Goodbye and Good Riddance to Bill de Blasio, a Terrible Mayor on Every Issue He Tripped Over
The best thing you could say about Bill de Blasio was that he was good for a laugh.

New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio, a bumbling punchline of a politician, is finally leaving office at the end of the year, and what better time to give the outgoing mayor a good old-fashioned Bronx cheer?
It's tempting to review de Blasio's seven-year tenure and focus on the clownish moments: accidentally killing a groundhog on Groundhog Day; dressing up in Spock's blue Starfleet uniform and calling himself Captain Kirk; hitting his favorite gym while the rest of the city was under onerous COVID-19 lockdowns.
But then you'd miss the spectacular failures and hypocrisies of his policy initiatives.
De Blasio campaigned on a broad, progressive platform highlighting economic inequality and promising to improve police relations. The hapless de Blasio then managed to completely alienate rank-and-file NYPD officers while simultaneously enraging police reform advocates. Like previous administrations, de Blasio's office defended and expanded police secrecy laws that shielded misconduct files and other records from being released to the public. After the police killing of Eric Garner, he told a story about giving his biracial son, "the talk" about police, which enraged police unions. The mayor never forgot the sting of having NYPD officers turn their backs on him during a funeral for two murdered cops. In the years that followed, he was content to be the doormat for the NYPD.
For example, de Blasio didn't have much to say last summer as NYPD was caught on camera in dozens of instances clubbing and attacking protesters. His weak excuse was that he hadn't seen any of the viral videos that were coming out nightly.
This all wouldn't be so galling—every other New York City mayor in recent history has done the same—if de Blasio wasn't on the record decrying this very sort of thing.
Before he became mayor, de Blasio was the New York City public advocate, an elected position that acts as ombudsman or watchdog (or, to be more honest, a perch for an aspiring pol to take swipes at the current mayor). De Blasio released a "transparency report card" on New York City agencies' compliance with the state's Freedom of Information Law. The report found that about 10 percent of requests to city agencies were simply ignored. The NYPD received an "F" grade for its habit of ignoring nearly a third of all public records requests it received.
But after de Blasio became mayor, all of those high-minded concerns about accountability and transparency disappeared. He tried to hide thousands of emails between him and an adviser. The NYPD's willful violations of New York's Freedom of Information Law continued unabated, and often supported in court by the mayor's office.
When the New York City Department of Investigation began looking into whether de Blasio used his security detail improperly for personal and political purposes (the agency concluded he did), an NYPD officer tried to obstruct the investigation.
The mayor was hostile to just about every other issue Reason cares about. He has a longstanding vendetta against charter schools. He loathed the concept of private property and threatened to seize buildings from landlords. "Look, if I had my druthers, the city government would determine every single plot of land, how development would proceed," he once said.
(Meanwhile, in 2018 the Justice Department sued the New York City Housing Authority, claiming that city officials systematically worked to cover up squalid conditions in public housing projects, including hiding test results on lead paint exposure.)
On a lighter note, there was the time de Blasio ran for president. It's hard to pick the best moment from de Blasio's embarrassing 2020 presidential campaign, but for my money, it was when he traveled to Miami and approvingly quoted Che Guevara.
De Blasio's candidacy was so ill-conceived and poorly executed that he polled at 0 percent in New York City. New Yorkers may be gluttons for punishment when it comes to electing mayors, but even they didn't want to inflict de Blasio on the rest of the country.
And that was all before de Blasio's handling of the COVID-19 pandemic, where he, for example, threatened to have Hasidic Jews arrested for gathering at the funeral of a rabbi. Or who could forget when he repeatedly asserted, contrary to available evidence and to the annoyance of his own health department, that only symptomatic people could transmit the virus?
His only real flashes of political acumen were when he was ribbing disgraced former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, a thin-skinned blowhard and fellow authoritarian who couldn't help but take the bait.
De Blasio's "progressive" tendencies only manifested themselves in authoritarian diktats against New Yorkers who weren't powerful enough to fight back. He never had a real interest in taking on the injustices perpetrated by the government he ostensibly controlled. The best thing you could say about Bill de Blasio was that he was good for a laugh, but the joke got old far before he was term-limited out of Gracie Mansion. Goodbye and good riddance.
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And yet, the fine people of NYC re-elected this buffoon when they had the chance. This alone speaks volumes about the collective IQ of NYC.
Good and hard.
It seems they're always afraid of winding up with someone worse. And then they do, so they're right.
Eric X is off to as good start.
I came here to say the EXACT thing. Its hard for me to feel bad about bullshit in NYC when they elect, and re-elect, people like this.
The same collective IQ of those in Chicago, Portland and San Fran.
Low IQ equals liberal thinking.
Local news. No one in the real world cares about New York.
Very nice summary, C.J. With a bit of tweaking it would make a great routine for a stand-up comedian.
My favorite gaffe was in March 2020 when he encouraged people to go out and spend a night on the town and not be afraid of CoVID-19, and then the next morning ordered all those businesses closed.
On the fourth day of Kwaanza Dr. Karenga gave them hos
detergent up their nose,
a vice to crush their toes,
karate baton blows,
and a whipping with electrical cords.
Well at least he got rid of the groundhogs and ponies.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/66890686@N02/51729268896/in/dateposted-public/
Move put of NY dummy.
It's bad enough that you cite Reason here, but to do such a boorish thing--and be so wrong.
De Blasio is a nightmare, but trying to give yourselves a pat on the back because his confused pravda was confused when the people putting out the pravda were trying to confuse is just sad.
In true NYC fashion let’s call out the word ‘Progressive’ for what it is. Communist. It’s out and proud amoung BLM, Jacobin- Democratic Socialists, CRT. Stop the word play soft landings. De Blasio is a communist and that’s all there is to it.
No, communists at least believe the government will wither away (once we've all become true 'soviet man' and no longer need it). Progressives think government is the solution to everything, and always want more of it.
Statists, then?
Any Communists with a role in government believe the government will wither away the same way half-hearted Christians believe in the Second Coming - it's theoretically out there in the distant future, but no one expects to actually see it, and they'd be appalled if it actually began to happen.
The only way an actual Communist regime will wither away is if it manages to so thoroughly ruin the country that no government service can continue to function - not even taxation. And the result is not a Marxist or even an anarchist paradise, but Somalia: a vicious dysfunctional society of gang lords become warlords - hundreds of tiny would-be governments fighting it out and trying to steal what they need to survive from everyone, including their own lower ranks.
De Blasio's value is as an example of the left's complete and total incompetence.
He is a buffoon. New Yorkers have elected some doozies.
Ever since Boss Tweed.
"videos showing police officers using batons and shoving peaceful protesters after the 8 p.m. curfew"
How convenient you left that part out C.J. How do you expect the cops to clear the street of thousands of people?
White progressives are the worst people in America and a plague worse than Covid.
William Wilhelm/DeBlasio is leaving but not before he gets one last lick in to the people of the city. They deserve it.
I have no sympathy for those people much like Portland, San Fran, Chicago, Minneapolis, or L.A. The people voted for those liberal clowns and they got what they voted for, good and hard.
Between the Cuomos and Wilhelm, they've managed to take the city and the state down the rat hole that is now creating an exodus not only from the city but from the state itself. The three of them are excellent examples of bloated egos, massive narcissism and near psychopathy but I guess those are the qualities of all politicians.
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It's notable that a city full of corporatists, making trillions from government and business working in concert with each other, wants more government power over people.
It's their business model for achieving greater power and wealth.
I've been twice. It is such a shit city full of pretentious people buying into a lie. Emporers new clothes.
International Finance. That’s slipping away. Goldman CEO stated a few weeks ago that just because the city has always been the hub of international finance, doesn’t mean it always will be.
That's just it, though. For a very long time, New York had a lock on a few potentially lucrative careers (high end financial services. advertising, theater, and a few others). The technology of the time made remote working a lot less productive and companies, probably rightly, perceived a network effect from being around all the other businesses in the industry. You might have been able to find work outside of NYC in those fields. But, it would likely be significantly lower on the totem pole. So, in a real way, the city really did have them trapped there. They made sure the suburban commuters got the full brunt of the city's taxes. So, they could let some of the middle-affluent get things like schools and police protection that the city was more interested in providing freebies to their constituencies than worrying about.
The pandemic should have been a wake-up call for everyone involved. I think it really proved that, for a lot of these middle affluent, remote work is a very real possibility. And for their employers, it really doesn't mean that much of a loss of productivity. For the political class of NY, this means that they have to, well, I would say revise their value proposition, but develop their value proposition is probably more accurate.
The problem is they still have to have offices there because the large hedge funds and traders rely on quickest to purchase algorithms during stock shifts. They make very small profits on millions of transactions by buying changes first then reselling quickly. So many jobs there solely about increasing the speed of their connections and algorithms to the exchange.
Stock exchange would be so much more just with buying windows to a highest bidder. Highest bid in a 30s window or something.