Yassky Responds

After much criticism from all sides, David Yassky has issued a statement regarding his opposition turned support of the Bloomberg Putsch. He had responded personally to my original criticism of his vote, but this is his official statement for public consumption. I promised to post his opinion when we discussed my open letter, so here it is:

I am sure you know by now that the City Council voted last week to approve Mayor Bloomberg's proposal to lengthen the term limit for City officeholders from eight years to 12 years.

I want you to know that after a great deal of thought, I chose to support the Mayor's proposal. This was the most difficult decision I have faced in the City Council – more than congestion pricing, the garbage plan, or the post-9/11 tax increase – and I want to explain why I believe it was the right choice.

Like many people, my initial reaction to the Mayor's proposal was outrage. While I have always held that the eight-year term limit was bad policy, it was a policy put in place by referendum and the fairest way to change it was by a subsequent referendum. I was saddened by the Mayor's eagerness to bypass the voters, and I strongly disagreed with his assertion that a referendum was not feasible. Most important, I knew that a Council vote to change term limits would confirm many people's most cynical suspicions about politics and politicians.

Following the Mayor's announcement, I advocated both publicly and privately, to the Mayor, the Speaker and my colleagues in the Council, that we should put the term limits question before the voters. I argued to the Mayor directly that he was making a mistake, and that he and the Council could not afford to undermine our moral legitimacy at precisely the time when we will be asking New Yorkers to sacrifice for the greater good.

As the vote neared, it became increasingly clear to me that the Mayor would not relent, and I focused intently on the choice before me. I had dozens – probably hundreds – of conversations with friends and constituents, and heard very strong feelings on both sides of the issue. Many people were appalled that the Council would even consider overturning a referendum, and many – I was surprised by how many – said simply: "I want to keep Mayor Bloomberg."

These conversations had a deep impact on my thinking. While I have worked well with the Mayor and I hold his Administration in high regard, I certainly don't believe he is the only person capable of leading the City over the coming years. But I do know that we are in a period of extraordinary challenge, and that voters may well value stability and experience in the City government. I became convinced that the right choice at this point in time was to leave open for voters the option of choosing to continue the Bloomberg Administration next November.

Even so, I pressed the referendum argument to the very end. Over the Mayor's objections, I introduced an amendment to the term limits bill that would have put the issue before the voters in a special election early next year. Many of my colleagues supported the amendment, and it was vigorously debated on the floor – but it lost narrowly. That left the stark choice: As much as I was loath to override the expressed will of the voters, I was unwilling to leave in place a term limits policy which I believe is bad in general and especially at this time.

Finally, I know that some on the other side of this debate have accused Council Members of acting out of self-interest in voting to change term limits. For my part, I can say unequivocally that I saw no personal benefit in the Mayor's proposal. As you know, I have been planning to run for City Comptroller next year, and have felt confident about my prospects for success. That campaign may now be foreclosed, as the current Comptroller is eligible to run for reelection.

I knew that many supporters would disagree with this vote. In making my final decision, one particular conversation stuck with me. In the supermarket, a few days before the vote, an older man approached me, told me he had voted for me, and told me he didn't like the term limits extension. But then he said: "Whatever you do, I trust you to do the right thing." I do believe that my constituents want me to look diligently at the issues before me and follow my best judgment about what is right for our City and for our community.

As difficult as this vote was, I know that still more wrenching choices lie ahead: closing hospitals versus fewer teachers, raising taxes versus cutting cops. On all of these issues, as with the term limits vote, I will take my responsibilities as a City Council Member with the utmost seriousness, and will work as hard as I possibly can to serve in the best interests of the people I represent.

Let me just say that it was this kind of political triangulation that damaged the Democrats for so long. This was about overturning the will of the people. It was not about term limits per se because this is a one time extension specifically stated to be for the benefit of Bloomberg with the City Council thrown in to give them incentive to back the Bloomberg Putsch. It also is not about the economy because Bloomberg was here all along as the economy crumbled, is here now and will be here for another year...yet the economy is still crumbling. What does extending his term have to offer us in terms of economic recovery? I have pointed out that is almost as absurd as suggesting that the economic collapse should be an excuse for a third Bush term.

This was about Bloomberg wanting to be declared Tsar and if the vote of the people has to be pushed aside, then so be it. Yassky has sided with this power grab for and by Bloomberg over the vote of the people. This puts him in with Scalia and Thomas on the Supreme Court who set aside the votes of the people in a one time decision to have the Supreme Court appoint Bush president in 2000. How does this differ except it is a legislative rather than judicial "fuck you" to the voters?

http://dailygotham.com/blog/mole333/yassky_responds
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Gothanonymous Reader's picture

He's a Bullshit Artist. Let

He's a Bullshit Artist. Let him go and have an independent Lie Detector test & let's see the results publicly. He did it for his own self interest.

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Gothanonymous Reader's picture

still stinks

I think it says a lot about Yassky that of all the opinions expressed to him by his constituents, the one that stuck with him (per his own admission) is the one that gives him a free pass to do whatever he wants. I, on the other hand, no longer trust Mr. Yassky at all.

Joy

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Gothanonymous Reader's picture

Newsday Asks You To Vote On Yassky's Naked Ambition

Check out this link and vote for Yassky!

http://weblogs.newsday.com/news/local/longisland/politics/blog/2008/10/n...

Newsday is running a poll to see who has the most naked ambition: David Yassky, Sarah Palin, or Suffolk County Reps. Steve Israel and Tom Bishop.

I'm going to just keep refreshing and voting for Yassky. I hope everyone else does the same.

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Gothanonymous Reader's picture

yassky is lying

I hope the voters don't cry for Yassky's agony. I'm voting for Jo Anne Simon, if she decides to run. Integrity is the key word here.

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Gothanonymous Reader's picture

re: Joanne Simon

Joanne Simon is a BIG HYPOCRITE!
She always does whats in her best interest and likes to make everyone think she is a true reformer.

Start interviewing those that really know her.

She is a cameleon.

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ROSALIE907's picture

I Knew What Yassky Would Do

And posted here before the vote last week. I even got an email from someone asking me why I thought that he'd vote with Bloomberg and I said that anyone who would move into a district to run in a Congressional race was selfserving and would do anything to stay in office (not in these words but you get the meaning). Yassky is a phoney a limeball and a liar. He was on ABC's Close Up Sunday morning and I'm sorry I only caught the end of the program when Diana Williams asked what kind of reaction he was getting from his district. He said he attended a few meetings (was he at CBID Thursday night?) and got mixed but mostly good and that people want to have the choice.

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mole333's picture

"Mostly Good"

Well, he got SLAMMED at CBID's forum. And I hear he got slammed even harder at IND, which once was Yassky friendly. In fact, remember that IND endorsed Yassky in his run for Conrgess...yet they are pissed at him now. Even the NY Times ran a piece that focused on the widespread criticism he was getting. If he considers that "mostly good" he has more disdain for his constituents than I thought.

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ROSALIE907's picture

Thanks Mole

I tried to get a video of the program but couldn't locate it yesterday. I figured CBID would slam him (what balls of him to even show up just 2 or 3 hours after the vote) but IND kind of surprises me.

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