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	<title>Observer &#187; Ex- Wunderkind Andy Stein Is Back, Pulling Levers for McCall, Hevesi</title>
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		<title>Observer &#187; Ex- Wunderkind Andy Stein Is Back, Pulling Levers for McCall, Hevesi</title>
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		<title>Ex- Wunderkind Andy Stein Is Back, Pulling Levers for McCall, Hevesi</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2001/04/ex-wunderkind-andy-stein-is-back-pulling-levers-for-mccall-hevesi/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 09 Apr 2001 00:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2001/04/ex-wunderkind-andy-stein-is-back-pulling-levers-for-mccall-hevesi/</link>
			<dc:creator>Andrea Bernstein</dc:creator>
				
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		<description><![CDATA[<p>As State Comptroller H. Carl McCall kicked off his 2002</p>
<p>gubernatorial campaign a few weeks ago, a ghost-like figure emerged from the</p>
<p>crowd of McCall supporters circulating in a ballroom at the Plaza hotel. His</p>
<p>salt-and-pepper mop of synthetic hair brought back memories of the days when he</p>
<p>was a political macher of the first</p>
<p>order, a Mayoral candidate-in-waiting, an ambitious son of privilege whose</p>
<p>dreams knew no limits.</p>
<p> Fifty-six-year-old Andrew Stein was once a contender, all</p>
<p>right--but after withdrawing from a disastrous Mayoral campaign and quitting</p>
<p>politics altogether eight years ago, he quickly became a forgotten man. His</p>
<p>name was seldom, if ever, invoked; his early successes as a brash young</p>
<p>Assemblyman were unknown to today's political stars on the rise. The very job</p>
<p>he held for years-City Council President-no longer exists. He wasn't quite 50</p>
<p>when he quit politics in 1993, which is like a promising athlete retiring to</p>
<p>the sidelines before age 30. Not long after his retirement, he and his wife,</p>
<p>Lynn Forester, quietly divorced, and Ms. Forester's business career took off.</p>
<p>By the late 1990's, she was being hailed as one of the most powerful women in telecommunications; she is now married to</p>
<p>Sir Evelyn de Rothschild. Her rise to fortune and her new marriage were the</p>
<p>subject of a long profile in the April issue of Talk magazine.</p>
<p> Andrew Stein, in the</p>
<p>meantime, was very much yesterday's news in a profession-politics-that lives in</p>
<p>the present tense.</p>
<p> But now, as a supporter and key adviser for Mr. McCall, Mr.</p>
<p>Stein is reemerging as a political figure, and people are noticing.</p>
<p> In an interview with The</p>
<p>Observer , Mr. Stein said that he had done some work for Mr. McCall in 1998,</p>
<p>but now his role is "definitely" a good deal larger. And he insisted that</p>
<p>"people come to me for advice all the time."</p>
<p> But in recent weeks, Mr. Stein's role as an advice-dispenser</p>
<p>has become more public.</p>
<p> A few weeks after the</p>
<p>McCall event, Mr. Stein joined City Comptroller Alan Hevesi for a photo op on</p>
<p>the steps of City Hall. Mr. Hevesi was speaking about nursing homes, a subject</p>
<p>Mr. Stein knows something about, having made his political name as a</p>
<p>fresh-out-of-college state legislator who investigated nursing-home abuses in</p>
<p>the early 1970's. Mr. Hevesi said Mr. Stein's appearance at the press</p>
<p>conference "gave the issue credibility," a tribute to Mr. Stein's image as an</p>
<p>advocate for nursing-home residents. Of course, Mr. Stein's days as a tireless</p>
<p>persecutor of crooked nursing-home operators 30 years ago are not even</p>
<p>yesterday's news. They qualify as history. "I don't think people would remember</p>
<p>his role," Mr. Hevesi said of Mr. Stein. "But they will, if we remind them."</p>
<p> Mr. Stein is ready to return the compliment. "Every time I</p>
<p>see Andy, he is pushing Hevesi," said U.S. Representative Charles Rangel of</p>
<p>Harlem. Mr. Rangel is an ally of Mr. McCall.</p>
<p> Mr. Stein's reemergence in local politics is not, it should</p>
<p>be noted, some exercise in municipal nostalgia. Just ask David Axelrod.</p>
<p> Until March 27, David Axelrod was Carl McCall's media</p>
<p>consultant, the man who, in 1994, had helped him become the first</p>
<p>African-American to win statewide elective office in New York. Mr. McCall and</p>
<p>Mr. Axelrod enjoyed a close personal relationship, with Mr. Axelrod laying the</p>
<p>groundwork for next year's gubernatorial race by managing Mr. McCall's highly</p>
<p>successful reelection campaign in 1998, when Mr. McCall garnered more votes for</p>
<p>Comptroller than George Pataki did in winning reelection as Governor. But on</p>
<p>March 27, Mr. Axelrod quit Mr. McCall's campaign, shocking the Comptroller's</p>
<p>supporters.</p>
<p> Most of them, anyway.</p>
<p> According to one faction in the McCall camp, Andrew Stein</p>
<p>and his father, businessman and power broker Jerry Finkelstein, had been</p>
<p>working behind the scenes to replace Mr. Axelrod, who is based in Chicago, with</p>
<p>the better-known Hank Morris, who once worked for Mr. Stein and who is now</p>
<p>trying to get Mr. Hevesi elected Mayor. According to sources familiar with the</p>
<p>McCall campaign, the argument was that Mr. Morris would know how to handle the</p>
<p>New York media, and that his quick-firing instincts would serve Mr. McCall</p>
<p>well. At one point, sources familiar with the New York Post said, somebody in the McCall camp went so far as to</p>
<p>leak an item to the Post 's Page Six</p>
<p>saying that Mr. Axelrod had been axed. But Mr. Axelrod said he decided to quit</p>
<p>after waiting two and a half months for Mr. McCall to decide who, in the end,</p>
<p>would serve as his campaign's media consultant.</p>
<p> Asked if he acted, as some McCall supporters insist, as a</p>
<p>"strong" advocate for Mr. Morris, Mr. Stein said: "Well, 'strong' is too strong</p>
<p>a word. I have great respect for Hank; I think he'd be an asset. I did advise</p>
<p>[Mr. McCall] that Hank knows all the players. I don't know David Axelrod, and I</p>
<p>don't have anything against him."</p>
<p> Mr. Finkelstein said he played no role in Mr. Axelrod's</p>
<p>departure, and he said he hasn't seen Hank Morris in eight years. He never</p>
<p>brought up Mr. Morris' name with Mr. McCall, he said, although he conceded that</p>
<p>"I do think [Mr. Morris] is very good." Nevertheless, several McCall advisors</p>
<p>said Mr. McCall invoked Mr. Finkelstein's name in discussions about the</p>
<p>campaign.</p>
<p> A Defining Moment?</p>
<p> The departure of Mr. Axelrod may prove to be a defining</p>
<p>issue for Mr. McCall. Most of his supporters liked Mr. Axelrod and appreciated</p>
<p>his history with the Comptroller. </p>
<p>"David leaving is bad for Carl," one McCall supporter said. Privately,</p>
<p>some supporters say they're disturbed that Mr. Stein and Mr. Finkelstein seem</p>
<p>to have such power in the campaign. "Carl talks to [Mr. Finkelstein] all the</p>
<p>time," said a source.</p>
<p> It is Mr. Stein's involvement with Mr. McCall that has</p>
<p>political insiders taking note. While his father, who runs a string of weekly</p>
<p>newspapers in the city and The Hill</p>
<p>in Washington, D.C., has always been a power behind the scenes, Mr. Stein has</p>
<p>been relatively absent from the political scene since 1993. Not only is he</p>
<p>starting to exert backroom influence again, but he is doing so for an unlikely</p>
<p>candidate. Mr. Stein, after all, is the man who introduced Mr. McCall's</p>
<p>Democratic rival, Andrew Cuomo, to Kerry Kennedy, who is now Mr. Cuomo's wife.</p>
<p>Mr. Stein is close to some members of the Kennedy clan, and the Kennedys will</p>
<p>be out in force to support their relative by marriage next year. Ethel Kennedy,</p>
<p>Kerry Kennedy's mother, was a financial supporter of Mr. Stein back in the old</p>
<p>days.</p>
<p> Mr. Stein said at first that he hadn't spoken to Mr. Cuomo</p>
<p>in seven years, but then recalled a conversation he'd had with Mr. McCall's</p>
<p>rival six months ago. "I told him it was a mistake to run [for Governor]," Mr.</p>
<p>Stein said. "Carl McCall has earned the right."</p>
<p> "Andrew and I have become friends," Mr. McCall said of Mr.</p>
<p>Stein. The Comptroller recalled that Mr. Stein and his father "helped me back</p>
<p>in 1994, and they've helped me now. They've helped a number of people; they do</p>
<p>raise money and every now and then maybe [offer] advice."</p>
<p> Mr. Finkelstein downplayed his role with the Comptroller's</p>
<p>campaign. Asked if he was raising money for Mr. McCall, he said, "Not really,</p>
<p>no." He said he contributed to Mr. McCall's reelection campaign in 1998, and</p>
<p>records show he hasn't made a donation since. He also donated to Governor</p>
<p>Pataki's reelection campaign in '98. "Would I like Carl to be Governor over</p>
<p>Andrew [Cuomo]? Yes," Mr. Finkelstein said. "Do I also like Mr. Pataki? Yes."</p>
<p>Mr. Finkelstein's newspapers tend to feature pro-McCall and anti-Cuomo stories,</p>
<p>a trend Mr. Finkelstein acknowledged without trying to argue that it is merely</p>
<p>a coincidence.</p>
<p> Mr. Stein, who ran for</p>
<p>Assembly straight out of college with an estimated $250,000 of his father's</p>
<p>money, had been in politics for a quarter of a century. His signal achievement</p>
<p>came at the beginning of his career-exposing fraud in the nursing-home</p>
<p>industry, which led to indictments, shake-ups and reforms. After leaving the</p>
<p>state legislature, he was twice elected Manhattan Borough President, then City</p>
<p>Council President. In 1993, he was ready to challenge incumbent Mayor David</p>
<p>Dinkins, who had been weakened considerably by spiraling crime rates and a poor</p>
<p>economy. To the astonishment of political insiders, the vaunted Stein</p>
<p>machine-fueled by Mr. Finkelstein's fortune-seized up after just a few months.</p>
<p>Mr. Stein not only quit the Mayoral race, he declined to run for the newly</p>
<p>created office of Public Advocate, the successor to his old job of City Council</p>
<p>President.</p>
<p> "There is more to life</p>
<p>than politics, and more to public service than being an elected official," Mr.</p>
<p>Stein said at the time. Stein loyalists insist he has remained involved,</p>
<p>setting up fund-raisers for elected official who are his protégés, especially</p>
<p>Manhattan Borough President C. Virginia Fields. But to all but the most careful</p>
<p>observers, he seemed to have dropped out of public life completely. Even his</p>
<p>former close aides seem to have no idea what he does now. "He works with a man</p>
<p>named Kelly," said one. (Mr. Kelly's first name is James, and with Mr. Stein,</p>
<p>he is a fund administrator for hedge funds.) Before going into business with</p>
<p>Mr. Kelly, Mr. Stein-like any number of former politicians-worked briefly for</p>
<p>Ronald Perelman's empire.</p>
<p> Now, however, Mr. Stein seems ready for something of a</p>
<p>comeback, even if only as a behind-the-scenes power broker. Mr. Finkelstein may</p>
<p>have summed up his son's attitude when Mr. Stein left elected office eight</p>
<p>years ago: "Politics," he said, "is never out of anybody's blood forever."</p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>As State Comptroller H. Carl McCall kicked off his 2002</p>
<p>gubernatorial campaign a few weeks ago, a ghost-like figure emerged from the</p>
<p>crowd of McCall supporters circulating in a ballroom at the Plaza hotel. His</p>
<p>salt-and-pepper mop of synthetic hair brought back memories of the days when he</p>
<p>was a political macher of the first</p>
<p>order, a Mayoral candidate-in-waiting, an ambitious son of privilege whose</p>
<p>dreams knew no limits.</p>
<p> Fifty-six-year-old Andrew Stein was once a contender, all</p>
<p>right--but after withdrawing from a disastrous Mayoral campaign and quitting</p>
<p>politics altogether eight years ago, he quickly became a forgotten man. His</p>
<p>name was seldom, if ever, invoked; his early successes as a brash young</p>
<p>Assemblyman were unknown to today's political stars on the rise. The very job</p>
<p>he held for years-City Council President-no longer exists. He wasn't quite 50</p>
<p>when he quit politics in 1993, which is like a promising athlete retiring to</p>
<p>the sidelines before age 30. Not long after his retirement, he and his wife,</p>
<p>Lynn Forester, quietly divorced, and Ms. Forester's business career took off.</p>
<p>By the late 1990's, she was being hailed as one of the most powerful women in telecommunications; she is now married to</p>
<p>Sir Evelyn de Rothschild. Her rise to fortune and her new marriage were the</p>
<p>subject of a long profile in the April issue of Talk magazine.</p>
<p> Andrew Stein, in the</p>
<p>meantime, was very much yesterday's news in a profession-politics-that lives in</p>
<p>the present tense.</p>
<p> But now, as a supporter and key adviser for Mr. McCall, Mr.</p>
<p>Stein is reemerging as a political figure, and people are noticing.</p>
<p> In an interview with The</p>
<p>Observer , Mr. Stein said that he had done some work for Mr. McCall in 1998,</p>
<p>but now his role is "definitely" a good deal larger. And he insisted that</p>
<p>"people come to me for advice all the time."</p>
<p> But in recent weeks, Mr. Stein's role as an advice-dispenser</p>
<p>has become more public.</p>
<p> A few weeks after the</p>
<p>McCall event, Mr. Stein joined City Comptroller Alan Hevesi for a photo op on</p>
<p>the steps of City Hall. Mr. Hevesi was speaking about nursing homes, a subject</p>
<p>Mr. Stein knows something about, having made his political name as a</p>
<p>fresh-out-of-college state legislator who investigated nursing-home abuses in</p>
<p>the early 1970's. Mr. Hevesi said Mr. Stein's appearance at the press</p>
<p>conference "gave the issue credibility," a tribute to Mr. Stein's image as an</p>
<p>advocate for nursing-home residents. Of course, Mr. Stein's days as a tireless</p>
<p>persecutor of crooked nursing-home operators 30 years ago are not even</p>
<p>yesterday's news. They qualify as history. "I don't think people would remember</p>
<p>his role," Mr. Hevesi said of Mr. Stein. "But they will, if we remind them."</p>
<p> Mr. Stein is ready to return the compliment. "Every time I</p>
<p>see Andy, he is pushing Hevesi," said U.S. Representative Charles Rangel of</p>
<p>Harlem. Mr. Rangel is an ally of Mr. McCall.</p>
<p> Mr. Stein's reemergence in local politics is not, it should</p>
<p>be noted, some exercise in municipal nostalgia. Just ask David Axelrod.</p>
<p> Until March 27, David Axelrod was Carl McCall's media</p>
<p>consultant, the man who, in 1994, had helped him become the first</p>
<p>African-American to win statewide elective office in New York. Mr. McCall and</p>
<p>Mr. Axelrod enjoyed a close personal relationship, with Mr. Axelrod laying the</p>
<p>groundwork for next year's gubernatorial race by managing Mr. McCall's highly</p>
<p>successful reelection campaign in 1998, when Mr. McCall garnered more votes for</p>
<p>Comptroller than George Pataki did in winning reelection as Governor. But on</p>
<p>March 27, Mr. Axelrod quit Mr. McCall's campaign, shocking the Comptroller's</p>
<p>supporters.</p>
<p> Most of them, anyway.</p>
<p> According to one faction in the McCall camp, Andrew Stein</p>
<p>and his father, businessman and power broker Jerry Finkelstein, had been</p>
<p>working behind the scenes to replace Mr. Axelrod, who is based in Chicago, with</p>
<p>the better-known Hank Morris, who once worked for Mr. Stein and who is now</p>
<p>trying to get Mr. Hevesi elected Mayor. According to sources familiar with the</p>
<p>McCall campaign, the argument was that Mr. Morris would know how to handle the</p>
<p>New York media, and that his quick-firing instincts would serve Mr. McCall</p>
<p>well. At one point, sources familiar with the New York Post said, somebody in the McCall camp went so far as to</p>
<p>leak an item to the Post 's Page Six</p>
<p>saying that Mr. Axelrod had been axed. But Mr. Axelrod said he decided to quit</p>
<p>after waiting two and a half months for Mr. McCall to decide who, in the end,</p>
<p>would serve as his campaign's media consultant.</p>
<p> Asked if he acted, as some McCall supporters insist, as a</p>
<p>"strong" advocate for Mr. Morris, Mr. Stein said: "Well, 'strong' is too strong</p>
<p>a word. I have great respect for Hank; I think he'd be an asset. I did advise</p>
<p>[Mr. McCall] that Hank knows all the players. I don't know David Axelrod, and I</p>
<p>don't have anything against him."</p>
<p> Mr. Finkelstein said he played no role in Mr. Axelrod's</p>
<p>departure, and he said he hasn't seen Hank Morris in eight years. He never</p>
<p>brought up Mr. Morris' name with Mr. McCall, he said, although he conceded that</p>
<p>"I do think [Mr. Morris] is very good." Nevertheless, several McCall advisors</p>
<p>said Mr. McCall invoked Mr. Finkelstein's name in discussions about the</p>
<p>campaign.</p>
<p> A Defining Moment?</p>
<p> The departure of Mr. Axelrod may prove to be a defining</p>
<p>issue for Mr. McCall. Most of his supporters liked Mr. Axelrod and appreciated</p>
<p>his history with the Comptroller. </p>
<p>"David leaving is bad for Carl," one McCall supporter said. Privately,</p>
<p>some supporters say they're disturbed that Mr. Stein and Mr. Finkelstein seem</p>
<p>to have such power in the campaign. "Carl talks to [Mr. Finkelstein] all the</p>
<p>time," said a source.</p>
<p> It is Mr. Stein's involvement with Mr. McCall that has</p>
<p>political insiders taking note. While his father, who runs a string of weekly</p>
<p>newspapers in the city and The Hill</p>
<p>in Washington, D.C., has always been a power behind the scenes, Mr. Stein has</p>
<p>been relatively absent from the political scene since 1993. Not only is he</p>
<p>starting to exert backroom influence again, but he is doing so for an unlikely</p>
<p>candidate. Mr. Stein, after all, is the man who introduced Mr. McCall's</p>
<p>Democratic rival, Andrew Cuomo, to Kerry Kennedy, who is now Mr. Cuomo's wife.</p>
<p>Mr. Stein is close to some members of the Kennedy clan, and the Kennedys will</p>
<p>be out in force to support their relative by marriage next year. Ethel Kennedy,</p>
<p>Kerry Kennedy's mother, was a financial supporter of Mr. Stein back in the old</p>
<p>days.</p>
<p> Mr. Stein said at first that he hadn't spoken to Mr. Cuomo</p>
<p>in seven years, but then recalled a conversation he'd had with Mr. McCall's</p>
<p>rival six months ago. "I told him it was a mistake to run [for Governor]," Mr.</p>
<p>Stein said. "Carl McCall has earned the right."</p>
<p> "Andrew and I have become friends," Mr. McCall said of Mr.</p>
<p>Stein. The Comptroller recalled that Mr. Stein and his father "helped me back</p>
<p>in 1994, and they've helped me now. They've helped a number of people; they do</p>
<p>raise money and every now and then maybe [offer] advice."</p>
<p> Mr. Finkelstein downplayed his role with the Comptroller's</p>
<p>campaign. Asked if he was raising money for Mr. McCall, he said, "Not really,</p>
<p>no." He said he contributed to Mr. McCall's reelection campaign in 1998, and</p>
<p>records show he hasn't made a donation since. He also donated to Governor</p>
<p>Pataki's reelection campaign in '98. "Would I like Carl to be Governor over</p>
<p>Andrew [Cuomo]? Yes," Mr. Finkelstein said. "Do I also like Mr. Pataki? Yes."</p>
<p>Mr. Finkelstein's newspapers tend to feature pro-McCall and anti-Cuomo stories,</p>
<p>a trend Mr. Finkelstein acknowledged without trying to argue that it is merely</p>
<p>a coincidence.</p>
<p> Mr. Stein, who ran for</p>
<p>Assembly straight out of college with an estimated $250,000 of his father's</p>
<p>money, had been in politics for a quarter of a century. His signal achievement</p>
<p>came at the beginning of his career-exposing fraud in the nursing-home</p>
<p>industry, which led to indictments, shake-ups and reforms. After leaving the</p>
<p>state legislature, he was twice elected Manhattan Borough President, then City</p>
<p>Council President. In 1993, he was ready to challenge incumbent Mayor David</p>
<p>Dinkins, who had been weakened considerably by spiraling crime rates and a poor</p>
<p>economy. To the astonishment of political insiders, the vaunted Stein</p>
<p>machine-fueled by Mr. Finkelstein's fortune-seized up after just a few months.</p>
<p>Mr. Stein not only quit the Mayoral race, he declined to run for the newly</p>
<p>created office of Public Advocate, the successor to his old job of City Council</p>
<p>President.</p>
<p> "There is more to life</p>
<p>than politics, and more to public service than being an elected official," Mr.</p>
<p>Stein said at the time. Stein loyalists insist he has remained involved,</p>
<p>setting up fund-raisers for elected official who are his protégés, especially</p>
<p>Manhattan Borough President C. Virginia Fields. But to all but the most careful</p>
<p>observers, he seemed to have dropped out of public life completely. Even his</p>
<p>former close aides seem to have no idea what he does now. "He works with a man</p>
<p>named Kelly," said one. (Mr. Kelly's first name is James, and with Mr. Stein,</p>
<p>he is a fund administrator for hedge funds.) Before going into business with</p>
<p>Mr. Kelly, Mr. Stein-like any number of former politicians-worked briefly for</p>
<p>Ronald Perelman's empire.</p>
<p> Now, however, Mr. Stein seems ready for something of a</p>
<p>comeback, even if only as a behind-the-scenes power broker. Mr. Finkelstein may</p>
<p>have summed up his son's attitude when Mr. Stein left elected office eight</p>
<p>years ago: "Politics," he said, "is never out of anybody's blood forever."</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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