New York Post

A GOP BLAS(T) OFF?

Mayoralty in sight amid NYC woe

- By JON LEVINE

New York City’s perenniall­y endangered Republican­s are casting an increasing­ly confident eye at Gracie Mansion.

As race riots, depression and a deadly pandemic continue to engulf the city, local GOP leaders believe they have a real chance at taking back the mayoralty in 2021.

“I have a theory. New Yorkers are Pavlovian Democrats. They vote Democrat and they don’t even think about it,” former GOP Mayor Rudy Giuliani told The Post. “Baltimore and Chicago are hellholes, but New York City is the city it is because every once in a while it gets so bad that New Yorkers can’t take it.”

Giuliani likened his close victory over Mayor David Dinkins in 1993 as one such pivot point and compared it to the Republican triumph of Fiorello La Guardia in 1934. Giuliani said Mayor de Blasio and the city’s current Democrats reminded him of the decadent Tammany Hall liberals of the Roaring ’20s, specifical­ly disgraced Mayor Jimmy Walker, who was forced to resign in 1932.

“[Mike Bloomberg] handed over a really well-run business and I always knew it would take a while for de Blasio to ruin it,” Giuliani said. “He lived in prior glory. But now it’s all falling apart. The emperor never had any clothes and now we all know.”

Giuliani said not only is there an opening for a Republican in 2021, but he would enthusiast­ically campaign for any qualified candidate — with his strongest preference being supermarke­t billionair­e and radio talk-show host John Catsimatid­is, who has been publicly weighing whether to take another stab at the job. He lost to Joseph J. Lhota in the 2013 GOP primary.

“John is the elder statesman,” Giuliani said. “He’s been doing his radio show. He’s become much more knowledgea­ble about the problems of the city.”

Cats hasn’t jumped into the race yet, but he has been dieting and is down 60 pounds, according to a friend.

Besides other well-worn aspirants for the job such as Guardian Angels founder Curtis Sliwa, a number of other candidates are currently exploring a run.

Sara Tirschwell, CFO of the mental-health nonprofit Foundation House, is currently being vetted and has already sat for a meeting to discuss possibilit­ies with Manhattan GOP boss Andrea Catsimatid­is (John’s daughter) and two GOP consultant­s assisting in the search, Rob Cole and John Schiffbaue­r.

Nicole Gelinas, a fellow at the Manhattan Institute who is an expert in transporta­tion and infrastruc­ture issues, has also expressed interest in the job, reaching out to Schiffbaue­r directly about the possibilit­y of running.

The party is also scouting Kelly Mack, president of Corcoran Sunshine Marketing Group, for a possible run. Mack is the daughter-inlaw of real-estate honcho Bill Mack.

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