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Sunday, February 22, 2015

“All politics is local,” Will Governor Cuomo Listen to the Folks in the Provinces? | Ed In The Apple

“All politics is local,” Will Governor Cuomo Listen to the Folks in the Provinces? | Ed In The Apple:



“All politics is local,” Will Governor Cuomo Listen to the Folks in the Provinces?


“All politics is local,” Tip O’Neill, Speaker of the House (1977-87)
Presidents, senators, speakers of the house, governors, political parties and the hordes who spin fight for the hearts and minds of the American people, well, at least the less than half of the American people who bother to vote.
The election cycle never ends.
Obama’s Executive Actions on Immigration, response to the Russians in the Ukraine, fighting ISIS, and on and on, each side tries to “win” the intellectual and visceral fight, from Fox on the right, to CNN to MSNBC on the left; however, networks and cable stations no longer have the influence they once had.
Newspaper sales decline every year, cyberspace is the battlefield. Americans get their “news” from websites, from Facebook, and, increasingly from Twitter.Hashtags rule.
Slowly and inexorably the fight over education appears to be tilting against the Obama/Duncan/Cuomo agenda.
Rubin Diaz is the Borough President of the Bronx, an anachronistic elected position, with the demise of the Board of Estimate in 1990 the borough president has no vote and no control over legislation or budgets, the borough president is the cheerleader for their borough. Diaz is highly popular and dependent on the governor, the state legislature, the mayor and the council to fund projects. In his sixth State of the Borough address, a long list of job creation achievements, new housing and economic development projects, he added the line, “Children shouldn’t be defined by one test.” The line was greeted with applause from the “All politics is local,” Will Governor Cuomo Listen to the Folks in the Provinces? | Ed In The Apple: