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The Prince of the City: Giuliani, New York and the Genius of American Life

The Prince of the City: Giuliani, New York and the Genius of American Life
By Fred Siegel

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In this first post-9/11 account of the career of the man who established himself as "America's Mayor" in the dark days after America was attacked, Fred Siegel shows how Rudy Giuliani's successes in New York--restoring law and order, cutting taxes and radically reducing the welfare rolls--demonstrated that Gotham was indeed "governable" (a matter of doubt until his election) and that our major cities might again become vibrant and dynamic places to live after thirty years of middle-class flight.

Someone who has worked with Giuliani as well as studied him, Siegel describes this colorful figure as an "immoderate centrist," who, like the city he came to embody, evokes contradictory emotions. For some, he was a ruthless autocrat during his years at city hall; for others, he was a heroic figure who took on the vested interests that had dragged the city down. Siegel regards Guiliani as a shrewd tactician and artist of the possible who could have stepped out of the pages of Machiavelli's THE PRINCE. A self-promoting, self-absorbed man, the mayor made his own enormous ego serve the city's well-being. He promoted the virtues of duty and sacrifice, but was sometimes unable to honor these values in his personal life. He was suspicious of those outside his immediate circle, but he also placed this tribal ethos in the service of ideals that transcended New York's ethnic politics and business as usual.

THE PRINCE OF THE CITY is at once a fascinating character study, a history of New York over the last forty years, and a classic inquiry into the issue of how cities thrive or die. Siegel's story culminates with a dramatic account of September 11, 2001, revealing how Giuliani's s eight years in office had prepared him and the city to rise to this tragic occasion. Siegel concludes with a look at how Guiliani's successor, Mayor Michael Bloomberg, has handled his legacy and at what the future might hold for America's Mayor.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #728675 in Books
  • Published on: 2005-07-25
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 408 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
Despite its title, this book is more a biography of late-20th-century New York than of former Mayor Giuliani. Siegel (The Future Once Happened Here), a well-known figure in New York civic discussions, deftly traces the city's post-War spiral into fiscal and social malaise. In an opening section titled "New York Before Giuliani," Siegel describes how New York "turned the temporary emergency of the Great Depression into the permanent basis of its politics and government" by instituting decades of overly generous social programs, catering to special interest groups and amassing huge debts. Enter Giuliani. Siegel credits Guiliani with being a great synthesizer of new ideas about urban governance and policing, and he lauds the mayor's tough stance on crime and spending control. Though critics may claim that the city's turnaround in the '90s merely coincided with a nationwide economic upswing, Siegel touts the importance of the Giulini administration's economic, welfare-reform and crime-fighting policies. Siegel worked with Giuliani and is obviously a fan; indeed, his book seems geared toward polishing Giuliani's reputation for a possible presidential run. Fortunately for readers, though, he does not gloss over the former mayor's missteps. He describes Giuliani's divorce and how it became a messy public distraction, and he takes the ex-mayor to task for failing to institutionalize his fiscal reforms and for giving in, during his second term, to the temptation to buy votes with large public expenditures.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist
Elected as mayor to reform New York City, Rudolph Giuliani offended liberal pieties in arguably the most liberal city in America. According to Giuliani, crime's root cause was not poverty but lax law enforcement; poverty was not alleviated by social welfare programs but perpetuated by them; and the public schools needed not more money but fewer bureaucrats. Chronicling the application of these heretical precepts during Giuliani's mayoralty (1994-2002), urban historian Siegel examines the extent to which they reformed city affairs amid vocal resistance from unions, social-service agencies, the school bureaucracy, and identity-group politicians. His tone is generally supportive of Giuliani's aims, and Siegel prefaces his narrative with a summary of the city's chronic fiscal fragility, which conservative analysts diagnosed as the consequence of economy-suffocating taxes, regulations, and Mob shakedowns, and which liberals maintained was the result of insufficient taxes, social programs, and ethnic-group inclusiveness. Integrating pertinent statistics, Siegel presents a positive but not uncritical opinion of the Giuliani record, which is of interest in itself but especially if Giuliani runs for president. Gilbert Taylor
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Review
"Siegel understands Giuliani as only New York’s best reader of public policy and political leadership can." -- Michael Barone, co-author, The Almanac of American Politics

"The Prince of the City is a remarkable account of the Giuliani years by our best writer on urban affairs." -- John Leo, US News & World Report


Customer Reviews

A masterpiece of political history5
Fred Siegel's "The Prince of the City" is not a biography of Rudy Giuliani. It is a political history of New York City, New York State and the forces Giuliani had to face and fight. As such, the book becomes a tribute to a remarkable, but far from perfect, man and a frightening portrait of an American city where corrupt poltiicians, addled academics, clueless socialists and race-baiters have gone mad and imprisoned honest, working people in a neo-Marxist nightmare.

Siegel provides a short history of New York City politics from the 1930s onward. I had no idea of just how far to the left the city was and how the government took so much from working people in order to support a huge (600,000!) cadre of those who wouldn't work and myriad social service "providers" catering to their imagined needs. Siegel provides facts, not opinions. If he has an axe to grind, he's done a superb job of keeping it hidden.

Giuliani, facing the reality of the fiscal devestation wreaked by his predecessors, attempts to bring the budget under control. Needless to say the entrenched bureaucracies, unions and interest groups fight him every step of the way, resorting to lies, ad hominems and even the threat of violence in the form of race riots if Giuliani doesn't retreat or compromise.

Siegel paints a portrait of Giuliani that predicted the man the nation and world became familiar with on and after 9/11. A strong man, secure in his beliefs; a man who was willing and able to stand alone. As it happens, Siegel reveals Giuliani as a skillful poltician who was able to weave a small alliance of forward thinking politicians, even those who were his political opposites, but who had the welfare of New York at heart.

The battles were monmumental, much greater than the national news reported. The corruption and stagnation of New York City is unbelievable. A Board of Education that consumed $11 billion annually, turned out graduates who couldn't read, but protected school custodians who mopped lunchrooms once a week. Principalships were sold. The number of employees was unknown. Corruption was rife. And this was only one of the problems Giuliani faced.

Al Sharpton and Charlie Rangel are portrayed as villains. Each reader, I am certain, will have their own opinion of these men. But their machinations are well covered in Siegel's book.

One of the most frightening chapters talks of how CUNY, once called the "poor man's Harvard" was dumbed down. CUNY's education college turned out most of the teachers for New York City's public schools. More than 50% of these teachers couldn't pass a simple exam. The academics then claimed that these failures were good teachers, but bad test takers --- and further dumbed down the test. With its open admission policy and free tuition, CUNY graduated less than 1% of its 2 year degree students within two years. (Perhaps as a byproduct of CUNY's dumbing down, the editing and proofreading of this book is awful. Spelling and grammatical errors abound. Small factual details weren't checked: the Chicago Institute of Art is mentioned: it happens to be the Chicago Art Institute.)

Siegel recounts the political jockeying when the Democrats attempt to defeat Giuliani. New York City is a wonderland of bizarre political alliances.

Finally, Siegel covers the Rudy of 9/11 and the immediate post-Rudy period.

As political history, "The Prince of the City" is absolutely first-rate. Regardless of your political viewpoint, it should be required reading.

Jerry

horror and redemption5
I began reading Siegel on New York several years ago. What he had to say changed my views on the proper role of government in the lives of real people as opposed to what theorists or statists believe it should be. When Giuliani was elected, politicians and police were convinced that crime could not be dealt with by law enforcement-"job training and education" were their answers so the police ended up responding to 911 calls and the city became mired in unchecked criminal activity and hooliganism. The liberal gospel had it that since poverty causes crime, nothing short of ridding society of it did much good. Federal, state and local governments, high taxes, an anti-business attitude, a myriad of rules and regulations, racialist politicians plus corruption on the part of unions, criminal enterprises and some in government had the city on the ropes. Giuliani changed all that. What Giuliani accomplished makes him one of the great men of our time. He simply did not accept the conventional liberal wisdom and he brought New York back to life. The other side fought him every inch of the way calling him every name in the book. One man with energy and courage can indeed make a difference. This is an excellent book about a great man. I have waited years for someone to write it and am not surprised that the man was Fred Siegel. At least one Democrat recognized what had happened to New York. Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan said, "Liberalism faltered when it turned out it could not cope with truth."

Good Retrospective on the Giuliani Era 4
This is the first post-9/11 biography of Rudy G. It provides a good retrospective on the Giuliani Era in New York. In a generally favorable examination, noted historian Fred Siegel shows the outsized impact that Rudy had on Gotham's politics and public policy. Not just the well chronicled successes -- the historic, national-pace-setting drop in crime, and his inspired leadership during and after 9/11. But also less frequently recalled achievements like the restoration of basic academic standards at CUNY, fiscal prudence (without resort to tax increases) during a pronounced regional recession, welfare reform, etc. The missteps are also covered in detail, including the tragic Diallo shooting, ill-considered 1999 City Charter reform plan, and the very public dissolution of Rudy's marriage.

Siegel has effusive praise for Rudy's prescience in anticipating, and preparing the City for, another terrorist attack after the first WTC bombing. Giuliani saw a link between the 1990 Meir Kahane assassination and the 1993 attack on the World Trade Center and knew the terrorist threat was real and on-going. His crisis management plans, while no panacea, paid dividends in the City's response to 9/11.

On the political front, Giuliani's endorsement sealed the election for Bloomberg in 2001. But a more telling measure of his influence that election year was the extent to which a longtime foe and career Naderite like Mark Green adopted much of Rudy's agenda. Giuliani bequeathed to Bloomberg a City whose economy was deeply wounded by 9/11 and the post-bubble recession on Wall Street, but that was in fundamentally better shape than Giuliani himself inherited in 1994. Still, Bloomberg's failure to meaningfully curb spending, imposition of tax increases and generally more paternalistic approach to governance signaled the end of the Giuliani Era in New York.

While I enjoyed this book a great deal, I deducted one star from my rating due to an inordinate number of typos and several careless mistakes. For example, Browning Ferris Industries, the national waste management behemoth, is repeatedly referred to as "Brown & Ferris."