
An animated Norm Siegel (center), flanked by Michael Meyers (left) and State Senator Eric Adams (right)
(Photo: Thomas Good / NLN)
NEW YORK — Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s recent announcement that he plans to seek a third term - and wants the City Council to change the law to make this possible - is stirring up controversy. Bloomberg has argued that New York needs him to navigate the City through the current financial crisis. Not everyone agrees.
On Sunday, two separate press conferences were held on the steps of City Hall to take up this issue.
At noon, City Council member David Weprin of Queens held a press conference opposing any legislative changes to term limits. Speakers at the conference included Public Advocate Betsy Gotbaum, former Parks Commissioner Henry Stern, attorney Gene Russianoff from NYPIRG and Council Members Bill de Blasio, John Liu, Eric Gioia and Charles Barron. The diverse group was united in their opposition to legislating any change that would negate two previous referenda in which the people of New York voted in favor of maintaining term limits.
After some council members stated that Mayor Bloomberg wasn’t the issue - the issue is one of process - Charles Barron disagreed.
“It is about Mayor Bloomberg. This is the worst attempt at a power grab — and changing the democracy into an oligarchy. It is Mayor Bloomberg and the rich on Wall Street who got us in this mess in the first place,” said Barron. “The people spoke in ’93 and ’96, said they wanted us eight and out,” he added.

Charles Barron (left) with NLN intern Nathaniel
(Photo: Thomas Good / NLN)
Barron proposed a different type of leadership for Bloomberg.
“Mayor Bloomberg came into this office worth 5 billion dollars, 65th on Forbe’s list. He is now eighth on the list and is worth twenty billion dollars. Well, Mayor why don’t you do what your buddy Warren Buffet did … Mayor give the City one of your twenty billion and stop coming to us with cuts, and bail out the poor and stop this power grab, this defiance of democracy, it’s a disgrace, it’s an insult to our city,” he said.
A second conference was held later in the day.
Shortly after two o’clock, civil rights attorney Norman Siegel, State Senator Eric Adams, City Council member Letitia James, City Council candidate Debi Rose and NY Civil Rights Coalition Director Michael Meyers joined with many other New Yorkers - individuals and group representatives - in condemning the Mayor’s “power grab”. The large, extraordinarily diverse, group filled the steps of City Hall and the press conference went on well into the afternoon. Speaker after speaker demanded that “the will of the people”, as expressed in the 1993 and 1996 referenda, be respected.
“The people of New York have spoken in favor of term limits … not once but twice,” said Norman Siegel. Commenting on the Mayor’s plan to overturn term limits by legislative mean Siegel said: “You need a public referendum to overrule a public referendum.”
“It’s over,” said Eric Adams, addressing Bloomberg — who was in Europe at the time. “Don’t become a political punch drunk boxer that believes he’s the only that can bring home the crown. New York is filled with competent individuals.”

Eric Adams (left) discusses Bloomberg’s “Napoleonic act”
(Photo: Thomas Good / NLN)
“It was men like Bloomberg and Wall Street billionaires that got us in this mess,” Adams told the crowd. “The same individuals we bailed out are now saying they’re going to get us out — don’t believe the hype, nothing could be more insincere,” he added.
“Shame on the editorial pages of this city. Shame on you,” Adams said, chastising the corporate media as he spoke directly to the assembled press corps.
Returning to his central theme, Adams said that “Mayor Bloomberg cannot duplicate the Napoleonic act of crowning himself as king of New York.”
View Photos/Videos From The Conferences…