Mayor Grasso? Or Waiting for Ray Kelly
April 18, 2011
So now we have the ex-stock-exchange's $140 million man, Richard Grasso, vowing to run for mayor if his old nemesis, Eliot Spitzer, decides to run -- and promising not to run if Ray Kelly does.
Grasso may be the first millionaire candidate with no governmental experience to publicly ponder running for mayor when Michael Bloomberg's term ends in 2013. He surely won't be the last.
He joins some undistinguished and, as yet, undeclared candidates that include City Council Speaker Christine Quinn; City Comptroller John Liu, Congressman Anthony Weiner; Liu's predecessor as Comptroller William Thompson and others even more undistinguished and unworthy of mention here.
But it was Grasso's remarks about Police Commissioner Kelly that bear repeating. He called Kelly "the man who really should be the mayor."
And compared to the above contenders, Grasso may be right.
Granted, Grasso is an NYPD buff. In 2000, this column awarded him its Boob of the Month award when in the midst of the trial of four officers charged with firing 44 shots that killed the unarmed African Amadou Diallo, Grasso pronounced the NYPD βthe greatest police force in the history of civilization.β
Grasso was also a heavy contributor to the non-profit, formerly independent Police Foundation, which Kelly has turned into his own professional slush fund. The foundation paid at least $30,000 between 2006 and 2009 for Kelly's meals and other expenses at the Harvard Club, where he hobnobs with people whom he refuses to identify. Since 2006, it has paid nearly $400, 000 to a marketing consultant who became Kelly's personal public relations man when Kelly considered running for mayor in 2009.
Yet compared to candidates Quinn, Liu, Weiner and Thompson, Grasso has a point about Kelly's qualifications. None of the above comes close to his experience -- or his successes.
Congressman Weiner is a hothead. Speaker Quinn is nothing more, or less, than a lunch-bucket pol. When Comptroller Liu assumed office, one of his more charming peculiarities was his insistence that subordinates rise when he entered a room.
As for Thompson, perhaps his most defining moment, after a lackluster spin as Comptroller, was coming within five percentage points of defeating Michael Bloomberg during the 2009 mayoral race. Thompson's near-win, however, had less to do with his abilities than with voter anger at Mayor Mike for violating his pledge to serve only two terms, then buying off enough City Council members to sanction his run for a third.
Contrast these nonentities with Kelly. In his ten years as police commissioner under Bloomberg, he has been a beacon of constancy, while Bloomberg's reputation has headed south and he increasingly sounded and acted like the snarky rich guy that he is.
For all his micromanaging and egocentric flaws, Kelly appears to the public as someone disciplined and down to earth. He has never spoken or acted in public like anything but a guy in total control.
That perception has helped him weather one crisis after another, including three fatal police shootings of unarmed black men.
While promising reforms in police procedure after each shooting, Kelly has produced none β at least none that he has shared with the public.
Kelly appears to be on top of a bourgeoning ticket-fixing scandal, said to involve no fewer than 400 cops and a cluster of PBA delegates. He also appears to have weathered a crisis involving the doctoring of crime statistics that many feel is widespread throughout the city. After whistleblower cop Adrian Schoolcraft of the 81st precinct in Brooklyn reported the downgrading of crimes, a police posse took him from his apartment and had him incarcerated in the psychiatric ward of Jamaica Hospital for six days.