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

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


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opponent in New York City in his successful bid for re-election as Governor), the Republican mayoral candidate in New York City polled 15.4 per cent of the total vote, or less than 2 per cent more than the Conservative Party polled in 1965.

      For instance, Messrs. Peter Maas and Nick Thimmesch, writing on January 2, 1966 in New York, the magazine of the Sunday Tribune, in which they delivered what is commonly accepted as the official Lindsay view of the chronology of the mayoralty campaign.

      But the doctrine held together—even if, intellectually, it was at this point bursting at the seams—that John Lindsay was a free agent. And then, when Mr. Beame was designated at the primary as the Democratic candidate, his placid defense of the status quo and his unbemused affiliations with the Democratic bosses reinvigorated the notion that Mr. Lindsay was uniquely independent.

      When Fiorello La Guardia left City Hall in 1945 he proclaimed, with characteristic self-appreciation, that thanks to himself, “partisan politics, dishonesty, graft, selfishness, favoritism, have been entirely abolished.” (By contrast, the Son of God’s tenure was a bust.) But allowing for political hyperbole, La Guardia had, it was generally agreed, accomplished the principal mission for which he had been picked by the Fusionists, which was to liberate New York from a city government which had come to view politics as a form of commerce. The good feeling the name of La Guardia popularly evokes is in part owing to his personality—it was La Guardia’s color that made his reign so lastingly impressive. But for the serious minded, his name suggests high standards of public service.

      In 1933, when New York City government had been so greatly discredited by the Seabury investigations, a Fusion group looked hard for a candidate who would be anti-Tammany Hall, period. Actually, neither La Guardia nor—later—John Lindsay was “above” parties. They disdained only those servile relationships to political parties which, on public analysis, tended to diminish their appeal as idealists. La Guardia, who fought savagely for the Fusionists’ endorsement (even as Lindsay maneuvered hard for the Liberal endorsement), had been the reluctant choice of the Fusionists in part because of his unorthodox mien, in part because he was formally a Republican; and it was doubted that a candidate who suffered the liability of that connection could, in a town registered four to one Democratic, beat the Democrats. The Fusionists desired to beat the incumbent with practically anybody at all, and the candidate’s own social and political views were held to be utterly immaterial. What mattered were personal integrity and the ability to reform the administration of the city. This was fusion not in behalf of a set of social positions about government but in behalf of elementary reform. For a generation, the political professionals called the civic-minded men who went in for that kind of thing, Goo-goos.22 The Goo-goos of 1933 were determined to rescue New York, caring not at all about the ideological list of the man they were determined to make


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