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Badillo smears immigrants
New York protests continue over City University chief's racist
diatribe
By Bill Vann
12 October 1999
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More than two weeks after Herman Badillo, the chancellor of
the City University of New York (CUNY), launched into a racist
diatribe against Mexican and Dominican immigrants, protests against
the politically connected lawyer and ally of Mayor Rudolph Giuliani
are continuing.
Demonstrators demanding Badillo's resignation succeeded in
surrounding a startled Giuliani outside City Hall on October 8,
slipping through the extensive security measures that have turned
the building into one of the most restricted areas in the city.
The reason for the protesters' ire was a talk given by Badillo
last month to a group of educators brought together by a private
foundation. He told his audience that "the biggest problem"
facing the educational system in New York City is students "from
the hills of Mexico and the Dominican Republic, who have never
been to any schools."
The CUNY chairman continued, "The problem is that in Mexico
and Central America, there never has been a tradition of education."
Badillo, a Puerto Rican-born politician, said many of the new
immigrants are "pure IndiansIncas and Mayans who are
about 5 feet tall with straight hair." He went on to complain
about increasing numbers of Mexican stores opening up in the Barrio,
the upper Manhattan neighborhood where he grew up. "That's
a Puerto Rican neighborhood," he said.
The statements provoked outraged protests from Mexican and
Dominican groups as well as a number of Hispanic politicians who
called upon Governor George Pataki to dismiss the CUNY chairman.
"I'm furious that a prominent leader of our community would
prove to be so callous and prejudiced," said Juan Figueroa,
president of the Puerto Rican Legal Defense and Education Fund.
Largely lost in the outrage over the racist tone of Badillo's
remarks was their sheer ignorance. Discovering the origin of Mexicans
and Dominicans in the Incas, a people native to the South American
Andean region, is a unique contribution of the CUNY chairman.
Mayor Giuliani initially attempted to dodge questions regarding
the CUNY chancellor's remarks. Asked for a response to the demands
for his resignation, the mayor attempted to deflect the question
back to his current right-wing hobbyhorse in his run for the US
Senate. He said he hoped "those who say they were outraged
by Herman Badillo's statements would join me in being outraged
at the Brooklyn Arts Museum." Pressed on the subject he defended
Badillo, asserting that he had "said the same thing about
Italians," and accusing the CUNY chief's critics of attacking
him "not for what he said, but for what he's doing to change
CUNY."
From the perspective of the working class, minority and immigrant
students that CUNY has traditionally served, however, there is
a direct connection between what Badillo said and the policies
that he has attempted to implement.
Badillo, who was himself the beneficiary of CUNY's free tuition
policies of an earlier epoch, has spearheaded the drive to exclude
from the system's 11 senior colleges all those unable to pass
a battery of placement exams and to eliminate all remedial education
in these schools. The new requirements are forcing many poor and
immigrant students to abandon their plans for a college degree
in the face of having to pay for expensive remedial courses before
they can enroll in college and become eligible for financial aid.
These new attacks on the right to a public higher education come
at a time when tuition is already at an all-time high.
While CUNY was founded with the ostensible mission of serving
those New Yorkers most in need of an education and least able
to afford one, the policies pushed by Badillo, Giuliani and Pataki
are aimed at bringing the system more into line with the stark
inequality that pervades all aspects of life in the city. Under
the slogan of "standards," they are attempting to transform
the system into one that can educate a limited number of the academically
elite to fill positions required by the Wall Street finance houses,
law firms and corporate headquarters that dominate the city's
economy. As for the vast majority of low-wage, service industry
jobs created in recent years, little or no higher education is
required.
The remarks of the CUNY chancellor, moreover, were directed
not so much at the immediate problems faced by the city universities,
but at the public schools themselves. The conception that the
"biggest problem" that these schools face is the dramatic
influx of immigrants that has driven up enrollment year after
year for the past decade is an argument for a form of educational
triage, excluding those facing the greatest educational challenges,
while focusing resources on the more privileged layers. Mayor
Giuliani's and Governor Pataki's advocacy of school vouchers and
charter schools as the solution to the city's schools crisis is
aimed precisely at such a "solution," culminating ultimately
in the privatization of public education altogether.
Badillo's political career is itself a clear expression of
the city's social stratification and the turn by a layer of the
privileged middle class to the right. The 69-year-old CUNY chancellor
began political life as a liberal Democrat, serving as Bronx borough
president in the late 60s and then holding a seat in the US House
of Representatives from 1970 to 1978. He was deputy mayor for
two years under Ed Koch, then switched to the Republican Party,
becoming Mayor Giuliani's top education adviser.
In addition to his CUNY post, Badillo is a senior partner in
the law firm Fischbein, Badillo, which has raked in millions from
clients seeking to do business at City Hall. The other key partner
at the firm is Raymond Harding, the boss of the Liberal Party,
who provided Giuliani with crucial support in both his mayoral
races and has remained a political adviser to the Mayor and a
conduit for political favors.
Badillo is expected to seek the Republican and Liberal nominations
to succeed Giuliani as Mayor in 2001.
While Badillo apologized for his remarks and Giuliani acknowledged
that the "words he used were wrong," both men aggressively
support the reactionary policies that the remarks were meant to
defend. In reality, the episode was merely the case of a reactionary
political representative of New York's financial elite expressing
in public what he and his cohorts routinely say in private.
See Also:
Task
Force calls for major attacks on City University of New York
Crisis threatens public higher education
[19 July 1999]
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