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Prometheus 6

All respect and no restraint

The truth about Giuliani oozes out like some foul smelling pus from a canker on his genitals


In 1993, Giuliani defeated New York's first black mayor, David Dinkins, by 53,367 votes, 49.3 to 46.4, after calling Dinkins a "Jesse Jackson Democrat." In 1997, Giuliani used the mayoral bid of Al Sharpton as a wedge issue against the other Democratic primary candidates, describing their refusal to renounce the controversial black leader as an insult to New Yorkers. In effect, Rudy stood up to and beat three icons of the black community - Dinkins, Sharpton and Jackson - all figures recognizable to white Republican primary voters.

Giuliani Poised to Launch His Own Version Of The "Southern Strategy"
November 4, 2007 12:01 PM

Strategists for Rudy Giuliani are quietly preparing a significantly race-based campaign strategy to strengthen support among socially conservative white voters, in the South as well as in the North.

The former Mayor carries the burden of three marriages and a Brooklyn accent, but he has more race cards to play than any of his opponents, and his success in the fight for the nomination - according to close observers of the campaign -- may depend on how aggressively he plays his hand.

The themes the campaign are lining up for renewed emphasis are those reflecting Giuliani's confrontational stance towards black New Yorkers and their white liberal allies, as well as his record of siding decisively with the police against minorities who launched protests alleging police brutality during the years he was mayor from 1994-2001.

Giuliani's eight years as New York's chief executive exemplified a Northern adaptation of the GOP's politically successful "Southern strategy" - the strategy playing on white resistance to and resentment of federal legislation passed in the 1960s mandating desegregation - resistance that produced a realignment in the South and fractured the Democratic loyalties of white working class voters in the urban North from 1968 to 2004.

"Race is at the heart of Rudy's story," according to Wayne Barrett, one of Giuliani's preeminent biographers. Giuliani ended race and gender preferences in New York's city contracting. He eliminated open admissions at City University and re-instituted testing requirements for the school -- requirements which disadvantaged black and Latino applicants seeking to complete the four-year curriculum. Also angering black leaders, Giuliani instituted tough law and order policies that were consistently cited by his administration as the driving force pushing crime rates down over 60 percent during his tenure as Mayor.

Equally important in courting a racially conservative Republican primary electorate in the current presidential election, Giuliani brought to a halt the black and minority domination of New York city politics.

You are too funny for words. Can't be too surprising

Amadu Diallo.

Abner Louima.

I know these names are familiar to you. So, this can't be a surprise to you.

What I think folks should be focusing on with regards to Rudy is that the lunatics who brought us the Iraq War have set up camp and have been welcomed with open arms by Rudy. The Giuliani campaign is now Neo-con Heaven.

That those lunatics are welcome anywhere should be more upsetting. Him adapting his racist ways is not a shock.

Ultra-conservatives worried

Ultra-conservatives worried about Giuliani's ambiguous positions on abortion, gun control, and gay rights should take heart that he adheres to the unifying principle upon which much of the modern Republican political coalition is based.  All this talk about how Giuliani is too moderate for the Republican base ignores this basic fact.          

Sugar.

Pus? Canker? Genitals?

Don't sugar-coat it, P6. Tell us what you really think.

I dragged his butt into the

I dragged his butt into the Thompson/Drug Kingpin brouhaha too. When News and Notes posts the segment I'll put up a link.

I really don't like Giuliani. 

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