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	<title>Observer &#187; Mark Green&#8217;s Angriest Day</title>
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		<title>Observer &#187; Mark Green&#8217;s Angriest Day</title>
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		<title>Mark Green&#8217;s Angriest Day</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2001/11/mark-greens-angriest-day/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 07 Nov 2001 15:48:22 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2001/11/mark-greens-angriest-day/</link>
			<dc:creator>Josh Benson</dc:creator>
				
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		<description><![CDATA[<p>It was Mark Green&rsquo;s angriest day.</p>
<p>The polls showed that Michael Bloomberg, incredibly, had made a race of the 2001 Mayoral campaign after all, which meant that Mr. Green was perilously close to blowing what everybody had considered a sure-shot victory.</p>
<p>Only two months ago, Mr. Green seemed ready to swat away his three major Democratic rivals without breaking a sweat. Beating Mr. Bloomberg was supposed to be child&rsquo;s play. Then it all started to fall apart. And on Nov. 5, the final full day of campaigning, Mr. Green let the weeks of tension and frustration show, unleashing a barrage of invective at every campaign stop, hoping to stop the bleeding.</p>
<p>Here is a stop-by-stop account of the assault:</p>
<p>9:10 a.m.: Emerging from the Staten Island ferry terminal in lower Manhattan, Mr. Green brandished a brochure featuring black-and-white pictures of Mr. Green and former Mayor David Dinkins stamped with the word &ldquo;REJECTED.&rdquo; &ldquo;It shows the gross hypocrisy of the Bloomberg campaign,&rdquo; said Mr. Green. &ldquo;This from a Republican billionaire who invested in South Africa before the end of apartheid.&rdquo;</p>
<p>9:35 a.m.: Standing on a sidewalk in Williamsburg with a collection of local Hispanic leaders, politicians and rabbis, Mr. Green introduced a new twist on his attacks. &ldquo;For years, I worked to stop an incinerator from being built in Williamsburg. Where was Michael Bloomberg?&rdquo; asked Mr. Green. &ldquo;He was off legally making billions of dollars and rooting for the Red Sox!&rdquo;</p>
<p>12:30 p.m.: Mr. Green&rsquo;s bus--his staff dubbed the day&rsquo;s events the &ldquo;Mark Green Magical Victory Tour&rdquo;--pulled into a desolate, windswept parking lot in Flushing, Queens. In one corner, a stage was set up with a microphone and a Mao Zedung&ndash;style oversized portrait of Mr. Green as a backdrop. Two dozen Chinese and Korean supporters of Mr. Green held signs and shivered. Mr. Green took the stage, accompanied by teachers&rsquo; union leader Randi Weingarten, Martin Luther King III and a handful of local leaders. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t usually require a picture that&rsquo;s that big of me,&rdquo; Mr. Green said over a booming sound system that echoed in the empty lot. &ldquo;When the campaign is over, please send it to my wife, so she can put it up in my living room.&rdquo; Silence. Mr. Green tried a different tack, citing Mr. Bloomberg&rsquo;s reported statement that he avoids going to Queens: &ldquo;A man who says he doesn&rsquo;t like coming to Queens doesn&rsquo;t deserve the votes of people in Queens,&rdquo; said Mr. Green. After a pause, the stalwarts in the parking lot applauded.</p>
<p>12:55 p.m.: The Green campaign released a chilling, last-minute television ad featuring an allegation that Michael Bloomberg once told a pregnant employee to &ldquo;kill&rdquo; the fetus. A sinister-sounding voice says, &ldquo;Bloomberg bought her silence. Are you going to let Mike Bloomberg buy your vote?&rdquo;</p>
<p>2:15 p.m.: In Forest Hills, Queens, surrounded by his A-team of Jewish supporters--Senators Joe Lieberman and Charles Schumer, Comptroller Alan Hevesi and Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver--Mr. Green talked about his <em>kishkes</em>, detailed his adherence to the principles of <em>tikkun olam</em> and bragged about how he had &ldquo;jawboned down kosher-for-Passover prices for the first time in a generation.&rdquo; Then he turned his attention back to a more familiar theme, reciting Mr. Bloomberg&rsquo;s anti-Queens comments, calling him a &ldquo;rich elitist&rdquo; and likening him to a &ldquo;rookie pitcher&rdquo; being brought in for Game 7 of the World Series. Asked by a reporter if he shared Mr. Green&rsquo;s apparently low opinion of Mr.Bloomberg, Senator Lieberman demurred.</p>
<p>3:30 p.m.: A rally at Bryant Park promised to be the most upbeat event of the day. A string of prominent Green supporters--including Bill Clinton and no fewer than three Kennedys (Bobby, Ted and Kerry Kennedy Cuomo)--gave rousing speeches praising Mr. Green. A crowd of several hundred union workers voiced its approval. Mr. Green hugged the former President, to massive cheers from the increasingly boisterous audience. Then Mr. Green spoke. &ldquo;I worked for months, and not for weeks, to run a positive campaign,&rdquo; Mr. Green began, &ldquo;but then Michael Bloomberg started saying that I was a Stalinist, anti-police and a racist.&rdquo; There was a pause. &ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t mind the Stalinist charge, although my Trotskyite friends were upset.&rdquo; The crowd tittered uneasily. Mr. Clinton appeared to grimace. One campaign aide leaned over to another and muttered sarcastically, &ldquo;That&rsquo;s a great message.&rdquo;</p>
<p>9:00 p.m.: The voice of West Side Representative Jerrold Nadler boomed from a microphone mounted on a flatbed truck parked on the corner of Broadway and West 82nd Street. &ldquo;We have to get out the vote, especially on the West Side, because this is where we have to pile up the margins,&rdquo; he yelled. Thirty-five volunteers huddled on the sidewalk gamely cheered and raised their Green signs. The microphone was passed around the truck to a number of Upper West Side Democratic luminaries, such as Assemblyman Scott Stringer and State Senator Eric Schneiderman. Suddenly, an older man in a jacket and cap emerged from his apartment building and approached the truck. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve got kids, and they&rsquo;re trying to sleep,&rdquo; he yelled. The speeches continued as the disgruntled dad stared angrily. &ldquo;You&rsquo;re making too much noise,&rdquo; he persisted. Veteran Manhattan Democrat Karen Burstein tried to soothe him. &ldquo;I understand,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;We&rsquo;re almost done.&rdquo; Just then, water came flying out of an upper-story window, soaking several unlucky young volunteers on the sidewalk. A younger, angrier-looking resident approached the truck. &ldquo;Get them out of here!&rdquo; he yelled to a nearby police officer. &ldquo;They&rsquo;ll be gone in 10 minutes,&rdquo; said the cop, wearily. &ldquo;Why 10 minutes?&rdquo; the man asked. &ldquo;They&rsquo;re not moving,&rdquo; insisted the cop. Mr. Green, now front and center on the truck, attempted to speak. &ldquo;This is bullshit!&rdquo; the man screamed. &ldquo;All right, shut up already!&rdquo; came a shout from the crowd of Green volunteers. &ldquo;You shut up!&rdquo; said the man. Then he pointed to Mr. Green. &ldquo;And he shuts up!&rdquo; He stormed off. Mr. Green stared after him a moment. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll now keep it down,&rdquo; he began, &ldquo;because of that well-bred gentleman over there.&rdquo; Then, quietly, he resumed the offensive: &ldquo;For months, I&rsquo;ve tried to run a positive campaign &hellip;. &rdquo;</p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>It was Mark Green&rsquo;s angriest day.</p>
<p>The polls showed that Michael Bloomberg, incredibly, had made a race of the 2001 Mayoral campaign after all, which meant that Mr. Green was perilously close to blowing what everybody had considered a sure-shot victory.</p>
<p>Only two months ago, Mr. Green seemed ready to swat away his three major Democratic rivals without breaking a sweat. Beating Mr. Bloomberg was supposed to be child&rsquo;s play. Then it all started to fall apart. And on Nov. 5, the final full day of campaigning, Mr. Green let the weeks of tension and frustration show, unleashing a barrage of invective at every campaign stop, hoping to stop the bleeding.</p>
<p>Here is a stop-by-stop account of the assault:</p>
<p>9:10 a.m.: Emerging from the Staten Island ferry terminal in lower Manhattan, Mr. Green brandished a brochure featuring black-and-white pictures of Mr. Green and former Mayor David Dinkins stamped with the word &ldquo;REJECTED.&rdquo; &ldquo;It shows the gross hypocrisy of the Bloomberg campaign,&rdquo; said Mr. Green. &ldquo;This from a Republican billionaire who invested in South Africa before the end of apartheid.&rdquo;</p>
<p>9:35 a.m.: Standing on a sidewalk in Williamsburg with a collection of local Hispanic leaders, politicians and rabbis, Mr. Green introduced a new twist on his attacks. &ldquo;For years, I worked to stop an incinerator from being built in Williamsburg. Where was Michael Bloomberg?&rdquo; asked Mr. Green. &ldquo;He was off legally making billions of dollars and rooting for the Red Sox!&rdquo;</p>
<p>12:30 p.m.: Mr. Green&rsquo;s bus--his staff dubbed the day&rsquo;s events the &ldquo;Mark Green Magical Victory Tour&rdquo;--pulled into a desolate, windswept parking lot in Flushing, Queens. In one corner, a stage was set up with a microphone and a Mao Zedung&ndash;style oversized portrait of Mr. Green as a backdrop. Two dozen Chinese and Korean supporters of Mr. Green held signs and shivered. Mr. Green took the stage, accompanied by teachers&rsquo; union leader Randi Weingarten, Martin Luther King III and a handful of local leaders. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t usually require a picture that&rsquo;s that big of me,&rdquo; Mr. Green said over a booming sound system that echoed in the empty lot. &ldquo;When the campaign is over, please send it to my wife, so she can put it up in my living room.&rdquo; Silence. Mr. Green tried a different tack, citing Mr. Bloomberg&rsquo;s reported statement that he avoids going to Queens: &ldquo;A man who says he doesn&rsquo;t like coming to Queens doesn&rsquo;t deserve the votes of people in Queens,&rdquo; said Mr. Green. After a pause, the stalwarts in the parking lot applauded.</p>
<p>12:55 p.m.: The Green campaign released a chilling, last-minute television ad featuring an allegation that Michael Bloomberg once told a pregnant employee to &ldquo;kill&rdquo; the fetus. A sinister-sounding voice says, &ldquo;Bloomberg bought her silence. Are you going to let Mike Bloomberg buy your vote?&rdquo;</p>
<p>2:15 p.m.: In Forest Hills, Queens, surrounded by his A-team of Jewish supporters--Senators Joe Lieberman and Charles Schumer, Comptroller Alan Hevesi and Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver--Mr. Green talked about his <em>kishkes</em>, detailed his adherence to the principles of <em>tikkun olam</em> and bragged about how he had &ldquo;jawboned down kosher-for-Passover prices for the first time in a generation.&rdquo; Then he turned his attention back to a more familiar theme, reciting Mr. Bloomberg&rsquo;s anti-Queens comments, calling him a &ldquo;rich elitist&rdquo; and likening him to a &ldquo;rookie pitcher&rdquo; being brought in for Game 7 of the World Series. Asked by a reporter if he shared Mr. Green&rsquo;s apparently low opinion of Mr.Bloomberg, Senator Lieberman demurred.</p>
<p>3:30 p.m.: A rally at Bryant Park promised to be the most upbeat event of the day. A string of prominent Green supporters--including Bill Clinton and no fewer than three Kennedys (Bobby, Ted and Kerry Kennedy Cuomo)--gave rousing speeches praising Mr. Green. A crowd of several hundred union workers voiced its approval. Mr. Green hugged the former President, to massive cheers from the increasingly boisterous audience. Then Mr. Green spoke. &ldquo;I worked for months, and not for weeks, to run a positive campaign,&rdquo; Mr. Green began, &ldquo;but then Michael Bloomberg started saying that I was a Stalinist, anti-police and a racist.&rdquo; There was a pause. &ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t mind the Stalinist charge, although my Trotskyite friends were upset.&rdquo; The crowd tittered uneasily. Mr. Clinton appeared to grimace. One campaign aide leaned over to another and muttered sarcastically, &ldquo;That&rsquo;s a great message.&rdquo;</p>
<p>9:00 p.m.: The voice of West Side Representative Jerrold Nadler boomed from a microphone mounted on a flatbed truck parked on the corner of Broadway and West 82nd Street. &ldquo;We have to get out the vote, especially on the West Side, because this is where we have to pile up the margins,&rdquo; he yelled. Thirty-five volunteers huddled on the sidewalk gamely cheered and raised their Green signs. The microphone was passed around the truck to a number of Upper West Side Democratic luminaries, such as Assemblyman Scott Stringer and State Senator Eric Schneiderman. Suddenly, an older man in a jacket and cap emerged from his apartment building and approached the truck. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve got kids, and they&rsquo;re trying to sleep,&rdquo; he yelled. The speeches continued as the disgruntled dad stared angrily. &ldquo;You&rsquo;re making too much noise,&rdquo; he persisted. Veteran Manhattan Democrat Karen Burstein tried to soothe him. &ldquo;I understand,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;We&rsquo;re almost done.&rdquo; Just then, water came flying out of an upper-story window, soaking several unlucky young volunteers on the sidewalk. A younger, angrier-looking resident approached the truck. &ldquo;Get them out of here!&rdquo; he yelled to a nearby police officer. &ldquo;They&rsquo;ll be gone in 10 minutes,&rdquo; said the cop, wearily. &ldquo;Why 10 minutes?&rdquo; the man asked. &ldquo;They&rsquo;re not moving,&rdquo; insisted the cop. Mr. Green, now front and center on the truck, attempted to speak. &ldquo;This is bullshit!&rdquo; the man screamed. &ldquo;All right, shut up already!&rdquo; came a shout from the crowd of Green volunteers. &ldquo;You shut up!&rdquo; said the man. Then he pointed to Mr. Green. &ldquo;And he shuts up!&rdquo; He stormed off. Mr. Green stared after him a moment. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll now keep it down,&rdquo; he began, &ldquo;because of that well-bred gentleman over there.&rdquo; Then, quietly, he resumed the offensive: &ldquo;For months, I&rsquo;ve tried to run a positive campaign &hellip;. &rdquo;</p>
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