Bill de Blasio has been called a Cuba-loving socialist, soft on crime, two-faced and even an irresponsible late sleeper over the past six months of his campaign to lead the nation’s largest city.
But nothing quite stuck.
On Tuesday, de Blasio is expected to sail to victory over Joe Lhota, his Republican rival and the former chairman of the city’s transit system, to become the next mayor of New York City. De Blasio, a former city councilman and current public advocate, emerged victorious in a crowded Democratic primary in September, brushing off accusations that his self described "progressive" views will return New York City to its graffiti-covered, crime-ridden past.
The lines of attack against de Blasio have fallen into two major camps: that his staunch opposition to the way the city police force has used “stop and frisk” means he is soft on crime, and that his liberal beliefs are too extreme for New York. De Blasio has said on the campaign trail that income inequality has divided New York into the haves and have nots, a “tale of two cities” he would try to correct as mayor.
The New York Post, the city’s right-leaning tabloid and one of the loudest voices among de Blasio's critics, took its best shot against him in its cover Monday, running a photo of de Blasio’s disembodied head next to a huge hammer and sickle. “Back in the USSR!” the cover said. “’Progressive’ Bill’s secret Cold War trip.” The story refers to de Blasio visiting the Soviet Union in 1983, when he was a college student at NYU . Earlier in the campaign, de Blasio’s opponents hammered him for honeymooning in Communist Cuba and doing aid work in Nicaragua during the Communist-funded Sandinista civil war.
But the latest Marist poll out Monday shows de Blasio leads among likely voters, 65 percent to Lhota's 24 percent. Only 8 percent of voters said they may still change their mind before Tuesday.
“They ran a very, very time warped campaign,” Doug Muzzio, a professor at Baruch College’s school of public affairs, said of Lhota. “One reason it didn’t work is that de Blasio had a coherent, clear, consistent message and vision and that was one of change, hopeful change.”
Even the “soft on crime” attacks that Lhota used in multiple ads harkened back to the 70s and 80s, hoping New Yorkers would be afraid enough of the city’s crime-ridden history to reject de Blasio.
An October ad from Lhota’s campaign called de Blasio “recklessly dangerous” on crime, juxtaposing the charge with grainy black and white images of graffiti-covered subway cars and street crime from the 1970s. In another Lhota ad, the former Rudy Giuliani aide said New York City is “one bad mayor away” from going back to the crime and budget chaos of a few decades ago.
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