Finally, A Seasoned Politician Emerges
Mayor Bloomberg figures out the art of promising big, untenable proposals and quietly dumping them when it’s obvious that they are unaffordable:
Mayor Bloomberg dropped a financial bombshell yesterday by saying he’s “not sure” the city can still afford the 7 percent property-tax cut that he had included just six weeks ago in his 2009 executive budget.
The mayor’s startling assessment came as he and the City Council were within days of wrapping up negotiations on the new $60 billion budget for fiscal 2009, which starts July 1.
Officials said a repeal of the tax cut — which would sap $1.2 billion from property owners — had never come up in those talks.
“This is the first I’m hearing of that,” said surprised Councilman David Weprin (D-Queens), chairman of the Finance Committee.
Sounding gloomier than ever, Bloomberg warned that Wall Street profits are falling off the cliff with $20 billion in losses recorded in the first three months of this year.
And he must be enjoying watching the City Council twist in the wind about it:
Judging from the initial reaction of legislators, the mayor faces an uphill fight.
“It’s a nonstarter,” said Councilman Eric Gioia (D-Queens).
“The Wall Street numbers are definitely problematic,” said Weprin. “At this point, I don’t think there’s any need to panic. We can always do a mod [budget modification] later.”
Council Speaker Christine Quinn (D-Manhattan) said retaining the property-tax cut remains a “priority” for the council, as does restoration of budget cuts that impact classrooms.
Gioia, Weprin and Quinn: all term limited.
Annotation: For Queens in ’09, Candidates in Spades (City Hall News, June 11, 2007)
Posted: June 14th, 2008 | Filed under: Follow The Money, Grandstanding, Political