| Long, Hot Summer for Irish Pols
By Tom deignan
AS we make our way towards Memorial Day weekend, the political scene
usually cools off. Politicians retreat from Washington or Albany, and
the big issues of the day tend fade into the background as we all turn
our attention to summer fun, such as how on earth we’re going to
keep filling those gas tanks!
But if you are an Irish American politician, it seems these are the days
when things are heating up.
Let’s start in New York City where one of Mike Bloomberg’s
top aides — the son of Irish immigrants — has become engaged
in a power struggle within the administration.
According to Ben Smith in the New York Daily News, Patrick Brennan is
being touted as the new leader at the obscure but influential Community
Assistance Unit. Brennan, whose mother was born in Mohill, Co. Leitrim
and whose father was born in Kiltimagh, Co. Mayo, is being supported by
Deputy Mayor Kevin Sheekey.
However, others within Camp Bloomberg have said they want to expand the
administration’s diversity and want to hire an African American
for the job.
Either way, this shows that since joining the Bloomberg team during last
year’s election, Brennan has become a valued aide. A native of Bay
Ridge, Brooklyn, Brennan worked in the New York City public school system
before getting involved in politics.
In 1998 he worked for Chuck Schumer’s Senate campaign and later
held senior posts with organized labor. Why would an Irish union man work
for a billionaire Republican? As Brennan told “Sidewalks”
last year, he thinks Bloomberg is the man to give New York’s working
class a shot at the American Dream.
Meanwhile, a number of Irish Americans are already battling for the crucial
2006 congressional elections. Perhaps the most surprising name in this
context is upstate Congressman John Sweeney.
What is surprising is that Sweeney (like Brennan, a Republican who comes
out of an Irish American union background) is being targeted as vulnerable.
Democrats are pointing to President George W. Bush’s bad poll numbers
in Sweeney’s upstate district and are hoping Sweeney will sink along
with the president.
Earlier this month a New York Times analysis said that Sweeney was “on
the defensive.”
This comes a few months after Sweeney was involved in a nasty feud with
Governor George Pataki loyalist Patrick McCarthy. According to the Albany
rumor mill, Sweeney believes McCarthy was assisting his Democratic opponent
Kirsten Gillibrand.
Why would these Irish Republicans be at each other’s throats? Well,
Sweeney has never been afraid to attack New York’s Republican leadership.
“We face a disaster in 2006,” Sweeney was quoted as saying
last year. This and other comments have been taken as not-so-veiled swipes
at Governor Pataki and other New York State GOP leaders.
The allegations of aiding the Democratic enemy even led one New York Republican
to write a letter demanding that McCarthy be punished for backstabbing
Sweeney.
All of this infighting only assists the Democrats. They have targeted
Northeast Republican seats such as Sweeney’s as the key to turning
2006 into their 1994 — that is, the year they convincingly swept
to victory in the House of Represent-atives, as Republicans did that year,
led by Newt Gingrich.
Syracuse Republican James Walsh, also a familiar name to many Irish Americans
thanks to his Walsh visa program and chairmanship of the Friends of Ireland
committee in Congress, is another incumbent who has been targeted by Democrats
as vulnerable.
If Democratic strategy pans out, then come November, you will know the
name of Chris Murphy.
As The Times noted earlier this month, “The Democrats’ strategy
is on prominent display in Connecticut’s Fifth Congressional District,
where the Democratic challenger, Christopher S. Murphy, 32, a state senator,
has accused the 12-term Republican incumbent, Representative Nancy L.
Johnson, of playing a leading role in helping advance the agenda of President
Bush and conservative House leaders on issues including the war in Iraq
and health care.”
It’s a long way to go, of course, before those 2006 elections. In
the meantime, you can also keep your eye on the attorney general’s
race here in New York State, where Buffalo’s Denise O’Donnell,
from a large working class Irish Buffalo family, as well as Sean Patrick
Maloney are among those fighting an uphill battle for the Democratic nomination.
As for reading, well, maybe you’ll want to take former New Jersey
Governor Jim McGreevey’s new book about his declaration that he
is a “gay American” to the beach.
Or maybe you’re better off sticking to politics outside of the
bedroom.
(Contact Sidewalks at tomdeignan@earthlink.net.)
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