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Wealth Is ‘in the Wrong Hands,’ Mayor Says, Pledging to Redistribute It Wealth Is ‘in the Wrong Hands,’ Mayor de Blasio Says, Pledging to Redistribute It
(about 1 hour later)
A new ferry route will link Staten Island to the West Side of Manhattan. New Yorkers who don’t get paid vacation will soon have two weeks.A new ferry route will link Staten Island to the West Side of Manhattan. New Yorkers who don’t get paid vacation will soon have two weeks.
And wealth in the city will be more evenly distributed.And wealth in the city will be more evenly distributed.
Those are some of the promises Mayor Bill de Blasio is making in his State of the City speech on Thursday, his sixth since taking office and one that clearly articulates his view of how he has changed New York City as he prepares to embark on a national tour to trumpet his accomplishments and proposals. Those are some of the promises Mayor Bill de Blasio made in an hourlong State of the City speech on Thursday, his sixth since taking office and one that clearly articulated his view of how he has changed New York City as he prepares to embark on a national tour to trumpet his accomplishments and proposals.
“Brothers and sisters, there’s plenty of money in the world. Plenty of money in this city,” his prepared speech reads. “It’s just in the wrong hands!” “Here’s the truth, brothers and sisters, there’s plenty of money in the world. Plenty of money in this city,” the mayor said, flanked by screens with graphs of productivity outpacing compensation. “It’s just in the wrong hands!”
In the speech, being delivered at Symphony Space on the Upper West Side at 11 a.m., the mayor presents his leadership of New York as one that has made streets safer and brought new protections for tenants and workers. He casts himself as an aspiring Robin Hood — aiming to take from the rich and give to the poor — even as he has thus far been unsuccessful in his many attempts to raise taxes on high earners. In the speech, delivered at Symphony Space on the Upper West Side, the mayor presented his leadership of New York as one that has made streets safer and brought new protections for tenants and workers. He cast himself as an aspiring Robin Hood — aiming to take from the rich and give to the poor — even as he has thus far been unsuccessful in his many attempts to raise taxes on high earners.
Major elements of the speech had been set out by Mr. de Blasio in recent days: a plan to improve customer service for the city’s public hospitals and better connect uninsured residents to primary care physicians; and legislation to require paid vacation for private-sector workers.Major elements of the speech had been set out by Mr. de Blasio in recent days: a plan to improve customer service for the city’s public hospitals and better connect uninsured residents to primary care physicians; and legislation to require paid vacation for private-sector workers.
Others were new, if somewhat less grand. The ferry system is expanding to include the new Staten Island route and add new service between Lower Manhattan and Coney Island. The mayor is announcing a partnership with the budget chain Warby Parker to provide free eyeglasses to all city kindergartners and first graders who need them. Others were new, if somewhat less grand. The ferry system would expand to include the new Staten Island route and to add new service between Lower Manhattan and Coney Island. The mayor announced a partnership with the budget chain Warby Parker to provide free eyeglasses to all city kindergartners and first graders who need them.
The speech caps an unusual spurt of activity for the mayor in the early days of 2019. The speech capped an unusual spurt of activity for the mayor in the early days of 2019.
Since New Year’s Day, Mr. de Blasio has held five news conferences in which he took questions from the media — including ones last week about the census, crime statistics and half-price MetroCards — and made two announcements ahead of his speech that garnered broad attention, on health care and paid vacation.Since New Year’s Day, Mr. de Blasio has held five news conferences in which he took questions from the media — including ones last week about the census, crime statistics and half-price MetroCards — and made two announcements ahead of his speech that garnered broad attention, on health care and paid vacation.
The mayor, in his address, continues to aim at a bigger, if unnamed, target: the nation’s political and economic system. The mayor, in his address, continued to aim at a bigger, if unnamed, target: the nation’s political and economic system.
“This country has spent decades taking from working people and giving to the 1 percent,” the prepared text says. “This city has spent the last five years doing it the other way around. We give back to working people the prosperity they have earned.” “This country has spent decades taking from working people and giving to the 1 percent,” he said. “This city has spent the last five years doing it the other way around. We give back to working people the prosperity they have earned.”
The speech, delivered against a campaign-style backdrop of seated supporters, concludes: “Those goals are not utopian or unreachable. They are achievable.” The speech concluded: “Those goals are not utopian or unreachable. They are achievable.”
Mr. de Blasio is giving the speech during the day, rather than in the evening as he has done for the past three years. And he is using a teleprompter, departing from his recent practice of allowing himself more freedom to improvise by relying only on bullet points. That approach did not appear to serve him well in the past two years in speeches that ran long and were not strongly received. Mr. de Blasio gave the speech at 11 a.m., rather than in the evening as he has done for the past three years. And he used a teleprompter, departing from his recent practice of allowing himself more freedom to improvise by relying only on bullet points. That approach did not appear to serve him well in the past two years in speeches that ran long and were not strongly received.
Yet as he has in the past, the mayor is employing rhetoric aimed at showing empathy for struggling New Yorkers who have not benefited from the city’s prosperity sounding almost like a life coach. On Thursday, he spoke against a campaign-style backdrop of seated supporters, though City Hall refused to identify them.
“Are you spending enough time with your kids? When was the last time you and your partner could go out on a date?” his remarks read. “Do you see your life getting better this year? Or are you just holding on?” As he has in the past, the mayor employed rhetoric aimed at showing empathy for struggling New Yorkers who have not benefited from the city’s prosperity sounding almost like a life coach.
The speech includes the usual heralding of city workers who did exceptional work in the past year. The mayor also was to add a few moments of flair, using video to illustrate some points and signing an executive order on stage to create a new office for tenant protection that he said would step up enforcement against landlords. “Are you spending enough time with your kids? Do you have time for that? When was the last time you and your partner could go out on a date?” he said. “Do you see your life getting better this year? Or are you just holding on?”
As he signs the order, Mr. de Blasio plans to punctuate the moment, according to his prepared remarks: “That was easy, wasn’t it?” The questions echoed the importance-of-family theme from a five-minute video that opened the proceeding, with New Yorkers of various background talking about their struggles and their home lives.
The speech included the usual heralding of city workers who did exceptional work in the past year. The mayor also added a few moments of flair, using video to illustrate some points — like a silent scroll of nations that already require paid vacation — and signing an executive order on stage to create a new office for tenant protection that he said would step up enforcement against landlords.
As he signed the order, Mr. de Blasio punctuated the moment by holding the document aloft to the applauding room. “Who says government can’t act fast?” he said.