From The Daily Gotham:
Oh boy. As the end of his term nears, Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg and his senior advisers have been exploring strategies that would allow him to remain in political life, including undertaking a campaign to overturn the city's term limits law or making a bid for governor, according to two people who have been briefed on the deliberations. Two things: first, you really have to wonder what the outcome would be if there were a statewide referendum on term limits. Such as, say, term limits applicable to the state legislature. The rock-solid support for such limits in the City most likely is not confined to the five boroughs. If two terms and eight years were good enough for George Washington, why aren't they sufficient for Sheldon Silver and Joe Bruno, in office for thirty-two years, or Joe Lentol, at thirty-six? |
I don't even want to imagine an eternal back and forth between Silver and Bloomberg. That sounds like a nightmare and antithetical for reforming politics in New York. Bloomie may have his high hopes and ambitions, but no polling effort is going to give him everything he desires. Didn't he learn his lesson the first and second time around? New York City needs a progressive voice after too many years of a technocrat.
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