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bobthedrummer

(26,083 posts)
Tue Feb 2, 2016, 01:38 PM Feb 2016

In 1999 Socialist Daniel Hoan was named one of the best Mayors in US history.

I was born, raised, educated, grounded in the work ethic and a lot more in Milwaukee, Wisconsin which had three Socialist Mayors, the last one, Frank Zeidler, was in office during my birth and childhood.

I'm not into the neurolinguistic programing "patriot games" of those that have attempted to demonize "SOCIALIST" or equate it with totalitarian communism. F#ck you too.

Whoever is with me, so far, just look at the "far left radical" policies of some of the finest Mayors ever elected and then criticize what they attempted and achieved.

Daniel Hoan Mayor of Milwaukee 1916-1940 (Wikipedia)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daniel_Hoan

Frank Zeidler Mayor of Milwaukee 1948-1960 (Wikipedia)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Zeidler

Who else has a positive view of the political word Socialist?



11 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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In 1999 Socialist Daniel Hoan was named one of the best Mayors in US history. (Original Post) bobthedrummer Feb 2016 OP
Bridgeport, Conn. had one too, from the '30s through the '50s KamaAina Feb 2016 #1
Thanks KamaAina. I vividly remember how both the Dems and Reps used the race card bobthedrummer Feb 2016 #2
And wasn't Golda Meier also one of the Socialist Mayors ANOIS Feb 2016 #3
I don't think so-but Golda and I both attended South Division High School, lol. bobthedrummer Feb 2016 #4
Kick and a repost of a 2008 thread-Inconvenient truths about the New Democrats... bobthedrummer Feb 2016 #5
Kick and a repost of a 2008 thread-Inconvenient truths about the New Democrats... bobthedrummer Feb 2016 #6
Interesting read. Thanks. NCTraveler Feb 2016 #7
Great thread bob. Kick! elias49 Feb 2016 #8
Kick n/t bobthedrummer Feb 2016 #9
. bobthedrummer Feb 2016 #10
And tonight the PRICELESS debate between HRC and Bernie Sanders will be held in MILWAUKEE!!! bobthedrummer Feb 2016 #11
 

KamaAina

(78,249 posts)
1. Bridgeport, Conn. had one too, from the '30s through the '50s
Tue Feb 2, 2016, 01:45 PM
Feb 2016
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jasper_McLevy

Jasper McLevy (March 27, 1878—November 20, 1962) was an American politician who served as mayor of Bridgeport, Connecticut from 1933-1957. He was a member of the Socialist Party, later leaving in protest to join the Social Democratic Federation....

In the early 1930s, Bridgeport, an industrial city in southern Connecticut, was plagued by corruption and hard hit by the Great Depression. In 1931, voters had ousted the incumbent Republican mayor for Democrat Edward Buckingham and McLevy only lost by a couple thousand votes. By 1933, dissatisfaction had spread to both parties and McLevy trounced the competition, bringing along a Socialist majority on the Board of Aldermen, Bridgeport's city council. While people familiar with local politics had seen the writing on the wall in the 1931 results, the national media was astonished to find the Socialists in control in a New England city.

Contrary to the fears of some, capital did not flee Bridgeport and McLevy began upon a reform agenda rather than a revolution. In a time of reduced revenue due to the Depression and, with city coffers depleted by corruption, McLevy managed to meet the City's obligations and balance the books, even reducing taxes. He withheld the lucrative contract for trash hauling, instituting municipal trash collection, saving the city hundreds of thousands of dollars. He took over Pleasure Beach where concessionaires had been reneging on taxes and rent for years. He began the process of putting all city purchases out for competitive bidding. In one instance when asphalt suppliers all supplied identical bids, he threatened to create a municipal asphalt supplier and broke their cartel. He championed transparency, opening all board and commission meetings to the press and the public ("Operation Goldfish Bowl&quot . He sold the expensive limousine his predecessor had used. He instituted a merit system in the police and fire departments. McLevy went on to be reelected eleven times.

While he was a Socialist, McLevy was known for his fiscal restraint. When asked, after a snow storm, when the City would begin plowing snow, McLevy allegedly replied, "God put the snow there, let him take it away." McLevy gained a reputation for balancing budgets, reducing spending and micromanaging city affairs. In the vernacular of the time, McLevy was referred to as a "sewer socialist", a pragmatist who focused on the details of running a city.
 

bobthedrummer

(26,083 posts)
2. Thanks KamaAina. I vividly remember how both the Dems and Reps used the race card
Tue Feb 2, 2016, 01:50 PM
Feb 2016

effectively against Zeidler. Btw, Milwaukee is still the most physically racially segregated major city in the US.

ANOIS

(112 posts)
3. And wasn't Golda Meier also one of the Socialist Mayors
Tue Feb 2, 2016, 01:59 PM
Feb 2016

of Milwaukee? And I believe I read that at that time Milwaukee won an award for being the best-run city in America.

 

bobthedrummer

(26,083 posts)
4. I don't think so-but Golda and I both attended South Division High School, lol.
Tue Feb 2, 2016, 02:06 PM
Feb 2016

Of course, during different eras. Public education during the Zeidler years included many of the first G.I. Bill teachers, veterans of WWII and Korea. I learned a lot from them all.

They informed my anti-fascist core.

 

NCTraveler

(30,481 posts)
7. Interesting read. Thanks.
Wed Feb 3, 2016, 02:32 PM
Feb 2016

"During Hoan's administration, Milwaukee implemented the first public bus system in the United States[citation needed]. This was prompted by dangerous accidents: pedestrians were run over by street trolleys that ran down the middle of the road. Among the victims of such streetcar accidents was Hoan's fellow Socialist, Victor L. Berger, who was killed in 1929."

Just amazing.

According to the links, he died 38 years before he was named one of the best Mayors in US history. Damn. I'm sure he felt so at the time.

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