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That's definitely the clearest historical example, but it just doesn't strike me as plausible. Are the remaining people in NY (or the other cities) able to do a complete 180 on a bunch of different issues?
I don't know what the prevailing sentiments were leading up to Giuliani, but they need to correct way more than the crime problem. Homelessness is out of control, the business environment is extremely unattractive, and cost of living is off the charts. Realistic solutions to any of those problems run totally against everything Team Blue is pushing.
I would love to be wrong on this (and I easily could be), but I just don't see a solution on the horizon.
I'm not sure at all, but NYC is a different animal. No doubt the city council is a nightmare right now, but the difference between NYC and, say San Francisco, Seattle, etc is it's still the home of Wall Street, finance, and banking, at least for now. The financial power of this country is still there. Whether they are willing to crash it all for socialist policies remains to be seen.
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Interesting
So, at some point they get fed up and either leave or install politicians who will clean it up, whether voters like it or not.
Are there any signs of that coming soon?
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Well, for all his deficiencies, Adams got elected, and he's certainly right of DiBlasio. The best way to tell is the amount of criticism he gets from the local liberal press.
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