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Giuliani, Once a Foe, Is Among First to Commemorate David Dinkins Giuliani, Once a Foe, Is Among First to Commemorate David Dinkins
(about 3 hours later)
Rudolph W. Giuliani, who defeated David N. Dinkins in New York City’s 1993 mayoral election, was among the public figures to commemorate Mr. Dinkins in the hours after his predecessor died late Monday at 93. Rudolph W. Giuliani, who defeated David N. Dinkins in New York City’s 1993 mayoral election, was among the first public figures to commemorate Mr. Dinkins in the hours after his predecessor died late Monday at 93.
Mr. Giuliani, who had been among Mr. Dinkins’s severest critics, said on Twitter early Tuesday that his predecessor had given “a great deal of his life in service to our great City.” He added, “That service is respected and honored by all.” Mr. Dinkins, a barber’s son, became New York City’s first Black mayor in 1990. He died at his home in Manhattan, less than two months after the death of his wife, Joyce.
New York State’s attorney general, Letitia James, said in a statement that Mr. Dinkins had inspired her bids for public office. Mr. Giuliani was once among Mr. Dinkins’s severest critics. But early Tuesday morning, he said on Twitter that his predecessor had given “a great deal of his life in service to our great City.”
“The example Mayor David Dinkins set for all of us shines brighter than the most powerful lighthouse imaginable,” said Ms. James, who shattered racial and gender barriers when she was elected to her current post in 2018. “That service is respected and honored by all,” Mr. Giuliani added.
“For decades, Mayor Dinkins led with compassion and an unparalleled commitment to our communities,” Ms. James added. “His deliberative and graceful demeanor belied his burning passion for challenging the inequalities that plague our society.” Mr. Dinkins won office on a pledge of racial healing, and he had plans to build housing, improve health care and respond to the concerns of marginalized groups. After his death, several prominent New Yorkers, including the state’s attorney general, Letitia James, praised those liberal instincts.
Mr. Dinkins liked to call New Yorkers a “gorgeous mosaic,” and he saw himself as a conciliator who might subdue the passions of multicultural neighborhoods with patience and dignity. “For decades, Mayor Dinkins led with compassion and an unparalleled commitment to our communities,” Ms. James, who shattered racial and gender barriers when she was elected to her current post in 2018, said in a statement. “His deliberative and graceful demeanor belied his burning passion for challenging the inequalities that plague our society.”
Mr. Dinkins was a cautious, deliberate Harlem Democrat who climbed to City Hall through relatively minor elective and appointive offices. He liked to call New Yorkers a “gorgeous mosaic,” and he saw himself as a conciliator who might subdue the passions of multicultural neighborhoods with patience and dignity.
Ms. James nodded to that idea: “The voice that gave birth to the ‘gorgeous mosaic’ is now at rest,” she wrote.Ms. James nodded to that idea: “The voice that gave birth to the ‘gorgeous mosaic’ is now at rest,” she wrote.
Mr. Dinkins, a barber’s son, became New York City’s first Black mayor in 1990. Dianne Morales, one of the candidates hoping to replace Mayor Bill de Blasio in the election next November, called Mr. Dinkins “a force to be reckoned with, and a strong advocate for a fairer city.”
He was rejected by voters after one term amid criticism over his handling of four days of racial violence in Crown Heights, Brooklyn. Mr. Giuliani beat him by sweeping the white ethnic neighborhoods in Brooklyn, Queens and Staten Island that were his political base. Several prominent African-Americans said Mr. Dinkins had been an inspiration to their careers.
Mr. Giuliani, who is now President Trump’s personal lawyer, and Fiorello H. La Guardia, who ran New York in the 1930s and ’40s, were arguably the city’s most dominant mayors of the 20th century.
Mr. Dinkins, by contrast, was a cautious, deliberate Harlem Democrat who climbed to City Hall through relatively minor elective and appointive offices.
Mr. Dinkins died at his home in Manhattan, less than two months after the death of his wife, Joyce.
African-American politicians from New York City were among those tweeting condolences in the hours after his death.
“We have lost another giant,” Representative Yvette Clarke of New York, who is from Brooklyn, wrote on Twitter. “My thoughts and prayers go out to the Dinkins family as we remember the Mayor’s great legacy in New York.”
Jamaal T. Bailey, a state senator from the Bronx, called Mr. Dinkins “a true trailblazer and legend.”Jamaal T. Bailey, a state senator from the Bronx, called Mr. Dinkins “a true trailblazer and legend.”
“People like me follow in your footsteps,” he wrote. “Representation matters. Thank you for paving the way for us.” “People like me follow in your footsteps,” he wrote on Twitter. “Representation matters. Thank you for paving the way for us.”
“So kind; So brilliant; So selfless!” wrote Michael Blake, a New York State assemblyman from the Bronx. “THANK YOU Mayor Dinkins. Rest well good and faithful servant.” Patrick Gaspard, who was the United States ambassador to South Africa during the Obama administration, said that Mr. Dinkins was “grace itself” and “always went high when they went low.”
Journalists who knew Mr. Dinkins also weighed in on his life and legacy. "He taught me that you don’t need to be loud to be strong,” Mr. Gaspard wrote on Twitter.
“Got to cover Mayor David Dinkins for @AP when he traveled to the Dominican Republic,” David Beard, a former Associated Press writer, said in a tweet. “The people treated Dinkins like a rock star, like their own president.” A few journalists shared tales of covering Mr. Dinkins in the 1990s.
“Got to cover Mayor David Dinkins for @AP when he traveled to the Dominican Republic,” David Beard, a former Associated Press writer, tweeted. “The people treated Dinkins like a rock star, like their own president.”
Jane McManus, a longtime sports reporter, recalled that Mr. Dinkins was beloved by many people who worked at the U.S. Open tennis tournament.Jane McManus, a longtime sports reporter, recalled that Mr. Dinkins was beloved by many people who worked at the U.S. Open tennis tournament.
“I was surprised to see a person I knew as a sober politician be so friendly and such a tennis fan, seemed like he always had that warm half-smile for people he knew,” wrote Ms. McManus, who now directs the Center for Sports Communication at Marist College in Poughkeepsie, N.Y.“I was surprised to see a person I knew as a sober politician be so friendly and such a tennis fan, seemed like he always had that warm half-smile for people he knew,” wrote Ms. McManus, who now directs the Center for Sports Communication at Marist College in Poughkeepsie, N.Y.
“He and Bud Collins are probably up there now debating the best matches they ever saw,” she wrote, referring to a legendary tennis reporter who died in 2016. “He and Bud Collins are probably up there now debating the best matches they ever saw,” she wrote on Twitter, referring to a legendary tennis reporter who died in 2016.
Mr. Dinkins was rejected by voters in 1993 after one term amid criticism over his handling of four days of racial violence in Crown Heights, Brooklyn. His aides said he insisted on conceding to Mr. Giuliani despite a close result because he did not want to risk inflaming passions in a city that was starkly polarized along racial lines.
Mr. Giuliani, who beat Mr. Dinkins by sweeping the white ethnic neighborhoods in Brooklyn, Queens and Staten Island that were his political base, went on to become, arguably, one of the city’s most dominant mayors of the 20th century, alongside Fiorello H. La Guardia.
He is now President Trump’s personal lawyer and has led failed attempts in court to reverse Mr. Trump’s defeat in the presidential election. Critics have characterized Mr. Giuliani’s work for the Trump administration as a decline into farce by a once-respected figure.
Mr. Dinkins, by contrast, became a quiet elder statesman after leaving office, teaching at Columbia University, hosting a radio talk show and attending receptions, dinners and ceremonies.
“He took a quiet pride in the small kindnesses,” Mr. Gaspard wrote on Tuesday. “He accomplished much with humility and more strength than the world knew. Rest in our hearts.”