The Unmaking of a Mayor. William F. Buckley Jr.

The Unmaking of a Mayor - William F. Buckley Jr.


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postpone for another occasion a discussion of the difficulties of introducing radical analysis into a general campaign. He did agree that I had an opportunity the major candidates did not have, but also he agreed that I had certain difficulties in communicating those ideas, in any substantial detail, to the general public. We met before I made the talk which included the remarks above, which were not, so far as I am aware, relayed by any of the communications media (granted, all except for a single daily newspaper were, at that moment, struck down). But I noticed—and I say this fully understanding that Mr. White’s professional commitments to the two major candidates necessarily dictated the allocation of space in his article for Life—that he ended up in his own piece dealing with the subject as follows: “Knowing himself to be absolved from the dreadful prospect of actually governing the city, Buckley revels in candor: he can muse aloud that New York would be better off if it had less, rather than more, people—if it shrank from eight million to six and a half million.” And then his section on my candidacy concludes with a passage which, if I may revel in candor, is a cliché which political typewriters can reel off by depressing a single key: “What, in effect, asks Mr. Buckley, is the purpose of city government? Is it really to care for the worn and the tired, the huddled and hopeless, the refugees who, today, come from the Black South or Spanish Puerto Rico, as 90 years ago they came from Europe to pass through Castle Garden and Ellis Island? Has the city—has, indeed, all American government—promised too much? Should government, therefore, cut and run from its promises?”

      Letter to the author, December 2, 1965.

      Ah, the ideological coda, how it afflicts us all! And how paralyzingly sad that someone who can muse over the desirability of converting New York City into an independent state should, having climbed to such a peak, schuss down the same old slope, when the mountains beckon him on to new, exhilarating runs.

      1. Richard Whalen, A City Destroying Itself (New York: William Morrow, 1965).

      2. The (private) New York Community Council’s Budget Standard Service sets $6,400 per year as the acceptable income for a family of four. The median income of New York’s white population is $6,600; of the nonwhite population, $4,440.

      3. Letter to the author, December 2, 1965.

       The Political Scene The Political Scene

      Besides, assuming it were organizationally possible, around what is the Republican Party of New York to organize? The notion that it should organize around certain political ideas different from ideas regnant within the Democratic Party appears to have been discarded as, simply, ridiculous. Would the GOP run on the integrity of its racial stock? It sometimes appeared to be doing so, complained Mr. Leonard Hall, a highly competent political technician, though not competent enough to have secured for himself the Republican nomination for Governor in 1958, at a time when Rockefeller also desired it. Hall added his voice to the chorus of breast-beaters after the ignominious defeat of Senator Goldwater. “We have permitted our party,” he said, “to become too exclusive. We have been trying to elect national candidates with the descendants of the people who came over on the Mayflower, and that boat just wasn’t big enough. . . . Our party gives the appearance of being an organization of white Anglo-Saxon Protestants.” (The WASP vote in New York City is 12 per cent, somewhat less than the Negro vote alone.)


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