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Political issues behind the murder in New Yorks City
Hall
By Peter Daniels
28 July 2003
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The July 23 killing of a New York City councilman marked the
first time that a murder had taken place inside the nearly 200-year-old
seat of city government. James E. Davis was gunned down in the
City Council chambers on the second floor of City Hall, just across
the hall from the office of Mayor Michael Bloomberg.
Davis, 41-years-old and in his first term on the Council, was
shot to death by Othniel Askew, 31, a man who was described as
a political rival. Davis had brought him to City Hall. He had
been able to bring a gun into the building because Davis described
him as a friend, thus allowing them both to bypass the metal detectors.
Upon entering, Davis and Askew went up to the balcony of the
Council chambers. A little more than 20 minutes later, as Davis
prepared to descend to the Council meeting, Askew took out a pistol
and fired repeatedly at the councilman. Within moments, a police
officer on duty fired from the floor of the Council chamber at
the shooter in the balcony. Both Davis and Askew died almost immediately,
although it was hours before it became clear that the second fatality
was the man who had killed the councilman.
Media coverage, while providing many factual details about
the shooting, focused almost exclusively on the issue of City
Hall security. Mayor Bloomberg said that from now on everyone
entering the building, including himself and all public officials,
would have to walk through the metal detectors. He was also at
pains to reassure the public, and especially the members of the
Republican National Committee who arrived in the city less than
a day after the killing, that it was not an act of terrorism.
The Republicans came to plan the 2004 convention. New York has
been chosen as site for the renomination of George W. Bush, with
the events of September 11, 2001, as a superpatriotic backdrop.
As some observers pointed out, metal detectors could hardly
be installed in every public building in the city, including the
many district offices of City Council members, for instance. In
any event, there are some political issues raised by the murder
of Davis that have been studiously avoided in the media and in
official circles.
Davis, a former police officer, was known as a political insurgent
who had repeatedly challenged what remains of the Democratic Party
machine in Brooklyn. In 1998, he nearly defeated the incumbent
New York State assemblyman, Clarence Norman, Jr., who is also
the Brooklyn Democratic chairman. Three years later, as the citys
new term limits law led to a virtually complete turnover in the
membership of the City Council, Davis ran and won the race to
represent the Brooklyn neighborhoods of Fort Greene, Clinton Hill
and Prospect Heights.
The councilman quickly set himself apart from the leadership
on various issues. He was one of only three members of the Council
who voted recently against an 18.5 percent increase in property
taxes to deal with the citys massive budget gap.
However, Davis in no way challenged the basic corruption and
decay of the existing political institutions. He established himself
as an extremely ambitious political operative inside the Council.
Davis developed a reputation, not unlike that of many of his colleagues,
for politically threatening potential rivals or attempting to
buy them off with the promise of jobs or other assistance if they
did not run against him. While actively courting local constituents
with the kind of services local officials usually provide, Davis
advanced no alternative program to the big business policies pursued
by the Democratic Party at the federal, state and local levels.
In Othniel Askew, Davis apparently met a potential rival who
did not respond as expected. Askew, who moved only recently to
the Fort Greene neighborhood, was born in Brooklyn but grew up
in suburban Long Island. He graduated from college, served in
the Air Force, and had held a series of office jobs and worked
as an accountant. Most recently, he described himself as a real
estate developer, and soon after his arrival in the neighborhood
made plans to run against Davis in this years election.
Askew was apparently angered when his nominating petitions
were not accepted because they had not been filed in time. He
then began appearing regularly at Daviss office, making
persistent requests for assistance, asking the councilman to provide
him with a letter of recommendation, indicating that he was now
a supporter of Davis, but at the same time suggesting to others
that he still wanted to get back into the race.
Askews obsession with Davis and the forthcoming election
led to a number of bizarre developments in the days before the
shooting. He repeatedly asked another candidate to drop out of
the race in his favor, even though he had not been able to file
for ballot status. He asked this same candidate, Are you
willing to die for this race, because I am. At the same
time, Askew asked Davis to agree that he would take his seat should
something happen to Davis.
In addition to this obviously unbalanced behavior, Askew made
a call to the Federal Bureau of Investigation on the morning of
the shooting, complaining of intimidation by Davis. Some of his
complaints, as they have been reported in the press, sound plausible.
According to these accounts, Davis offered Askew a job if he dropped
out of the Council election. Davis also reportedly threatened
to expose the fact that Askew was gay.
There seems little doubt that Askew was deranged, and on one
level the killing seems to be a particularly prominent example
of workplace violence. Ironically, one of the items of business
due to be taken up by the City Council on the day of the shooting
was a resolution of concern on this subject.
This incident is significant as an example of the kind of social-psychological
dysfunction that has erupted repeatedly in the form of shootings
in schools and workplaces around the country. There is an additional
element, however, that bears some serious consideration: the picture
of political chaos and decay that emerges.
As if to underscore the fact that the City Hall shooting was
not simply a fluke, only two days after the shooting, a campaign
volunteer for a City Council candidate was arrested and charged
with threatening to shoot another incumbent councilman and two
of his aides. The volunteer, Julio Abreu, accused Councilman Hiram
Monserrate of Queens and several of his assistants of harassing
the backers of a rival candidate, Luis Jimenez. Interestingly,
Monserrate, who was close to James Davis, is also a former police
officer.
The old political machines that existed in New York City have
been decaying for decades. The days of political bosses doling
out patronage and pulling strings have disappeared. Moreover,
none of the political parties have any serious mass base, either
in New York or in any other urban center. The Republicans are
virtually nonexistent in New York, regularly polling perhaps 20
percent of the vote in presidential elections, yet they have occupied
the mayoralty for the past 10 years. The Democrats continue to
hold sway in other local offices, but the vast majority of the
population pays absolutely no attention to what passes for politics.
Voter turnout often does not reach 30 percent, and is even less
in the poorest neighborhoods. With the Democratic politicians
indifferent to the concerns of the working class and increasingly
utilizing various forms of racial politics to solidify a base
of support, Republican candidates have won the mayors office
in every election since 1989.
The legislation of term limits several years ago introduced
a new and major destabilizing element into this overall picture
of political decay. The great majority of the Council is now made
up of newly elected members. However, in the absence of any party
representing the working class, or of any perspective and leadership
for working people, the turnover in Council membership has little
to do with democracy. A new layer of highly ambitious politicians
has seen an opportunity to cash in by running for the vacant Council
seats. These individuals present no ideas and avoid any serious
discussion of political issues, but are determined to do whatever
is necessary to win the plum of political office.
We cannot be positive about the specific causes of the City
Hall killing, but it certainly does raise important issues about
the decay of political institutions and the increasingly hollow
claims that they represent vehicles for the exercise of the will
of the majority.
See Also:
Military-style killer
on the loose near US capital
[15 October 2002]
New school shootings
in US: social issues once again come to the fore
[22 January 2002]
Another workplace
shooting in the US: five dead at Chicago Navistar plant
[10 February 2001]
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