Still, de Blasio acknowledged that, after Bratton gave him the name of Tucker, he phoned Sharpton, who said he was just about to enter — where else but — the White House, and ran Tucker's name by him.”
Justifying his call to Sharpton, the Mayor said that Sharpton was the nation's most prominent civil rights leader. He ignored the fact that Sharpton is also the most polarizing figure in the city and is despised at all levels of the police department.
We already know that Sharpton's former spokeswoman, Rachel Noerdlinger, is McCray's chief of staff. We also know that she violated city rules by failing to list in her disclosure form that she lives with a convicted murderer and drug-dealer who has posted anti-police rants and racked up hundreds of dollars in parking fines while driving Noerdlinger to and from work.
No big deal, said de Blasio of these lapses.
Bratton's supporters made out that he had successfully manoevered his way through this racial thicket.
“We won,” said a Bratton supporter. “Bratton got rid of Banks who he felt was an impediment to his running the department.”
They added that Bratton was shrewd enough to have someone make a call to the White House — where Tucker had worked for Obama — and that the White House then called de Blasio saying that Tucker was legit.
Bratton himself said that, despite calls for his resignation, “I'm not going anywhere. For those trying to push me out the door, you'd better start pushing harder.”
For those watching the past couple of weeks' events, one had to wonder how long he meant it for.