Administration and social conditions
Government
New York City is administered by a mayor who chooses department heads and criminal-court justices and prepares the annual budget. Mayors hold considerable power but are constantly involved in legislative battles with the 51 members of the City Council. Both mayor and council members serve a maximum of three four-year terms. In general, beginning with Fiorello La Guardia in the 1930s, the mayors usually have led their own parties and have been stronger than other party leaders.
Two themes are constant in the administrative history of New York: tension between the city leadership and the superior authority of the state in the struggle for home rule, and the municipality’s desire to contain the decentralizing tendencies caused by its component elements. In the Dutch colonial period, the director general of New Netherland was a city resident who ruled both province and burgh, but after 1664 England’s provincial governor named a mayor. In the 1680s Gov. Thomas Dongan granted New York its first municipal charter and permitted the election of aldermen, but he retained the right to appoint the mayor, recorder, clerk, and sheriff. Effective control remained in the hands of the governors until it was wrested away by the city aristocracy after 1740. Despite divided authority the city grew rapidly, and by the 1730s it possessed two newspapers, an almshouse, a night watch, and a network of volunteer firemen.
During the time of the American Revolution, New York suffered from a long British occupation and two fires that destroyed one-third of its buildings. Federalist Mayor James Duane, whose own home had been burned to the ground, supervised rebuilding efforts in the 1780s, and his successor Richard Varick completed the reconstruction of city and government. Their efforts, abetted by those of DeWitt Clinton after 1803, established the foundations for New York’s national dominance. After 1800 New York was the nation’s largest city, a commercial dynamo that worked efficiently even as the city became a great melting pot of different peoples. Yet New Yorkers still lacked the right to elect their own mayor; only in 1834 did Jacksonian Cornelius Lawrence initiate democratic control, which subsequently has been characteristic of the metropolis. One area in which voters of all classes agreed was the need to improve city services, and in April 1835 they approved the creation of a new water supply. New York’s Croton Aqueduct opened in 1842, inaugurating a century of city efforts to tap regional water resources and provide citizens with some of the nation’s best-quality drinking water; this better water was also vital in ending the epidemics that periodically struck the city. Manhattan’s desire for home rule was often at odds with the plans of upstate legislators, and in 1857 Albany authorized the Metropolitan Police District to cover four urban counties. Involvement by the state created two competing police forces, and their subsequent battles were ended only by the intervention of the state militia. Not until 1870—after massive bribery by “Boss” William Magear Tweed—was local police power restored. Tweed’s charter increased the authority of the office of mayor in governance matters and, after the “Tweed ring” was overthrown in 1871, a reform charter added power to the office of comptroller. The Board of Estimate and City Council also were established to direct city development.
New York in the 19th century, while primarily under the control of the Tammany Hall political machine, constructed Manhattan’s basic water, sewer, fire, police, transportation, and park facilities. There was, naturally, some corruption and a great deal of what insiders like George Washington Plunkitt called “honest graft,” but the experience gained in building Manhattan permitted the greater city to construct an infrastructure capable of serving a far denser population. In 1899 social reformer Jacob Riis described a metropolis “barely yet out of its knickerbockers” yet poised for greatness; Riis believed its enduring challenge would be to care for the poor. Novelist Theodore Dreiser agreed, for in New York the strong “are so very strong, and the weak so very, very, weak—and so very, very, many.” The wealth generated by economic success in New York was never totally subservient to the demands of the affluent.
Compassion is hardly part of the city’s cold image, but caring for its less fortunate citizens has been a major theme of its modern history. In this most capitalist of all American cities, a strong element of socialist ideology fostered the creation of the nation’s largest municipal hospital and university systems, vast areas of public housing, and generous welfare benefits for the poor. City programs exist in uneasy proximity to a remarkable collection of the world’s best private hospitals, some of its most expensive apartments, and dozens of private universities. Social initiatives first attempted in New York became precursors of New Deal programs in the 1930s, while the city’s American Labor and Liberal parties constantly advanced an agenda of public responsibility. Although the Democratic Party organization served many constituencies, it held political power because it never forgot the poorest citizens, who also voted. The enormous wealth of the city funded a wide range of altruistic programs without major difficulty until the 1960s, when welfare rolls exceeded one million people and crime rates soared. The vast decline in manufacturing and the taxes it provided also undermined the city economy, and New York suddenly became a metropolis out of control. Mayor John Lindsay never mastered the crisis; he attempted to create “superagencies” to deal with human resources, the environment, health, housing, and parks even as the borough presidents and community groups demanded greater local control. Lindsay’s long feud with the state government eventually led to loss of central control over the school system in 1969. By 1975 the city nearly fell into bankruptcy, its finances were administered from Albany, and its social compact appeared on the verge of anarchy.
In the last decades of the 20th century, New York’s rebirth was spectacular. Mayor Edward I. Koch restored fiscal security to the city, and his administration began the slow task of restoring lost confidence. Koch’s trademark question, “How’m I doing?” became identified with city revival; as the national economy rebounded so, too, did New York. Commercial construction boomed, and multibillion-dollar refurbishing programs of subsidized housing and transportation systems were instigated. Not even the great stock disaster of October 19, 1987—when the Dow Jones average dropped by more than one-fifth—halted the turnabout. The 1990s were a decade of unprecedented wealth accumulation in the country’s richest city, but poverty and homelessness endured as societal realities.
In 1989 the U.S. Supreme Court declared that New York’s government system, which gave equal representation to populous Brooklyn and underdeveloped Staten Island, violated the “one man, one vote” mandate of the Constitution. The Board of Estimate was to be abolished, and a November referendum decided that the City Council would be expanded to 51 members in order to enhance the power of minorities. Council authority over the budget, land use, zoning, and franchises was increased, and a new planning commission was established. The renovated council remained under Democratic control but now had the potential to oppose mayoral initiatives; when voters elected Republican Rudolph Giuliani as mayor in 1993, the urban political scene became confrontational. Battles over educational leadership, city planning, and spending projections marked Giuliani’s administration, even as it successfully reduced city crime in all categories and pruned welfare rolls. By the late 1990s the city’s murder rate had fallen to the lowest level in 35 years. Aggressively preventive tactics pioneered in New York substantially reduced the national crime rate, while “quality of life” policing made citizens feel safe on the streets. Acting in concert with national welfare reform, Giuliani’s administration established the country’s largest workfare program while slashing welfare rolls by more than 400,000. In 2001, near the end of his administration, Giuliani reversed the earlier perception that he had turned his back on the city’s tradition of compassion by leading the vast rescue and recovery effort at the site of the World Trade Center disaster.
In 2002 billionaire businessman Michael Bloomberg replaced Giuliani as mayor. During Bloomberg’s tenure (2002–13) the “stop-and-frisk” policy—which permitted police officers to stop, interrogate, and search New Yorkers solely on the basis of “reasonable suspicion”—may have contributed to a significant drop in crime, but it also engendered a firestorm of controversy. Critics of the policy argued that it both violated Fourth Amendment protections and resulted in racial profiling (between 2004 and 2012 about 80 percent of those stopped by police were Black or Hispanic). Bloomberg’s successor, Democrat Bill de Blasio (2014–21), campaigned on a commitment to reform the stop-and-frisk program, and under him there was a decline in the use of the policy as well as a reduction in crime. Both Bloomberg and de Blasio were unsuccessful candidates for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2020. Giuliani failed to gain the Republican nomination in 2008 and later played a controversial role as a spokesperson and lawyer for U.S. Pres. Donald Trump. De Blasio’s replacement as mayor in 2022 was Eric Adams, a Black American former policeman who had served as the Brooklyn borough president from 2013 to 2021.