Taxman
Full disclosure demands that I admit the following: I have been a friendly, but not familiar acquaintance of Councilman Michael McMahon’s younger brother, Tom, for about 25 years. Despite this, Councilman McMahon was not my preferred candidate in his 2001 race for City Council (that would have been John Del Giorno). However, in late 2002, my family moved to an apartment on Tom McMahon’s block and during one winter snowstorm, the younger Mr. McMahon leant me his snow shovel so I could dig out my car. Therefore, I am not without personal bias concerning the McMahon clan, including the Councilman, who’ve I’ve met twice, once in 2003 and once recently, for a combined period of about ten minutes. Full disclosure also demands that I admit that I first met Steve Harrison at a Christmas party in Bay Ridge for the American Heritage Democratic Club sometime between 1998 and 2002, and that in the course of a conversation lasting less than five minutes, including time for a vigorous handshake, he managed to convey to me that he was a “conservative Democrat” who opposed abortion and gay rights. Sometime thereafter, we encountered each other again when, in his capacity as Community Board Chair, Mr. Harrison was carrying then Republican-Conservative-Right to Life Councilman Marty Golden’s water in an effort to dump the traffic problems of Bay Ridge upon the streets of its poorer, darker neighbor Sunset Park. Still later, in 2002, I encountered Mr. Harrison when he was working in the campaign of Mr. Golden to oust an incumbent Democratic from a newly gerrymandered State Senate seat, so that Joe Bruno’s Republican majority could feel a little bit safer. As such, I cannot say that I am without bias in the matter of Mr. Harrison. My admittedly seat of the pants impression of both these gentlemen was that Mr. McMahon was a pleasant enough, hail-fellow-well-met attempting to convey as little of substance as possible, and that Mr. Harrison was a pompous egotistical blowhard always ready to tell you more than you wanted to know. But personal qualities aside, neither of them would get my vote in a primary for Congress in my reliably liberal home Congressional District, but both would be perfectly acceptable to me as Democratic candidates for the far more conservative 13th CD. Normally, my preference in this race would be to nominate the candidate who seemed in the best position to beat the Republican. 75% of this district is in Staten Island, an area so parochial that 75% of its residents once voted to secede from the City of New York. Mr. Harrison is from Brooklyn. Mr. McMahon is a well known and popular elected official on Staten Island. Moreover, Mr. Harrison has shown he cannot raise money, while Mr. McMahon has shown he can do so. While Mr. Harrison brags about his strong showing last time, he got beaten by 14 points in a Democratic landslide year, running far behind the rest of his party’s ticket; no one sane is predicting a top of the ticket Democratic landslide this year in the 13th CD. By every measure, Mr. McMahon is the stronger candidate. First, vendettas of this sort send an object lesson. The nasty things I’ve written about Mr. Harrison and others (Carl Kruger, Dov Hikind and the Garsons) concerning their conduct in the 2002 Golden Senate race sends a message that such action are not without consequences. Given the likelihood of similar treachery as the Democrats attempt to capture the State Senate, that message is one worth conveying. What a great narrative it would be for Steve Harrison to show that the crazed lunacy of the GOP drove him to change his politics; this is the narrative that the Democrats need to show to the country. It is the narrative of Wesley Clark (even if it is not his week), Jim Webb, and my favorite upstate Congressional candidate, Jon Powers. But, it is not the narrative of Mr. Harrison, because Mr. Harrison refuses to acknowledge that he ever evolved in his views. In 2002, Mr. Harrison gave money and sweat equity to Republican candidates for statewide office, State Senate and Congress, even after the vote authorizing the Iraq war, yet he has the brass balls to claim he was against the war along. He now makes the war the centerpiece of his campaign, but in 2002, he expects us to believe that a local zoning issue was so important that he felt compelled to hand out palm cards bearing the name of pro-war Congressman Vito Fossella. I am proud to live in a country where I'm allowed to burn my flag--it's what makes my flag worth saluting. It perturbs me that some people want to prevent desecration of the flag by instead desecrating the Bill of Rights, and I’ve taken candidates to task for it previously. Is Steve Harrison ready to make Gatemouth eat crow? Don’t hold your breathe. In that race, Mr. Harrison ran to the right of every candidate, including the Republican. The literature Mr. Harrison paid for and distributed illustrates once and for all that those “progressives” like Michael Bouldin who defend Harrison’s prior support of the Republican and Conservative Parties as being solely a pragmatic response to a local zoning concern are either ignorantly chanting the party line dogma without concern for the truth, or are purposefully spreading lies knowing they are not so. One of Harrison's mailings was entitled "This is what Republicans and Conservatives are saying about Steve Harrison" from either different members of the Republican and Conservative parties (one of them a Priest), and continually mentions the word “values”, as in “It would be easy for me to say that the reason I am voting for Steve is because he is the most conservative candidate running and that he share are values. But it goes beyond that”. Other code words also make cameos, “we know that in the City Council he will put us, and not some other agenda, first”. As George Wallace's literature used to say, "The Courage of Your Convictions". Another mailing was entitled "Who are Republicans really voting for on February 25 for City Council?". Most of that piece was a reprint of an article from the Bay Ridge Courier about the race, and featured a quote from one local wag which Harrison thought important enough to blow up and point in its own box, “There are a lot of Republicans who are actively supporting Steve already, and since Steve is running the more conservative campaign, he may pick up some of the Conservative vote, too.” As I said, Harrison's number one issue was the 2002 property tax increase, the City may still have been on the balls of its ass, but Mr. Harrison was “the only person who wants to roll back the highest property tax increase in New York City history.” In demagoging against the tax increase. Harrison showed no shame whatsoever. Perhaps this was understandable in 2003 Bay Ridge, though even the Republican managed to show a little more class. One would think that, in light of Mr. Harrison’s unacknowledged political evolution, the “peasants with pitchforks” crusade he ran against an emergency measure in a time a grave crisis would be an episode he’d like to forget; one would be wrong. Like in 2003, Mr. Harrison is still rousing rabble about the 2002 tax increase, spewing vile invective against Mr. McMahon for having had the good sense and cajones to do what was necessary. Apparently, the real reason Mr. Harrison cannot acknowledge his political evolution is because it never took place. Today, Mr. Harrison is still the Steve Harrison of the nineties and 2002-03, still demagoging against the property tax increase the City had to swallow like castor oil. Mike McMahon, aggressively defends the necessity of the 2002 tax increase and makes no apologies. Steve Harrison also holds to his old position and makes no apologies. so tell us why you really dislike Harrison ........
![]() So Gatey: tell us how you really feel about Harrison please/lol.
reply | email this comment
Lords knows what they've already said about me on Daily Gotham, meanwhile I'm getting email saying I sullied the good name of Jimmy Oddo. As Rick Nelson once said, "it's all right now, learned my lesson well, You see, ya can't please everyone, so you got to please yourself" I'd rather drive a track. Democratic Councilman Mike McMahon's campaign is claiming it is on track to raise half a million dollars for his congressional bid in the quarter that just ended - an eye-popping amount, considering he has only officially been in the 13th CD race for a month. The SI Advance reports that McMahon's Democratic primary opponent, Steve Harrison, has raised about $150,000. But Harrison doesn't appear ready to let the cash difference push him out of the race, telling the Advance: "If dollars could vote, he wins. But they don't. It's a classic grassroots campaign against a machine campaign, and we'll see what happens."
A source close to McMahon notes he has raised in three weeks about 1.5 times the amount Harrison has raised in his last three campaigns combined (that would be a Council bid, his unsuccessful 2006 challenge to Rep. Vito Fossella and this second bid for the soon-to-be-vacant seat). McMahon's camp said he has held 17 fund-raisers in 13 days, including events in Albany, Washington, and Manhattan as well as in the district. He has landed some early endorsements from labor (most recently the AFL-CIO), which is helping a lot toward raising money, as is his support from the DCCC and designation the D-trip's Red-to-Blue fund-raising program. The Councilman has, of course, also been doing his share of dialing for dollars, but that was hampered by the fact that he was part of the 2009 budget negotiating team, which finally hammered out an agreement with the Bloomberg administration last week after a protracted and often acrimonious negotiating period. McMahon just recently hired a finance director: Deb Solomon, who used to work for Rep. Steve Israel in Washington. Her first day on the job was June 30. (Israel, as you'll recall, does candidate scouting in the Northeast for the DCCC). The McMahon source pointed out that this race has drawn national attention, not only due to the high-profile scandals that forced Fossella to decline to seek re-election, but also because the seat is now seen as a top pick-up for the Democrats. A Phoenix Rising?? http://www.bronxcountygop.com/index.htm It is more like this: http://www.w3bdevil.com/forums/You-Are-Full_of_Shit_(Toilet).jpg Dollars don't vote. People do. Mark my words, Steve Harrison will beat the Tammany Hall Staten Island and Brooklyn that Gatemouth is a stooge for and defeat Michael McMahon in the primary. You are correct--dolars don't vote. If the money figues were shifted, McMahon would still beat Harrison, just on name recognition and geographic identity. email me at gatemouthnyc@hotmail.com and we'll arrange a bet. Loser pays $100 to the campaign of the winner of the 13th CD Demcoratic primary. Apparently betting on an election result is a felony in NYS; so let's just say I was only joking
Post new comment |