|
ormally I would
hesitate to bring a New York story before the NRO readership. A
lot of Americans, and a whole lot of NRO readers, hate New
York City, which they regard as the concentrated essence of all
that's wrong with this republic a malodorous fever swamp
of antigun fanatics, out-of-control immigration, limousine liberalism,
high taxes, arrogant public-sector unions, Clintons, Sharptons,
rent control, corruption, and, like the scene that confronted Tam
O'Shanter in the kirk:
Wi' mair
of horrible and awfu',
Which even to name wad be unlawfu'.
"The capital
of a nation that doesn't exist," someone once called New York
City. (Who? I forget. If you know, please tell me.) The name John
Rocker mean anything?
I have the
impression that red-state America has been cutting New York City
some slack recently though, because of what happened there in September,
so I offer the following little New York story for you to meditate
on, with a fair degree of confidence that I shall get only a very
small number of e-mails asking: "Why should I waste time reading
about a bunch of long-haired hippie commie nail-biting bed-wetting
degenerate pinko lefty dupes....?"
As you may
know, the Big Apple had a mayoral election recently, and the winner
was self-made billionaire Mike Bloomberg. A Republican of convenience
who arouses enthusiasm in absolutely nobody I know, Mayor Bloomberg
has started his term of office by "reaching out" to all
and sundry, apparently not aware that in New York City this is a
sure way to get your arms lopped off. This, after all, is a place
where the attempt to install public toilets launched a titanic struggle
between about 200 interest groups, a struggle that is now, 20 years
later, still locked in a stalemate as bitter, destructive, and immobile
as the Western Front in World War I.
Well, perhaps
Mayor Bloomberg will learn, and perhaps he will do some good, and
perhaps it may even come to pass that four years from now, if caught
short on my way from National Review to Penn Station, I shall
not need to beg embarrassing favors from the staff of Starbucks.
I sincerely hope so. I like New York City. We lived here for the
first four years of our marriage, and for me the city has never
quite lost that honeymoon glow. We lived in a "studio apartment"
which is to say, a flat smaller than the interior of a suburban
SUV, with a bed that folded down out of the wall. (A "Murphy
bed," they call them. Who was Murphy?) Rosie used to say that
if she wanted to put anything down in that place, she had to pick
something else up first. It was wonderfully central, though: located
in one of the few surviving 19th-century houses in midtown, over
a Korean restaurant on 46th street and Lexington, so central that
our post office was the one in Grand Central Station. We used to
walk up to Rockefeller Center to go ice skating. We danced at the
Windows on the World atop the World Trade Center. Ah, "souvenir,
souvenir, que me veux-tu...?" But I digress.
The thing is,
Mayor Bloomberg wants to hire his daughter. This young lady, whose
name is Emma, is 22 years old and fresh out of Princeton, where
her thesis on medieval poetry won top honors. (Couple of years ago
I was in a comedy club when one of the comics started interacting
with the audience. He asked one young woman what she did. She was
a student, she told him. Of what? he asked. Of English literature,
she replied. "Oh, so your people are loaded, are they?"
This got a big laugh. Perhaps that young woman was Ms. Bloomberg.)
Well, Emma wants to go and work for Dad at City Hall, and Dad wants
her on board.
Why does Emma
Bloomberg want to work in the city government? Not for the money,
that's for sure. Her Dad gives her an allowance that covers rent,
living expenses, and "a little extra," she says. It is
a vulgar error to suppose that people go into politics for the money.
The thrill of power to say to this one, come, and he cometh,
and to that one, go, and he goeth is sweeter by far than
anything money can buy. Is it sheer public-spiritedness, then? Doesn't
sound like it. When the question was put to her, she said this:
"It's grabbing an opportunity and believing in yourself....
It's an opportunity I just can't pass up."
Opportunity...
opportunity... Opportunity for what? What do you think? An opportunity
to pick up some really hot résumé points right out
of college, that's what. A job near the heart of city government,
with constant high-preference access to the city's chief executive.
What ambitious young person wouldn't want that... opportunity?
And Emma comes with some qualifications beyond medieval poetry:
she worked hard and, by all accounts, effectively for her father's
election campaign. Got a taste for politics, apparently: "She
refused to rule out seeking election herself one day," reports
the New York Post. Uh-oh.
Emma's bid
for a jump-start on a career in "public service" may come
to nought. The city has rules that prohibit officials from using
their position to get "financial gain or private or personal
advantage for a close relative," and the people who administer
these things may decide that the job Emma is angling for comes under
the heading of "personal advantage" (as, indeed, Emma
seems to believe it does). It is, therefore, by no means a foregone
conclusion that she will get in. Leaving that aside, let's consider
the political morality of the thing.
As a conservative,
I have nothing whatever against people being rich, and nothing against
rich people setting up their kids with a comfortable life. I know
some extremely nice trust-fundees, wish I knew a few more, in fact...
I have no problem with Bloomberg's wealth, and even less with the
advantages this confers on his daughter.
I don't even
have much problem with nepotism, as a general phenomenon. Personal
connections are the very stuff of commercial life, and family connections
are just more personal than others. I have been on both sides of
the job-interview table, and I know very well that a personal recommendation
from someone whose opinion I respect is worth any amount of interviewing
or perusing of résumés. Certainly, if I myself need
to get work on Wall Street again, my first move will be to start
phoning and e-mailing people I've worked with, or for, to see if
any of them can help me. This is human, natural, normal, and healthy.
Mind you, if I had a dad who was CEO of a big corporation, I'm not
at all sure he would be on my call list. Some people would deliberately
not use a connection like that, to make a point of their
independence. I kind of think I'd be one of those people, but I'm
not sure, and can't see actually anything wrong with being on the
other side of the issue. Personal feelings aside, from the point
of view of business efficiency, I think nepotism is probably a plus.
An executive functions better, the better he knows his colleagues
and subordinates; and who do you know better than your own kin?
That last point
is probably true in government, too. It would be nice to get back
to the Cincinnatus ideal of government by disinterested citizens,
selflessly leaving their farms for a few years to come and help
out the republic. We all know, however, that a modern government
even a city government is a vast and complex enterprise,
to be effective in which, you need many of the skills of advanced
business management, as well as the ability to keep your feet in
endless bureaucratic turf wars. Growing up in a political family
is one way to get a start on acquiring those skills, and the child
of a politician is more likely than average to make an effective
politician him- or her-self though not, of course, without
first having sought and obtained the approval of the electorate.
So why do I
feel so strongly that Emma Bloomberg should not get a job
in her father's administration? Why? Because of that word "opportunity,"
that's why. Because, to be blunt about it, I don't like her attitude.
"It doesn't make sense I should be penalized because he's my
father," says Emma. I beg to differ. It makes perfect sense
to me. What would not make sense would be for this young
lady to be launched into a political career without first having
had her apparently boundless sense of entitlement deflated a bit,
or better still a lot. Look at her language: penalized. A
young woman who never has, nor ever will, want for anything material,
speaks of being penalized because some regulation prevents
her from getting the plum job she has set her heart on.
Believe it
or not, Emma, there really is such a thing as public service, outside
of quotation marks. In fact governments, in free countries, exist
precisely to offer public services. They do not exist to provide
"opportunities" to ambitious young persons. To the incidental
degree that they do actually offer such "opportunities,"
it is a matter of simple fairness that they should offer them impartially
to all who care to apply. Yes, you would probably do very well working
for our new mayor. Yes, other things being equal, your knowing him
so well, and him knowing you so well, would probably add some increment
of efficiency to the work of the city government. A government,
however, is not the same thing as a private company, and it has
other imperatives than just efficiency. The government of New York
City is not for you, Emma or rather, it is no more
for you than it is for any of the other 7,999,999 citizens. If you
have half the talents your dad says you have, you'll find plenty
of "opportunities," don't worry. Swallow a little disappointment.
Do your dad a favor he really doesn't need any niggling little
controversies at this point in his mayoralty. Go get a job with
Goldman Sachs. Or, if you are really intent on public service, how
about a spell in the army?
|