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Ed Koch, the Jewish king of New York who had to keep his private life a secret

James Kirchick’s groundbreaking new book lifts the lid on the former Mayor of New York City’s life

May 12, 2022 12:23
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NEW YORK - NOVEMBER 18: Former New York City Mayor Ed Koch speaks during the celebration of his 85th Birthday at the Bryan Cave LLP Celebration at the St. Regis Hotel on November 18, 2009 in New York City. (Photo by Jemal Countess/Getty Images for Bryan Cave LLP)
3 min read

The New York Times has posthumously outed Ed Koch, the three-time Democrat mayor of New York City from 1978 to 1989, as gay. The piece is a detailed account of the loneliness of a closeted politician who entered politics before 1973, the year the American Psychiatric Association stopped classifying homosexuality as a mental illness. It might not be news – Koch’s gayness was the worst-kept secret in New York politics ­– but it is history.

Koch, who died in 2013 aged 88, was the son of immigrants from Galicia. Calling himself a “liberal with sanity”, he revived NYC after the fiscal crisis of the early Seventies and rebuilt the city’s public housing. He was the liberal Jewish face of New York when liberal Jews defined the city and its politics. But he was also a coalition-builder in a city of sharp-elbowed ethnic rivalry.

In 1977, Koch fought his first mayoral campaign against Mario Cuomo, a fellow Democrat from the outer borough of Queens. “Vote for Cuomo, not the homo,” read the posters that appeared all over Queens. The Cuomo campaign denied responsibility. Koch beat Cuomo for the mayor’s job, but in 1982, Cuomo beat Koch in the race for governor of New York State. In 1981, Koch won re-election with 75 per cent of the vote and the endorsement of both parties – then raised his share of the vote to 78 per cent in 1985. He was the congressman from Greenwich Village, the mayor of one of the most liberal cities in the country, and he came from the progressive wing of the Democrats, but none of this protected him against innuendo.

“Homosexuals were seen as a threat to national security, and homophobia was a weapon that everyone used,” says James Kirchick, author of a new and groundbreaking history, Secret City: The Hidden History of Gay Washington. “The left used it against the right, the right used it against the left. This notion that homosexuality and gay rights are a progressive issue, that really didn’t happen until the Eighties or the Nineties even.”