Edward I. Koch

views updated May 17 2018

Edward I. Koch

Edward I. Koch (born 1924) was one of New York City's most controversial mayors. He led the city from the edge of bankruptcy in 1978 to a substantial budget surplus in 1983.

Edward I. Koch was born December 12, 1924, in New York City, the second of three children born to Russian-Jewish immigrants Louis and Joyce Silpe Koch. When his pantsmaker father fell on hard times during the Depression, Edward, then age six, and his family moved in with relatives in Newark, New Jersey, in 1931. Ten years later they returned to New York City. Koch graduated with honors from high school and attended City College from 1941 to 1943 until drafted into the U.S. Army. Koch served in Europe as an infantryman, won two battle citations, and was discharged in 1946. After the war he took an accelerated course at New York University Law School, was graduated in 1948, and was admitted to the bar the following year. He then opened a small law practice.

Law Career and Beginnings in Government

With a law business that could only be described as mediocre, Koch became increasingly active in Democratic political affairs. Koch worked as a campaign volunteer for presidential candidate Adlai Stevenson in 1952 and 1956 and also became a vocal member of a reform group called the Greenwich Village Independent Democrats. A liberal civil rights activist and reformer, Koch led a fight which deposed Democratic Party boss and district leader Carmine DeSapio in 1963. Thereafter he made an unsuccessful run for the New York State Assembly but lost in 1966. Two years later Koch was elected the first Democrat since the Depression era to represent Manhattan's "silk stocking" 17th district in the U.S. House of Representatives. Reelected four times, Koch served on the Banking and Currency Committee and the Appropriations Committee and was one of four congressional observers on the Emergency Financial Control Board established to deal with New York City's fiscal crisis of 1975. During his tenure in Congress Koch spoke out against the war in Vietnam and worked for federal aid to mass transit, health care for the aged, and a family assistance program, earning high praise from the liberal-left Americans for Democratic Action.

Mayor of New York City

In September 1977 Edward Koch entered a seven person Democratic primary seeking the mayoral nomination from which he emerged as the winner, beating chief challenger Mario Cuomo. In the heated election campaign which followed attempts were made to smear the unmarried Koch as a homosexual with signs that read: "Vote for Cuomo, not the homo." Ed Koch handily beat the future New York governor with 713,000 votes to Liberal Party candidate Mario Cuomo's 587,000. The dirty politics campaign embittered relations between these two leading New York democrats (which were exacerbated again in 1982 when Koch challenged Cuomo for the gubernatorial nomination). Koch had also struck a responsive chord with Gotham voters in his tough talk about cracking down on crime and the need for fiscal solvency and his combative willingness to stand up to the powerful municipal unions and minority special interests groups.

When Edward Koch took over the mayoralty in January 1978 the city was teetering on the edge of bankruptcy and saddled with a $1 billion deficit. Koch, with the continuing aid of federal loan guarantees and the Municipal Assistance Corporation, bore down on extravagance, pared the city payrolls, cut superfluous and inefficient public services, and brought the city back to fiscal solvency, boasting of a $500 million surplus by 1983. His real talent was to say "no" to excessive expenditures and over-generous settlements with municipal unions. With his clever quips and zany sense of humor, he brought a majority of New Yorkers around to liking his new lean, mean brand of urban austerity.

Koch was reelected mayor in 1981 as a candidate of both the Democratic and Republican parties. Persuaded by New York Post publisher Rupert Murdoch and his own upward ambitions, Koch entered the 1982 Democratic primary for governor and again faced his bitter rival, Mario Cuomo. He lost the primary. Koch may have contributed greatly to his own defeat by an impolitic interview with Playboy magazine, which his foes publicized and in which Koch referred to suburban life as "sterile" and rural life as "a joke" and made fun of pickup truck drivers, the very voters he needed to win the nomination.

Reelected to a third term as mayor in 1985, Koch drew an astonishing 75 percent of the vote, underscoring his great popularity with ethnic, blue collar, and Jewish voters. Despite his allegedly bad relations with Black leaders, a New York Daily News poll showed Koch pulled a sizable 37 percent of the Black vote in the 1985 Democratic primary compared to a Black candidate who polled only 40 percent, with 20 percent going to Council President Carol Bellamy.

"No New York mayor since Fiorello LaGuardia has inspired more affection, respect and outright loathing" asserted Insight magazine in 1985. Feisty, combative, spirited, and outrageously outspoken (he once called minority welfare spokesmen "poverty pimps"), Koch was also a fervent supporter of Israel and readily mixed municipal politics and foreign policy in his public addresses. During his second term Koch also wrote a best-selling book, Mayor: An Autobiography, an entertaining, shot-from-the-lip odyssey of mayoring which embarrassed his enemies and some of his erstwhile friends. Yet his larger achievement was that he brought New York back from the brink of financial disaster and raised the spirits of New Yorkers. For that and other reasons, Professor Roger Starr said of Koch: "He is the right man for the right time." Mayor Koch was New York City's most effective promoter and frequently repeated that he wanted to be "Mayor for Life."

Koch most recently tried his hand as a novelist, with Murder At City Hall (1995), and Murder on Broadway (1996). He also presided over a television revival of The People's Court that began in the fall of 1997.

Further Reading

For Koch's version of his mayoralty, see Edward I. Koch, Mayor: An Autobiography (1984), and for a critical version of his mayoralty see Arthur Browne, Dan Collins, and Michael Goodwin, I Koch: A Decidedly Unauthorized Biography of the Mayor of New York City, Edward I. Koch (1985).

The quotable and irrepressible Edward Koch can be followed in the election issues of the New York Times and national news magazines. See also Dotson Rader, "Where's Ed Koch Going?" in Detroit Free Press Parade (August 1, 1982); "The Big Apple: Worms and All," in Insight (October 28, 1985); and New York Daily News-Channel 7 polls (October 25, 1985). □

Koch, Edward Irving

views updated May 14 2018

KOCH, EDWARD IRVING

KOCH, EDWARD IRVING (1924– ), U.S. politician. Born in the Bronx, New York, Koch attended the City College of New York from 1941 to 1943. In his last year of college, he was drafted into the army, where he served with the 104th Infantry Division. He received two battle stars and was honorably discharged in 1946 with the rank of sergeant. He graduated from New York University School of Law in 1948 and began to practice law. Deeply committed to the service of his native city, he entered public life in 1963, when he replaced Carmine de Sapio, the long-time Tammany Hall district leader in Greenwich Village. He was reelected in the following two years. Koch was elected to the New York City Council in 1966 and was the first Democrat to represent his district in more than 30 years. Two years later he was elected to Congress, where he served for nine years. He led the fight for urban-orientation and was instrumental in having the mass transit operating subsidy bill passed in 1974. He has strongly supported measures aimed at furthering equal opportunity, human rights, health care, and the arts. In 1976 he was voted "the most effective Congressman from New York" by his congressional colleagues from New York City.

In November 1977 he was elected the 105th mayor of New York, assuming office on January 1, 1978, and was overwhelmingly reelected in 1981. His rallying cry "How'm I doing?" was best answered by the fact that he held the position for three terms, until 1989. Among his many achievements as mayor, Koch succeeded in restoring financial stability to New York City and placed the Big Apple on a balanced budget. He ran for a fourth term but was defeated in the Democratic primary.

Koch then became a partner in the law firm of Robinson, Silverman, Pearce, Aronsohn & Berman. He also wrote political columns; was a commentator for Bloomberg Television; hosted a radio talk show; and wrote movie, book, and restaurant reviews, as well as a weekly column for Newsday.

Among Koch's books are How'm I Doing? The Wit and Wisdom of Ed Koch (with M. Shestack and R. Sayre, 1981), Mayor (1984), Politics (1985), His Eminence and Hizzoner (1989), All The Best: Letters from a Feisty Mayor (1990), Citizen Koch (1992), Ed Koch on Everything (1994), Giuliani: Nasty Man (1999), and I'm Not Done Yet: Remaining Relevant (with D. Paisner, 2000).

bibliography:

J. Mollenkopf, A Phoenix in the Ashes: The Rise and Fall of the Koch Coalition in New York City Politics (1992); J. Newfield and W. Barrett, City for Sale (1989); M. Goodwin, et al. I, Koch: A Decidedly Unauthorized Biography of the Mayor of New York City (1985).

[Rohan Saxen and

Ruth Beloff (2nd ed.)]

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