When William F. Buckley – the father of modern conservative thought – ran
for mayor of New York City in 1965, his platform included support for the
designation of bike lanes throughout the city. That might seem surprising
to many people today, who are used to associating bicycle infrastructure
with left-wing politics, but Buckley's position made sense in context.
Heather Hendershot, a professor of comparative media studies at MIT, spoke
to my fellowship last week about her work researching Buckley and his
groundbreaking political talk show *Firing Line *for an upcoming book.

Buckley, Hendershot said, ran for mayor knowing he had no real chance of
winning. (Famously, when asked what he would do first if elected, he
quipped, "Demand a recount."
<http://maggiekb.us8.list-manage.com/track/click?u=6d32b85afe89d936dcc221ab8&id=793edab049&e=3a8af27547>)
The point for him wasn't to win. Instead, it was to show voters what a true
conservative looked like, in comparison to the Republican candidate who,
according to *The New York Times* article linked above, actually "ran to
the left" of the Democratic candidate on many issues. And the fun part
about running for an election you know (and don't really care) that you
have no chance of winning is that you aren't beholden to anyone. Unlike the
serious candidates, Buckley could – and did – honestly speak his mind in
ways politicians typically can't, for fear of offending their base or
enraging key supporters/contributors. Bike lanes were a part of that
<http://maggiekb.us8.list-manage.com/track/click?u=6d32b85afe89d936dcc221ab8&id=047e257c78&e=3a8af27547>,
Hendershot said, because Buckley saw them as a relatively cheap and easy
solution for horrendous traffic problems that plagued the city – even
though saying so almost certainly alienated both car drivers and public
transit advocates.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/10/02/magazine/02buckley.html?_r=0

From:
*Copyright © 2015 Maggie Koerth-Baker, All rights reserved.*
The Fellowship of Three Things, a weekly collection of fascinating facts,
cool photos, and intriguing short interviews collected by Maggie
Koerth-Baker during her fellowship at Harvard University.
-- 

a

Andy Bach,
[email protected]
608 658-1890 cell
608 261-5738 wk
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