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Evans
Caglage / Dallas Morning News
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| New York Mayor, Rudy Giuliani pauses to talk with reporters enroute to the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001. |
By BETH J. HARPAZ Associated Press Writer |
NEW YORK – Mayor
Rudolph Giuliani has been quoting Winston Churchill to help New York get through
its darkest hour.
Now, even the
mayor's usual critics say his steady leadership since the terrorist attack on
the World Trade Center has been Giuliani's finest hour.
After barely
escaping with his own life from a building adjacent to the twin towers, he
gently, calmly informed his fellow New Yorkers that the death toll would be
"more than any of us could bear." He lost personal friends and officiated at
funerals; he has worked around the clock, holding news conferences in between
visits to the disaster site and meetings to coordinate the response; he has
pledged to rebuild and prosper; and he even found time to officiate at a
wedding, saying, "This is what life is all about."
Many New Yorkers
are now wishing they could undo a term-limits law that prevents the lame-duck
mayor – who has just three months left in office – from running for office
again.
"Ten more years!"
shouted a rescue worker Monday as Giuliani toured the site of the World Trade
Center disaster.
Giuliani's new
admirers include diehard Democrats who never voted for him, activists who have
long lambasted him as insensitive to minorities, and people in other countries
who may not have known his name a week ago.
Political
consultants say Giuliani could run for anything now and win.
Giuliani deflected
the acclaim. "What I should do is do the job until Dec. 31, and prepare someone
else as the next mayor," he said.
Ordinary New
Yorkers disagree.
"I wish he could
stay on and that we didn't have term limits," said Linda Yarwood, a Manhattan
paralegal. "I would vote for him again. He is a pillar of strength for our
community and our nation."
Rachel Biern, who
works as an online researcher, did not support the mayor until now.
"I think he's been
amazing under crisis," she said. "He was calm and he kept people together. He
was just the right balance of sadness and determination. He really does care
about New York."
The mayor ran for
Senate from New York last year against Hillary Rodham Clinton but dropped out of
the race six months before the election amid revelations that he had prostate
cancer and a girlfriend. (He is now in the middle of a nasty divorce.)
Nelson Warfield, a
Republican political consultant and former press secretary to Bob Dole,
predicted that "whoever becomes mayor will beg him to stay on in some role to
oversee the rebuilding of the city. But I think Rudy Giuliani goes wherever he
wants from here. If he chooses to seek political office, I can't imagine anybody
stopping him."
Four Democrats and
two Republicans are running for mayor. The primary was supposed to have taken
place Sept. 11, the day two hijacked jets crashed into the Trade Center. The
primary was rescheduled for Sept. 25.
Former Mayor Ed
Koch, a Democrat who wrote a book about Giuliani called "Nasty Man," said the
mayor "over the last eight years has often been petty and insensitive. But
there's no question he has risen to the occasion here. The challenge of leading
the city when it's under attack, comparable to war, has been met."
Koch suggested that
Giuliani be kept on as a reconstruction czar.
Asked Monday if he
would consider being an anti-terrorism czar, Giuliani said: "I've never been big
on czars."
On Sunday, Giuliani
presided at a promotion ceremony for the Fire Department to fill its leadership
ranks after hundreds of firefighters were lost Tuesday.
He quoted Churchill
during the ceremony, saying: "Courage is rightly esteemed the first of human
qualities because it's the quality which guarantees all others."
In an interview
with Barbara Walters to air Monday night on ABC, Giuliani recommended that
people read "about the Battle of Britain and how the people of London lived
through the constant daily bombardment by the Nazis. ... They never gave up
their spirit, and they figured out how to go about their lives."
Even the Rev. Al
Sharpton, a black activist who has persistently accused the mayor of being
insensitive to the needs of minorities, admitted Giuliani had "done a good job.
I have no criticism."
He was especially
impressed that one of the mayor's first announcements to New Yorkers – amid the
shock, terror and mourning – was a call for tolerance, given the city's diverse
immigrant population and large Muslim community.
"It was a good
thing for him to say," Sharpton said. "I was happy to see him set a different
tone than he has set in the last eight years."
Randy Mastro, who heads a commission on the City Charter, which bars officials
from serving more than two terms, said he has received hundreds
of calls and e-mails "asking if there's anything that can be done
to see to it that Rudy continues as mayor."
But Mastro said
that even as a write-in candidate, Giuliani could not legally serve unless the
City Council or the state Legislature changed the term limits law. With
Democrats running both bodies, that does not appear likely.
Even overseas,
Giuliani has admirers.
"Giuliani is doing
a brilliant job and everyone has said that," said Yvonne Hosking, a London
secretary. "I find him very compassionate, he really came to the fore."
She said she
wouldn't necessarily compare him to Churchill, but added: "I can see a
Churchillian attitude."
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