[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 159 (2013), Part 1]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Pages 233-234]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




 WARM GREETINGS AND RECOGNITION OF EDWARD I. KOCH, 3-TERM MAYOR OF NEW 
                     YORK CITY ON HIS 88TH BIRTHDAY

                                 ______
                                 

                        HON. CAROLYN B. MALONEY

                              of new york

                    in the house of representatives

                       Tuesday, January 15, 2013

  Mrs. CAROLYN B. MALONEY of New York. Mr. Speaker, Ed Koch is a great 
American lawyer, politician, and political commentator. He served 8 
years in the House of Representatives and 12 as mayor of New York City.
  Koch was born in The Bronx and raised in Newark. In World War II, he 
served in the European theater of war, earned two Battle Stars as a 
Combat Infantryman and was honorably discharged with the rank of 
Sergeant in 1946. Returning to New York, he attended City College and 
NYU School of Law, receiving his law degree in 1948. He was a sole 
practitioner before serving as a partner with Koch, Lankenau, Schwartz 
& Kovner.
  Koch became active in city and Democratic party politics as a 
reformer and opponent of Tammany Hall and Tammany leader Carmine 
DeSapio, whom he twice defeated for Democratic Party leader for the 
district which included Greenwich Village. He served on the New York 
City Council from 1967 to 1969 and the U.S. House of Representatives 
from 1969 to 1977, before running for Mayor of the City of New York.
  During the 1960s, Koch opposed the Vietnam war and marched in the 
South for civil rights. As a member of the House Appropriations 
Subcommittee on Foreign Operations, he advocated for a greater U.S. 
role in advancing human rights and became a target of attempted 
assassination by DINA, the Chilean secret police after proposing the 
cut-off of U.S. foreign aid to the right-wing government of Uruguay. He 
first rose to city-wide prominence as a result of his opposition to a 
controversial attempt by then Mayor John Lindsay to place a 3,000-
person housing project in a middle-class community, a move which, at 
the time, shocked many of his political associates.
  In 1977, Koch defeated incumbent Abe Beame, renowned feminist Bella 
Abzug and now former governor Mario Cuomo, in the NYC Mayoral 
Democratic primary, and went on to win the mayoralty. In 1981 he won 
re-election with 75% of the vote, running on both the Democratic and 
Republican Party lines. In 1982, Koch ran unsuccessfully for Governor 
of New York, losing the primary to then Lieutenant Governor Mario 
Cuomo.
  As mayor, Koch often deviated from the conventional liberal line, 
strongly supporting the death penalty and taking a hard line on 
``quality of life'' issues, such as giving police broader powers in 
dealing with the homeless and favoring (and signing) legislation 
banning the playing of radios on subways and buses. These positions 
prompted harsh criticism from many proponents of civil rights.
  In 1984 Koch published his first memoir, Mayor, a best-seller that 
was turned into an Off-Broadway musical. In 1985, he won re-election on 
the Democratic and Independent tickets with 78% of the vote. In 1986, 
Mayor Koch surprised many by signing a lesbian and

[[Page 234]]

gay rights ordinance after backing his Health Department's decision to 
shut down the city's gay bathhouses in 1985 in response to the spread 
of AIDS.
  In 1987, when the New York Giants won Super Bowl XXI, he refused to 
grant a permit for the team to hold their victory parade in the 
``Canyon of Heroes,'' quipping, ``If they want a parade, let them 
parade in front of the oil drums in Moonachie,'' a town near the 
Meadowlands Sports Complex in New Jersey, where the Giants play.
  In his third term, Koch suffered a stroke while in office, but 
continued with his duties. Koch became a controversial figure in the 
1988 presidential campaign for criticizing Jesse Jackson for alleged 
anti-Semitism and stating that Jews would be ``crazy'' to vote for 
Jackson. In 1989, he ran for a fourth term as Mayor, but lost the 
Democratic primary to David Dinkins, who went on to defeat Rudy 
Giuliani in the general election.
  In the years following his mayoralty, Koch became a partner in the 
law firm of Bryan Cave LLP and became a commentator on politics, movies 
and restaurants for newspapers, radio and television. He also became an 
adjunct professor at New York University (NYU) and a visiting professor 
at Brandeis University.
  In 2008, Koch announced that he had secured a burial plot in the only 
graveyard in Manhattan accepting new burials, stating, ``I don't want 
to leave Manhattan, even when I'm gone. This is my home. The thought of 
having to go to New Jersey was so distressing to me.'' On March 23, 
2011, the New York City Council voted to rename the Queensboro Bridge 
as the ``Ed Koch Queensboro Bridge.''
  Mr. Speaker, I ask my colleagues to join me in celebrating the 88th 
birthday of Ed Koch, an independent thinker, an outstanding leader and 
the quintessential New Yorker.

                          ____________________