Is Frankenstein Alive?
April 30, 2012
Running successfully for mayor would be Police Commissioner Ray Kelly’s greatest triumph.
Running unsuccessfully could be his greatest humiliation.
Despite the cheerleading of the New York Post and the Daily News for Mayor Ray, the one city official integral to such a bid seems conspicuously unenthusiastic: Kelly’s boss — Mayor Michael Bloomberg.
Read between the lines of Bloomberg’s comments about a possible Kelly run on last week’s John Gambling radio show.
While the News wrote that Bloomberg “sang his top cop’s praises Friday — days after a poll commissioned by the Daily News found almost half of New Yorkers surveyed want him to mount a run for City Hall,” the mayor didn’t sound as though he was one of them.
“I’ve never talked to Ray Kelly about running for mayor,” Bloomberg said on Gambling’s show, according to the News. “I can just tell you that Ray Kelly has done a phenomenal job as the commissioner of the Police Department.”
Until Bloomberg, a political neophyte, all mayors attempted to exert some sort of control over their police commissioners, albeit with varying degrees of success.
Benjamin Ward disappeared for three days during the 1983 Palm Sunday massacre.
Rudy Giuliani struggled for two years to reign in Bill Bratton before firing him.
Bloomberg, on the other hand, has granted Kelly more power than any police commissioner in the city’s history — no questions asked.
Kelly has repaid Bloomberg’s trust by not creating a whiff of scandal like Ward’s and avoiding Bratton’s example by never disagreeing with his boss, at least not in public.
Yet, despite giving Kelly virtually unlimited power, Bloomberg seems to regard him as hired help: a loyal and dependable [public] servant, so long as he remains in the kitchen.
As befits a man of wealth and entitlement, to Bloomberg that kitchen is the NYPD.
When Bloomberg decided to run for a third term in 2009, derailing Kelly’s own mayoral aspirations, the commissioner tabled his own ambitions and held his tongue. Bloomberg never appeared to have noticed.
Now four years later, all sorts of New Yorkers are urging Kelly to consider running again. Kelly could end all this speculation by categorically denying interest. Yet he hasn’t.
“I certainly appreciate those comments,” Kelly said recently. “It’s obviously flattering. But I’m totally focused on what I’m doing now.”
So what’s he doing?
Is he tweaking Bloomberg, his lord and master for the past ten years, who seems to be supporting City Council Speaker Christine Quinn for City Hall?
Is Kelly merely being mischievous, basking in the attention so that people will not view him as a lame duck commissioner?
Or has Kelly grown more brazen with each compliment from Bloomberg and other New Yorkers, such as NYU Professor Mitchell Moss, who likened Kelly to Jack Bauer, the Fox TV crime-fighter who broke laws in the name of national security, and who called Kelly “our secretary of defense, head of the CIA and … chief architect rolled into one.”
No police commissioner in the city’s history has ever run for mayor, although Bratton appeared to come closest in 1997 when he considered running against Giuliani, who’d dismissed him the year before.
But by lavishing virtually limitless power and unlimited praise on Kelly, has Bloomberg created a Frankenstein, whose loyalty is no longer to his boss but to his himself and own ambitions?
“Kelly thinks he can put it together,” says a well-connected former City Hall insider. “There is no incumbent running. There is no home run hitter here. It is a very weak field.”
Yet for Kelly, a mayoral run presents risks and pitfalls, especially if he runs without Bloomberg’s blessing.
We’re not talking about Bloomberg’s lack of a formal endorsement or even a lack of financial support. Rather, the mayor has crucial leverage over Kelly.
He can force Kelly out of police headquarters earlier than Kelly may wish, saying that he cannot simultaneously run the department and run for mayor.