Blogs at the CUNY Graduate School of Journalism

Posts Tagged ‘president’

From East Harlem to Times Square on Election Day

November 9th, 2008 by Aisha Al-Muslim

I spent the afternoon riding in a car with Craig Schley, who ran under the slate Voices of the Everyday People for Change (VOTE People), and with his volunteer as he campaigned on Election Day. Schley yelled out of a bullhorn as he drove pass local residents standing at bus stops and walking down the streets of Central and East Harlem.

Schley found himself running as an underdog against U.S. Representative Charles B. Rangel, the 38-year Democratic incumbent from Harlem. Rangel, 78, has represented the 15th Congressional District since he defeated Adam Clayton Powell Jr. in 1970, making him the fourth longest serving Democratic member of the House. The district, which has nearly 400,000 registered voters, stretches from the Upper West Side to Washington Heights/Inwood, Rikers Island, and includes a part of northwestern Queens and the Bronx.

 

Rangel, chairman of the tax-writing Ways and Means Committee, is under scrutiny by the House Committee on Standards of Official Conduct for failing to report taxable income from a villa he owns in the Dominican Republic and for living in four rent-stabilized apartments in Manhattan. Still, some constituents were obviously not concerned with the accusations about Rangel.

 

From the beginning, Schley’s candidacy against Rangel had been an uphill battle. At noon, Schley returned to the polling site where he voted to address complaints that two of the five machines at P.S. 144 on East 122 Street and Adam Clayton Powell Boulevard were broken by 11:30 a.m. More than anything Rangel benefitted from being in a heavily Democratic district with loyal party voters. Even those who know Schley and live in his district told him they unknowingly voted for Rangel.

 

“[People] are not confused about the ballot,” Schley said. “The problem is that they are voting straight democrat.”

After a long reporting day in East Harlem, I returned to the CUNY Graduate School of Journalism newsroom to wait to be edited. Although I was not completely happy with my edits, I eventually surrendered since I knew I could not win the battle. I went to BBQ’s where I watched MSNBC as they reported that Barack Obama would be the first African-American and 44th president of the United States.

I headed to 42 Street and Times Square where thousands of people cheered, yelled, cried and smiled with joy that Obama had won. I had never seen such a spontaneous street celebration. The feeling was surreal. That’s when it hit me that a black man had finally been elected president. There is no doubt that last week’s historic presidential election instilled hope for change in America.  

If I Were President, Economic Slump Is My Priority to Tackle with

November 6th, 2008 by Kate Zhao

Within one month, from the bankruptcy Lehman Brothers, to Bank of America’s buyout of Merrill Lynch, and Wachovia’s sale to Wells Fargo, in New York City, the biggest issue ahead of the new president – Obama is the financial crisis.

Sub-prime mortgage crisis hit the U.S. economy severely last year with hundreds of houses foreclosed, and rising rate of unemployment in the real estate industry.

Since more and more people cannot pay the monthly mortgage, Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae slumped into the bankruptcy edge. The government rescued the twin housing mortgage giants with $90 billion. Furthermore, Congress voted for a 700 billion bailout plan after its revision, which will plan to buy problematic financial assets, including loans, mortgage bonds, and other junk bonds in the market.

The Federal Reserve Bank cut interest rate twice to encourage lending. However, it has to cut the rate again to bring back confidence. The top executives of financial institutions, who intended to satisfy their greediness with a wealthy compensation package and walk away from the crisis, were under the scrutiny of F.B.I with charges of fraud. Some other managing workers and stock traders lost their jobs on Wall Street.

Since the Dow Jones Industrial Average Index fell more than 700 points, the biggest since the 9.11 terrorism attack, global investors and hedge funds oversea lost confidence on the U.S. Stocks. Millions of the U.S. citizens worried about their retirement plan on 401(K) investment.

The financial crisis affected European countries and even emerging markets in Asia, such as China, India, and Vietnam. Globalization made a New York regional crisis impact badly around the world. How much time we will spend to walk out of the economical recession is an unknown question to most of the economists, bankers, and worldwide residents. And it is the biggest challenge to the new president for his long and hard journey.

Reaction to McCain Attacks

October 16th, 2008 by

By Maya J. Pope-Chappell

Sen. John McCain has been heavily criticized for his seething tone and vicious attacks against Sen. Barack Obama. According to a New York Times/CBS News Poll, McCain’s attempts at tarnishing the Obama campaign with negative ads and reiterating Obama’s ties with formerly FBI labeled terrorist Bill Ayers, has backfired, leading to McCain’s decline in national polls.

With only weeks before the November 4th election, I hit the streets of Times Square with a recorder and a camera. Here is what a few of the people I talked to had to say.

What are your thoughts about the recent attacks?