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Bill Weld Lives? (New York's transit strike could revive a flagging candidacy.)
The American Prowler ^ | 12/22/2005 | W. James Antle III

Posted on 12/21/2005 9:45:31 PM PST by nickcarraway

Veteran Weld-watchers may have noticed a brief flicker of the old Bill Weld yesterday as he came out swinging against the striking New York transit workers. Does Big Red still have enough of the fire that won him the Massachusetts governorship in 1990 to make a difference in New York in 2006?

In an interview with the New York Sun, Weld challenged Democratic front-runner Eliot Spitzer to get tough on the strikers. "If he were governor, I don't think he would be as aggressive as I would be," said the Bay State turned Empire State Republican. "Mr. Spitzer should be asked whether if he were governor, would he fire the members of the executive board and any leaders publicly advocating a strike."

Weld told the paper he would fire the union leaders behind the strike in an effort to break the stalemate that has ground New York City public transportation to a halt and racked up an estimated cost of $400 million a day. This isn't quite the PATCO solution, but it is tiptoeing awfully close.

The move is vintage Weld, who was not your father's moderate Republican during his run on Beacon Hill. In his heyday, Weld was to bureaucracy and public-sector unions what Eliot Spitzer is to Wall Street -- and the taxpayers were his defrauded investors. He snatched highway maintenance away from the unions in eastern Massachusetts and repeatedly touted privatization. During his first gubernatorial campaign, Weld offered this description of his ideal budgetary process: "You assume no program is necessary...no bureaucrat's job is necessary...no line item in the budget is necessary."

The populist-libertarian rhetoric always outstripped the reality. But Weld knew how to tap voters' frustration with government workers, failed bureaucracies, and stultifying red tape in order to appeal to people who under ordinary circumstances wouldn't have pulled the lever for a WASP-y, squash-playing Republican.

But there was a second, less libertarian, part of Weld's appeal also briefly on display in the New York Sun story as he challenged an area of Spitzer's strength: "I was a U.S. attorney for five years and prosecuted 111 public corruption cases and got convictions in 109 of them. Has Mr. Spitzer prosecuted public corruption cases? I'm not really aware that he has."

Weld didn't just market himself as a wrecking ball who would tear down the accretions of big government and establishment corruption. He was also a law-and-order man who would get tough on the bad guys. This was the Bill Weld who pushed for the death penalty, talked up his Reagan-era experience as a federal prosecutor throwing the book at "drug thugs," who was going to "introduce convicts to the joys of breaking rocks."

This was the key to Weld's appeal in Massachusetts. He was a tough conservative Republican on issues like taxes and crime, where even blue-staters don't trust Democrats, but on social issues like abortion, he wouldn't say anything that would frighten the average resident of the Back Bay -- or the Upper East Side. Could that approach work in New York? Two words: Rudy Giuliani. (Perhaps not coincidentally, Giuliani is a Weld supporter.)

But, since declaring his candidacy, this hasn't been the figure Weld has been introducing to the voters of New York. In fact, he hasn't really introduced himself to New Yorkers at all, even though he has been talking about running for governor upon George Pataki's retirement since at least 2000. His run has had all the appearances of a vanity project rather than a serious bid.

As a result, New York voters have been equally offhand with him. In a December Strategic Vision poll, Weld (who received 71 percent of the vote when he ran for a second term in Massachusetts) draws just 25 percent to Eliot Spitzer's 58 percent. This is better than secretary of state Randy Daniels but worse than billionaire Tom Golisano. Weld is similarly situated among Republican primary voters. A Quinnipiac poll put him at 8 percent, ahead of Daniels but well behind Golisano and a single point behind former assembly minority leader John Faso.

Instead of playing to his strengths, Weld has been forced to talk about social issues in a probably futile attempt to secure the Conservative Party's ballot line. Consequently, he has obscured his culturally liberal image by veering to the right on abortion (he now favors banning partial-birth abortion and requiring minors to notify at least one parent) and same-sex marriage (although initially supportive of his former state's Goodridge v. Department of Health supreme judicial court decision, he currently says he opposes gay marriage outside of Massachusetts).

In the final analysis, it may just be that Weld's timing is off. He came on the scene in Massachusetts during the hangover from Michael Dukakis' economic miracle, when the budget was in disarray and the entrenched Democratic establishment was alienating independents with its excess. In New York, he is following a fellow Republican after an uninspiring third term in a cycle where the GOP's appeal is flagging. People looking for a decisive break from the status quo aren't likely to turn to Bill Weld instead of a popular Democrat.

And Eliot Spitzer is no John Silber, the irascible Boston University president who was Weld's Democratic opponent in 1990. Silber's brusque manner and social conservatism created an unlikely coalition of liberals and traditional Republicans that isn't likely to emerge in the New York gubernatorial race.

Despite the long odds, maybe if Weld continues to show signs of life he can make a race out of what is shaping up to be a rout. If not, then at least maybe he'll be able to make it interesting.

W. James Antle III is a senior writer for the American Conservative.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Editorial; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Massachusetts; US: New York
KEYWORDS: newyork; ntu; spitzer; strike; weld
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1 posted on 12/21/2005 9:45:33 PM PST by nickcarraway
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To: nickcarraway

Bill Weld does!


2 posted on 12/21/2005 9:49:36 PM PST by AmericanMade1776
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To: nickcarraway
Bill Weld?

New Yorkers...

Run for your lives.


3 posted on 12/21/2005 9:49:54 PM PST by billorites (freepo ergo sum)
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To: billorites

Just what are you inferring about Bill Weld, with your artsy martini pic?????


4 posted on 12/21/2005 9:59:41 PM PST by AmericanMade1776
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To: nickcarraway

Republican candidate for New York governor and former Massachusetts Gov. William Weld, speaks with reporters in Albany, N.Y., Monday, Dec. 12, 2005. Republicans are meeting in Albany to work towards selecting a slate of candidates for the 2006 election. (AP Photo/Tim Roske)

5 posted on 12/21/2005 10:02:28 PM PST by AmericanMade1776
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To: AmericanMade1776
This is more appropriate where Weld is concerned...

Everything Weld touches, Weld destroys (except for the Democrat party, of course).

6 posted on 12/21/2005 10:04:18 PM PST by fieldmarshaldj (Cheney X -- Destroying the Liberal Democrat Traitors By Any Means Necessary -- Ya Dig ? Sho 'Nuff.)
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To: AmericanMade1776
"Just what are you inferring about Bill Weld, with your artsy martini pic????? "

Uh, nothin...

7 posted on 12/21/2005 10:06:40 PM PST by billorites (freepo ergo sum)
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To: nickcarraway

Haven't thought of him in years. Remember when he and Jesse Helms went at it tooth and nail?


8 posted on 12/21/2005 10:07:49 PM PST by lawnguy (Give me some of your tots!!!)
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To: lawnguy

That was fun watching Jesse stomp that RINO trash into the ground.


9 posted on 12/21/2005 10:11:29 PM PST by fieldmarshaldj (Cheney X -- Destroying the Liberal Democrat Traitors By Any Means Necessary -- Ya Dig ? Sho 'Nuff.)
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To: nickcarraway

Too bad for Weld the strike is going to end on Thursday.


10 posted on 12/21/2005 10:14:15 PM PST by montag813
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To: AmericanMade1776

Wow, he got old, didn't he?


11 posted on 12/21/2005 10:16:14 PM PST by Tree of Liberty (requiescat in pace, President Reagan)
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To: billorites

Great post!!!


12 posted on 12/21/2005 10:52:15 PM PST by JohnG45
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To: nickcarraway

Wow! According to the article, Weld has not only turned "Empire Stater" but has also turned "Republican."


13 posted on 12/21/2005 11:01:12 PM PST by Malesherbes
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To: fieldmarshaldj

THis time Weld may be just what we need, to keep New York... Not that it is much of a victory, but it is better than Spitzer as Governor, because that would make him part of the Democrat presidential candidate farm team.


14 posted on 12/21/2005 11:12:07 PM PST by Schwaeky (Islam is a religion of Peace just like Nazism is an Ideology of tolerance.)
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Can you imagine a governor wanting to have the State House flag lowered to half-staff when Jerry Garcia died? Meet Bill Weld.
He did nothing for the Republican Party in Massachusetts, got bored, and left. Good luck New York.


15 posted on 12/22/2005 12:16:40 AM PST by capecodderathome (richard)
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To: Schwaeky

Keep New York for what ? He's a trojan horse Democrat. He destroyed what was left of the Massachusetts Republican party. That nuke cloud ain't a joke, it's what that Weld scum DID to Massachusetts and that college he destroyed in Kentucky.


16 posted on 12/22/2005 1:15:40 AM PST by fieldmarshaldj (Cheney X -- Destroying the Liberal Democrat Traitors By Any Means Necessary -- Ya Dig ? Sho 'Nuff.)
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To: fieldmarshaldj

I would rather have a RINO who caucuses with the Republicans, than a DINO that caucuses with the Dems.. At this point, more and more DINOs hearts will move them to the GOP on the issues that matter. RINOS will always disagree on a lot of issues, but they agree with us more than mainstream Democrats do!

also, keep in mind the political culture in New England is far more moderate. we can't expect a republican in Massachucets to tbe to the right of a democrat in alabama...


17 posted on 12/28/2005 11:54:18 PM PST by Schwaeky (Islam is a religion of Peace just like Nazism is an Ideology of tolerance.)
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To: Schwaeky

I will support any Democrat over the equivalent of political AIDS like William Weld if it will benefit or save the state Republicans for the LONG term. My claims that he absolutely and completely obliterated what was left of a RECOVERING and GROWING Republican party in the wake of the Dukakis era aren't merely an opinion, but absolute fact. When even LIBERAL Republicans in the state were crying out to Weld for help and he ignored their pleas, along with Republicans of every other stripe, that truly speaks volumes.

Weld is only interested in one thing, and that is himself and nobody else. He doesn't, nor has he ever cared, about the Republican party. He has been the greatest asset to the Democrats wherever he goes. He helped return absolute control to them in Massachusetts to the point that there is no longer a viable two-party system in virtually every corner of the state. The Governors that succeeded him have absolutely NO power or authority, are reduced to figurehead status. Not even Romney could turn around the damage Weld was completely and entirely responsible for creating and is getting out after one term.

If we have so lowered ourselves to the point of running "Republicans" indistinguishable from radical left-wing Socialists, you've just made the argument that we no longer need a Republican party at all. A substantial part of the reason why we have had such eroding fortunes in the northeast is because we have consistently FAILED to offer the voters clearly-defined choices, from the federal offices all the way down to the local level. Running liberal RINOs has been and continues to be a recipe for capitulation and a recipe for disaster. It hasn't proven a positive development anywhere.


18 posted on 12/29/2005 12:20:58 AM PST by fieldmarshaldj (Cheney X -- Destroying the Liberal Democrat Traitors By Any Means Necessary -- Ya Dig ? Sho 'Nuff.)
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To: fieldmarshaldj

I just would prefer to field candidates (esp in the case of the US Senate) that will vote for Bill Frist for Majority Leader (or maybe McConnell if Frist moves up the political ladder) than a Dingy Harry or Dasshole or for even Denny Hastert for house speaker over Nancy Pisslosi. The lines it is organized by are the most important right now, not merely in getting policy through, which is where Bush is suffering, but successfully waging the war on terror and winning it. Since 9/11, the Republicans have kept the worst of the terror attacks off our soil. If that means more Lowell Weickers and less Zell Millers being supported, so be it....


19 posted on 12/29/2005 11:12:12 PM PST by Schwaeky (Islam is a religion of Peace just like Nazism is an Ideology of tolerance.)
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To: fieldmarshaldj

NY is rather a null set when it comes to Pubbie white knights isn't it? Don't be trigger happy when in a null set zone, is my best advice.


20 posted on 12/29/2005 11:15:10 PM PST by Torie
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