I attended the Bradley for
President rally at Judson Memorial Church in Greenwich Village on 2/2/00.
The rally was scheduled to start at 12:30 pm so I arrived at 11:45 am to
get a good spot. I ended up about three standing rows back to the right
of the podium and had an excellent view of the kickoff to the March 7 primary.
A young man from NYU
Journalism school interviewed me. I explained why I prefer Bradley
of the current crop of candidates from both parties. It was interesting
to see the results of the preparation that goes into a staged event. This
was the beginning of the New York campaign and the stage was crammed with
dozens of local politicos and celebrities. Many seemed truly surprised
to see the turnout of several hundred that spilled out into the street
and around the block. I was notified by campaign@bradley.com
and noticed in the last week that the event was not overly publicized,
I think by choice. Even www.billbradley.com
only noted the location in the 24 hours preceding the event. You want the
news media there of course but you want to fill the hall with supporters,
not just anybody. I noticed someone faint about five minutes into Bradley’s
speech and I couldn’t help but wonder if this a classic political prank
to distract everybody.
Don’t Mess with Bill was the campaign theme
and among the other tunes played by a small jazz combo at the event. Emcee
Ron Silver did a good job kicking off the program at about 12:45.
Former Knick teammates Dave Debusschere and Earl “The Pearl” Monroe spoke.
Dave emphasized the character of the man he has known for 35 years. Earl
did too. Earl was walking with a cane and it isn’t known what “Pearl” is
illing with. Bill’s wife Ernestine spoke lovingly of her guy and it was
genuine. Like Kissinger used to say to Nixon when they were making a statement
regarding our reasons for a geopolitical action, it had the added advantage
of being true.
Patti Smith rocked the house with The People Have
the Power. I thought of my friend Gary who was Patti's biggest follower
in the late 70s.
Councilwoman Ronnie Eldridge [Mrs. Jimmy Breslin]
spoke and many other Manhattan pols whose names I didn’t write down. Shopper
saver and cable channel movie reviewer Ed “Judge” Koch made us raise our
right hands and pledge to take 10 people to the polls on Primary Day to
vote for Bill Bradley. Ed introduced Bradley. Slightly ironic as Koch was
a Gore man in ‘88 [Gore finished third]. Actually a short rich banker had
already introduced Bradley to
the stage, so quickly that it took us all by surprise. Bradley took in
the applause to confetti thrown by myself and other from long, cardboard
tubes. Then Ed took the mike and introduced him again, introducing him
to the microphone to start his speech.
As I watched Al Gore brag to his cheering audience after he won
New Hampshire he said, I heard what you said you wanted, and I told
the country what you told me to say. I'm paraphrasing but it's very
close to what I saw on C-SPAN. I think
that used to be called pandering, not leadership. I don't want a leader
to comfortably confirm my beliefs. We'd still have slavery if the system
didn't get shaken up now and then. I want to be challenged to excel. I
want the cesspool of campaign finance, in a fouler
state than the Paris sewers of the 19th century, to be cleaned up. Money
is influence is access is power. That's why Bradley [and McCain] are the
two most dangerous men out there today.
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