mike mcmahon

Staten Island and the Armenian Genocide

armenc7135The Armenian Genocide was the systematic slaughter of 1.5 million residents of the Ottoman empire in a campaign that lasted from 1915 to 1923.

On Thursday the House Foreign Affairs Committee narrowly approved a resolution that would acknowledge the genocide despite of a last-ditch effort by the Obama administration to stop the initiative claiming it could damage relations with Turkey.

Mike McMahon voted against the measure which passed 23-22.

“Instead of looking backwards to the turn of the 20th century, we need to look forward in the 21st century,” McMahon said in a press release.

Mike Allegretti, one of McMahon’s Republican challengers in the 2010 congressional race, decided to make a stand on the issue:

“I urge the members of the House Foreign Relations to stand-up and recognize the genocide which took place between 1915-1923,” Allegretti stated in a press release. “It is unspeakable that one and a half million Armenians lost their lives in an effort to erase them from their homeland. Passage of this resolution would be a positive step for the region.”

So Allegretti has staked his position on the issue. Is this smart politics, humanitarian empathy, misguided pandering to the Armenian lobby, knee-jerk opposition?

Let’s take a look at the demographics of the district:

Census population estimates for Staten Island place white residents at about 71 percent of the Island, with 9 percent black, 12 percent Hispanic, and 5.6 percent Asian. Under the designation “some other race” stands at 0.2 percent – maybe a sliver of that is Allegretti’s Armenian constituency.

There is no doubt that the unspeakable crimes from almost a century ago need to be recognized and the victims of these crimes deserve some sort of restitution. But a congressional measure on this issue is unnecessary or, worse, detrimental to US interests abroad.

In addition, the issue of the Armenian genocide is not even vaguely on the legislative radar for the vast majority of Staten Islanders, who are plagued with paltry public transportation and congested highways among other concerns about the economy and the prospect of another terrorist attack in NYC.

If Allegretti wants to make the Armenian issue even a minor focus of his campaign I’d wish him the best of luck, there’s always a position waiting for him at Bayside Fuel Oil.

Mikey in the middle

gop_balancing_act23 There is now proof that the congressman from Staten Island is not the partisan hack his critics have tarred him as.

According to a report by National Journal, Congressman Mike McMahon was rated the 211th most conservative member of the House and 219 among liberals — right smack in the middle of the 435-member chamber.

His campaign has seized on the news, touting it on their Web site and Facebook account. But they still have work to do.

The campaign, fledgling as it may be (the elections is eight months away) has to create a narrative. They need to sell McMahon as something Islanders can embrace and root for. He needs to be “one of them.”

In case no one has noticed, Staten Island is uniquely isolated from the rest of New York City, and for that matter, the entire state. There are three bridges connecting the island to New Jersey but only one that leads to Brooklyn; and Manhattan, you need to take the ferry to go there.

People there are distrustful of outsiders (sorry Allegretti), independent in the traditional sense, and, maybe at times, a little paranoid.

“Staten Island is a conservative place, we could take care of ourselves,” Warren Crapo owner of Crapo Realty told me back in September when I interviewed business owners in anticipation of the House health care vote.

I haven’t heard too much from the campaign. I know they are busy, and let’s be honest, this isn’t the New York Times here, but most major publications will treat this race as a peripheral issue, a sidebar from the ‘other borough.’

So here’s my own narrative. A portrait of a non-partisan centrist:

Mike McMahon has rejected the scorched earth policy of D.C. and has devoted his Congressional career to working with other members of the House on issues vital to Staten Islanders. Mike is not concerned with latching himself to the latest political trend or being a lackey of the current Democratic regime. He has, and always will, put locals issues (small businesses, modernizing transportation, combating terrorism) in their proper place above nonsensical partisan point-scoring.

Maybe McMahon will get similar advice for the editorial pages of the Staten Island Advance: but I wouldn’t hold my breath.