real count is closer to ten million; most are visa jumpers, assorted illegals and human debris. These refugees are happy to be in America even if they are treated as canned sardines and packed into filthy apartments and converted garages. The more fortunate are employed in fruit/fish markets and paid in left over rot which is later traded for living space. It will take many decades until these 10 million cellar dwellers come out of Brooklyn's shadows and get some sunlight.
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