Where Was Mayor Mike?
June 4, 2007
O.K., so where was Mayor Mike?
You’d think it would be political suicide for a major public
figure to blow off a major public event — especially one about
public safety. In the past, such an absence raised eyebrows, prompted
panicked excuses from underlings, or at the very least a reporter’s
question asking where in the world was the big guy.
Not today. Welcome to New York City and the privileged world of our
billionaire mayor Mike Bloomberg, who is able to jet away on his private
plane to the Caribbean or wherever and stay away, as events this weekend
indicate, as long as he wishes.
We are not certain how or where Bloomberg spent this past weekend,
though he must have been having plenty of fun. But we are certain of
one thing: he wasn’t there with Police Commissioner Ray Kelly and
the nation’s law enforcement brain trust as they faced the cameras
Saturday afternoon to reassure New Yorkers they had thwarted the latest
terrorist plot against the city.
Oh, how the world has changed. Twenty-three years ago, Police Commissioner
Ben Ward did not show up for the largest mass murder in New York’s
history, the Palm Sunday massacre. Ward was a no-show even though all
the top dogs in his own police department and in the mayor’s office — Mayor
Ed Koch included — trooped out to Brooklyn, where ten people (many
of them women and small children) had been fatally shot.
Was Ward’s appearance at the crime scene necessary and essential?
From a tactical standpoint, no. But it was symbolic. His absence sent
the message that he didn’t care about one of the worst crimes in
city history.
Worse, both the NYPD and City Hall downplayed his absence, first saying
he was on vacation with no contact number, then explaining that his absence
was no big deal.
It was only when a reporter — none other than Your Humble Servant — badgered
department spokeswoman Alice T. McGillion that the truth emerged. Ward
had been on a three-day bender with a girlfriend, traveling to motels
between Baltimore and Washington. The department couldn’t locate
him for three days — until he called from New Jersey, where his
car had broken down, and asked the NYPD to transport him and the girlfriend
back to the city.
Flash forward to this past weekend. On Saturday afternoon, the city’s — and
some of the nation’s — top echelon of law enforcement officials
all turned out for a news conference. They announced they had foiled
a plot by four suspected Muslim extremists — one an American citizen
living in Brooklyn, all with ties to Caribbean Muslims — to blow
up John F. Kennedy Airport. Three of the suspects were in custody. A
fourth was being hunted.
But one top official was neither seen nor heard from — New York
City Mayor Michael Bloomberg.
And, it appears, not one newspaper questioned the propriety of his
absence.
Was Bloomberg’s appearance in New York, like Ward’s 23
years before, necessary and essential? From a tactical standpoint, no.
But again, it was symbolic. His absence showed he didn’t consider
the terrorism arrests important enough to cut short his weekend in Bermuda — or
wherever he was and where God only knows what he was doing.
Bloomberg had to have known as early as Friday evening that the news
conference might interrupt his frolicking because that’s when the
FBI arrested the three suspects and informed the NYPD. (Normally, the
ranking NYPD man at the Joint Terrorism Task Force — [the group
of police detectives and FBI agents that made the arrests] — notifies
the police commissioner’s office while the FBI press office notifies
the police department’s office of public information.)