Starvin’ To Be Alone And Independent From The Scene That I’ve Known
Will the mayoral race in New York look anything like the one in Albuquerque? Tonight’s the night:
The Thompson campaign seems to think [the term limit extension issue is salient for voters], and they’re looking at the recent mayor’s race in Albuquerque, where the mayor, Martin Chavez, was defeated after he successfully sued to throw out the law barring him from seeking another term.
. . .
Three days after Chavez’s defeat, a reporter asked Bloomberg if he was afraid the same thing would happen to him. Bloomberg, standing in his campaign headquarters with the term-limited mayor of Miami, Manny Diaz, said he wasn’t, because “the politics there are different than the politics here.”
Some differences:
In Albuquerque, there were three candidates.
In Albuquerque, the third candidate in the race was a Democrat, like the incumbent. One siphoned votes from the other while the Republican candidate, Berry, consolidated his base. Also, both Berry and the other challenger, Romero, focused their attacks on Chavez.
In Albuquerque, the election was nonpartisan.
And most notably, in Albuquerque, all the candidates participated in a public financing program that capped their spending.
That last difference — spending — explains the absurdity of Bloomberg arguing that it “costs a lot of money to get a message out” — this despite the fact that he has had eight years to craft said message, and that he has the best name recognition of any other mayor in America.
See also: Bloomberg For Mayor 2009.
Posted: October 26th, 2009 | Filed under: Please, Make It Stop