Rudy Giuliani: divisive New York past has many in fear of Trump cabinet po

He was hailed as ‘America’s mayor’ after 9/11, but black residents who remember his time in New York believe his record of fueling racial tensions should disqualify him from serving as the US’s top diplomat
November 17, 2016
Spencer Ackerman, Lois Beckett and Jamiles Lartey
Guardian

Rudy Giuliani may soon be the first western diplomat of the modern era to have stoked a racist police riot.

The former New York mayor has shamelessly promoted himself as a key member of the Donald Trump administration first as a potential attorney general, then openly touting himself to become secretary of state.

But Giuliani’s one-man campaign is already facing a backlash – including from a Republican senator who said several of his colleagues believe Giuliani is unsuited to a key cabinet position.

Black residents who remember his time in New York with dismay believe his divisive record should disqualify him as the US’s chief diplomat.

Giuliani’s approach to policing created “an environment of terror for communities of color”, said Lumumba Bandele, a lifelong New Yorker and police reform advocate. If he takes on a national role, “We should all be preparing for worst-case scenarios,” he said.

His record on police abuses and freedom of expression is “frightening”, said Patrisse Cullors, a co-founder of Black Lives Matter.

In the wake of September 11, Giuliani was seen as a uniter, hailed as “America’s mayor” and a trustworthy leader for all New Yorkers. But Giuliani has a fraught history with New York’s black and brown residents. For decades, he has defended police killings and abuse of black men and fueled racial divisions.

Giuliani set the tone for his mayoralty before his election, on a hot summer morning in September 1992. The largely white New York City police force was angry with the city’s first black mayor, David Dinkins. Dinkins had proposed removing police representatives from a board that hears complaints about police brutality, a position unacceptable to the police and its powerful union.

A protest march by 10,000 off-duty police officers blocked traffic on the Brooklyn Bridge as uniformed officers stood aside. By the time it reached City Hall Park, it had taken an angry turn. Officers chanting “Dinkins Must Go!” pushed through the barricades and climbed the municipal steps. The New York Times described it as a “beer-swilling, traffic-snarling, epithet-hurling melee”. Newsday compared city hall to an “embassy in some far-off hostile land … under siege”.

The signs the police waved labeled the mayor a “washroom attendant”, claimed he was “on crack” said his “true color [was] yellow bellied” and asked if he had hugged a drug dealer that day. A subsequent official NYPD report, which recommended discipline for 42 officers and called the march an “embarrassment”, conceded some protesters used racial slurs and said the rally was “unruly, mean-spirited and perhaps criminal”.

Nearby, Giuliani, the man whom Dinkins beat in the 1989 election and who was waiting for a rematch, waited to address the crowd. Channeling its momentum, Giuliani addressed Dinkins’ policies by chanting “Bullshit!” He laid the “low morale” of the NYPD at Dinkins’ feet. The police, returning the sentiment, chanted: “Rudy, Rudy, Rudy.”

Giuliani would later say he had attempted to calm the fury of the protesters and that he had tried to move them away from city hall. He did not respond to requests for comment on Wednesday through his spokeswoman, Jo Ann Zafonte. The New York Times reported at the time that, during the city hall protest, “at least one Giuliani supporter circulated through the crowd handing out voter registration cards”.

A recently elected city councilwoman from Flatbush, Brooklyn, attempted to cross the barricades. “I try to forget the police riot at city hall,” Una Clarke told the Guardian this week.

But 24 years later, she remembers clearly what the white officers who blocked her path said to one another when she explained she was a councilwoman on her way to a meeting: “One guy looked at the other and he said: ‘This nigger is a council member, do you believe her?’ And I was stunned and taken off by it. Because I’m a Jamaican, frankly, I decided I was not going into my pocketbook to give him an ID.”

In Giuliani’s opinion, he was not the one playing incendiary racial politics in a confrontation with his political rival. “The mayor plays the racial card when he thinks it is to his advantage and then he condemns other people when he believes they’re doing it and that is very phony,” Giuliani said afterwards. He would later suggest that outrage at police officers using racial slurs against city officials was a distraction.

“The real question is, has the relatively minor occurrence of racial epithets, if they occurred at all, been made the major focus of this rally for political purposes?” he said in late September 1992.

Clarke remembered Giuliani telling her that she made up her encounter with police during the riot. “Rudy Giuliani said I was lying,” she said.

As mayor, Clarke continued, “he played every ethnic group against every ethnic group. For me, racially, he’s not changed.”

At the time, Dinkins’ chief political aide compared Giuliani to the Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke, accusing him of trying “to flame racial tensions rather than try to bring people together, and then make excuses about it”. Dinkins walked back the comparison on 23 September but kept the pressure on Giuliani, reminding the New York Times of “the kinds of comments that Rudy Giuliani made out here with a mob of police, drinking beer, behaving in an unruly fashion, and then egging them on”.

The city hall riot was the most dramatic episode in a long career marked by tension over police violence towards Americans of color – and Giuliani’s fierce defense of police officers and law enforcement. Patrick Lynch, the current president of New York City’s police union, did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Giuliani’s record as an advocate for law enforcement.

Bandele, an activist with Communities United for Police Reform, said that the riot set the tone for Giuliani’s eight years as mayor, from 1994 to 2001.

“In our communities, folks knew him for what he was. His nickname was ‘Adolf Giuliani’, so that gives you a sense of how people saw him. In communities of color, in LGBT communities, in immigrant communities, his presence was unwelcome and we were glad to see him go,” Bandele, a lifelong New York City resident said.

“The idea of Giuliani becoming the secretary of state, that’s frightening and it’s also really clear about the direction that Trump is going in,” said Cullors, the Black Lives Matter co-founder. “Giuliani represents the old: an archaic system that systematically devalues black life.”

From the start of his mayoralty in 1994, Giuliani signaled dismissiveness to the city’s black leadership. After longtime Harlem congressman Charles Rangel claimed that year Giuliani was not reaching out to black New York, the first-year mayor suggested black New Yorkers needed to watch their mouths.

“I want to reach out to all of the communities in the city. It has to be a two-way street. And they’re going to have to learn how to discipline themselves in the way in which they speak also,” Giuliani said.

In the summer of 1997, after an altercation at a nightclub, four Flatbush police officers beat and sodomized a Haitian immigrant in the 70th precinct house. The broomhandle officers forced into Abner Louima’s rectum tore his colon and perforated his bladder. Louima claimed, and later retracted, that the police torturing him told him: “It’s Giuliani time.”

The invented quote became a slogan for Giuliani’s opposition. Taking on a life of its own, it became a shorthand to describe the brutality of the Giuliani era, from actual police violence against black New Yorkers to the dismissive tone the mayor took with his critics. As soon as Giuliani handily won re-election and Louima recanted the comment, Giuliani said his critics “owe the people of the city an apology”.

One of those critics was Dinkins, who retorted that Giuliani had missed the point. “The problem is not what was said but what was done. The mayor continues to insist that only police officers can investigate police officers,” Dinkins said.

In 1999, Bronx police officers, apparently carrying out a stop-and-frisk, shot and killed immigrant Amadou Diallo in his apartment building vestibule. The officers shot at Diallo 41 times after he reached for his wallet to show ID. The killing attracted national attention right as Giuliani was nurturing national political ambitions. He called it “unfortunate” but pleaded that the police “should be given the benefit of the doubt”.

The officers who killed Diallo were acquitted. Giuliani told the Today show that the Diallo killing “does not reflect the overall record of the New York police department”. Bruce Springsteen wrote a song about Diallo and defiantly performed it at Madison Square Garden amid police protest. Giuliani criticizedSpringsteen for the song, as he would later criticize Beyoncé for her songs and performances referencing police violence.

The next year, on Eighth Avenue in Manhattan, an undercover cop solicited a man named Patrick Dorismond for a drug sale. A fracas ensued, and a different officer shot Dorismond dead.

The mayor began by unsealing Dorismond’s police record, to include his juvenile file. The formerly secret documents shed no light on what happened on Eighth Avenue that night. But Giuliani harnessed innuendo, infamously saying Dorismond “isn’t an altar boy”.

As it happened, Dorismond literally was an altar boy. When this was pointed out to Giuliani, he said: “I think that’s not a correct juxtaposition of statements, nor intended for any kind of decent or useful purpose.” It would take until May for Giuliani to concede he had made “a mistake”.

Fourteen years later, when the police killing of Michael Brown in Ferguson inspired a nationwide movement against police violence, Giuliani re-emerged as a defender of law enforcement, and a critic of black protesters, whom he deemed “racist”.

Giuliani used his record on fighting violence in New York City to add luster to an old conservative talking point: that black Americans were wrong to protest about state violence by police officers because a larger percentage of murders were caused by black men killing other black men.

“Ninety-three percent of blacks are killed by other blacks. I would like to see the attention paid to that that you are paying to this,” Giuliani said in widely criticized remarks on Meet the Press in November 2014, an exchange one New York City reporter dubbed “vintage Giuliani”.

“White police officers wouldn’t be there [in black neighborhoods] if you weren’t killing each other,” Giuliani went on to tell Michael Eric Dyson, a black Georgetown professor on the show with him.

“This is a defense mechanism of white supremacy at work in your mind, sir,” Dyson told him.

In 2016, he called Black Lives Matter “inherently racist” and said asked why activists never protested about the deaths of everyday black residents of Chicago.”Where are they then? Where are they when a young black child is killed?” he asked.

In fact, Black Lives Matter activists had held protests over gun violence in Chicago, including over the brutal murder of nine-year-old Tyshawn Lee. In March, Lamon Reccord, one of the most prominent and controversial young activists in protests against the police killing of Laquan McDonald, organized his own protest in honor of Tyshawn, one of many ongoing community protests and interventions led by black Chicago residents to address neighborhood gun violence.

Giuliani has frequently pushed back against potential critics by arguing, as he did on Fox and Friends in August talking about Beyoncé, that “I saved more black lives than any of those people” and adding that “maybe 4,000 or 5,000 were African American young people who are alive today because of the policies I put in effect.”

New York’s crime rate did fall dramatically, starting in Dinkins’ era and continuing in Giuliani’s: violent crimes declined 43% from 1990 to 1996. Homicides in the city dropped 66%, ahead of the national average decline of 50%, from 1990 to 1997. A narrative took shape that propelled Giuliani’s career: he had made New York safe. While it’s true that Giuliani presided over a historic decrease in violence, it’s less clear how much of the credit for this should go directly to the mayor and his policies.

“Not a lot,” said Frank Zimring, a prominent criminologist at the University of California Berkeley, and the author of The City That Became Safe: What New York Teaches About Urban Crime and Its Control.

The credit for the financial investment in increased New York City police manpower goes to Dinkins, Giuliani’s predecessor, and to the New York governor, Mario Cuomo, Zimring said. The credit for new police strategies goes to police commissioners Bill Bratton – who Giuliani, to his credit, hired, and then, not to his credit, fired, Zimring said – and Ray Kelly. (Bratton’s public approval ratings had been higher than Giuliani’s, which the mayor reportedly disliked.)

Zimring has argued that New York’s precipitous crime decline was driven in part by changes in policing, including a more data-driven focus on crime hotspots, though he called the much-discussed “zero tolerance” and the “broken windows” strategies “little more than slogans”.

“Unfortunately, New York’s successes in crime control have come at a cost,” he wrote. Although declines in violence benefited black New Yorkers, as Giuliani argued, “Police aggressiveness is a very regressive tax: the street stops, bullying and pretext-based arrests fall disproportionately on young men of color in their own neighborhood,” he wrote.

A report by the New York state attorney general found a massively disproportionate racial impact in the NYPD’s stop-and-frisk tactics after examining 175,000 of these incidents from January 1998 to March 1999. Black New Yorkers, 25.6% of the city, comprised 50.6% of stops. Hispanic New Yorkers, 23.7% of the city, comprised 33% of stops. White New Yorkers, 43.4% of the city, comprised 12.9% of stops. “In the most strongly white neighborhoods in New York,” the study found, “the disparity between minority and white ‘stop’ rates is most pronounced.”

The report stopped short of calling Giuliani’s favored police tactic racist, something that would take a judge’s ruling in 2013, which concluded that “the city’s highest officials have turned a blind eye to the evidence that officers are conducting stops in a racially discriminatory manner.”

At times, Giuliani has taken inclusive stances with regard to immigrants and Muslim New Yorkers. After 9/11, Giuliani was dubbed America’s mayor by Oprah Winfrey in his finest hour as a politician.

In a sweeping speech to the United Nations in October 2001, Giuliani praised New York’s “very strong and vibrant Muslim and Arab communities” as “an equally important part of the life of our city”.

“I’ve urged New Yorkers not to engage in any form of group blame or group hatred. This is exactly the evil that we’re confronting with these terrorists,” he said. “And if we’re going to prevail over them, over terror, then our ideals and principles and values must transcend all forms of prejudice.”

“This is not a dispute between religions or ethnic groups. All religions, all decent people, are united in their desire to achieve peace.”

Yet by 2010, the political winds had shifted, and Giuliani shifted with them.

That summer, outrage grew from the fringes of the right after a local Muslim leader had proposed building an Islamic cultural center in lower Manhattan, within walking distance of the former Twin Towers. The project, strongly defended by Giuliani’s successor, Michael Bloomberg, as a religious-freedom issue, became the target of a smear campaign, which dubbed it the “Ground Zero Mosque” or even the “Victory Mosque”, suggesting that the American Muslims who would go to the center for a moment of reflection were celebrating 9/11.

Giuliani joined in. Calling into a radio show in early August, he called the cultural center a “desecration” and falsely asserted that the imam behind the project, a man who had written a book called What’s Right With Islam Is What’s Right With America, had supported “radical causes”. In a later interview with the Today show, he suggested the project itself was radical: “If you’re a healer, you do not go forward with this project. If you’re a warrior, you do.”

In the years since, and particularly since joining Trump’s campaign, Giuliani has intensified his stance. He has boasted of placing undercover agents in New York mosques and stated “good Muslims” would benefit from surveillance in their communities. On Fox & Friends, Giuliani implied that only mosques with something to hide would object to police infiltration: “If you’ve got nothing going on there but a beautiful religious service, why in His name would you not want to have police officers there?”

“All I can say is God bless Rudy Giuliani,” said Una Clarke, who was at the police riot decades ago. “It’s a bundle of racists getting together to see if they can take us back to the old age.”

Topics: Broken Windows Stop-and-Frisk