Anthony Weiner: Giuliani Put Me On His 'List' Of Enemies

Vote For Me, I Was On Giuliani Hate List!
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NEW YORK, NY - MAY 23: Anthony Weiner (C) smiles while courting voters outside a Harlem subway station a day after announcing he will enter the New York mayoral race on May 23, 2013 in New York City. Weiner is joining the Democratic race to succeed three-term Mayor Michael Bloomberg after he was forced to resign from Congress in 2011 following the revelation of sexually explicit online behavior. (Photo by Mario Tama/Getty Images)

The enemy of my enemy is my friend, right? Right?

New York City mayoral candidate Anthony Weiner seems to think so. Or at least hope so. At a mayoral forum in Harlem's La Hermosa Christian Church organized by the Sojourner Truth Democratic Committee on Tuesday night, Weiner bragged about being on former Republican mayor Rudy Giuliani's hate list while he was on the city council, Politicker reports.

Weiner apparently gave Giuliani grief for failing to replace highly flammable paint in public housing projects around the city, contributing to the ignition of several fires in the 90s. At the forum, Weiner implied that he was the only city councilman to criticize Giuliani for this decision.

"And you remember there was one scrawny, skinny, undernourished city councilman standing up to Rudy Giuliani saying something’s wrong here?" he asked, according to Politicker. "I don’t know what kind of list he had -- but I was on it."

Weiner said that after he took Giuliani to task for a fire in a public housing project around Christmas one year, the mayor's office starting referring to him as "Ebenezer Weiner."

A New York Times story from 1995 supports Weiner's claim that he advocated the replacement of flammable paint in public housing projects around the time of the fires. On December 24 of that year, he held a press conference about the issue and called Mayor Giuliani's inaction "shameful."

Still, boasting about one's enmity with a relatively popular former mayor -- and presidential candidate -- seems like a strange political strategy. On the other hand, it's far from the strangest thing Weiner has ever done. It isn't even the strangest thing he did at the Sojourner Truth event. That medal goes to the incident recounted in the last two paragraphs of the Politicker story, which deserve to be presented without comment or abridgement:

But he did apologize to the group for arriving late–offering perhaps the most creative excuse in mayoral forum history: “It involved a 17-month-old, peanut butter and a cat,” he said, later explaining that his son had somehow managed to put peanut butter on the cat’s back.

“I’m not sure I’m ready to be mayor. I did not manage that situation very well at all,” he joked. “My wife yelled at me, she just doesn’t like the cat … And vinegar doesn’t work.”

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Before You Go

2013 NYC Mayoral Candidates
Bill de Blasio (01 of12)
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Currently the city's Public Advocate, Bill de Blasio announced his bid for mayor in January 2013.He has supported the paid sick leave bill, banning horse-drawn carriages, and has been fiercely critical of Mayor Michael Bloomberg's homeless policies. (credit:Getty Images)
Anthony Weiner(02 of12)
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Former Democratic congressman Anthony Weiner finally announced his bid for mayor in May after months of intense speculation by the media and politicians alike. In 2011, an embarrassing sexting scandal forced Weiner to resign from Congress. The lewd photos, along with his denial and subsequent admission, kept him out of the political spotlight until this spring. (credit:AP)
John Liu(03 of12)
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As the city's current comptroller, John Liu oversees New York City's finances. Despite a federal investigation accusing two former aides to Liu of breaking campaign finance laws, Liu announced his candidacy for mayor in March.In a recent interview, Liu said, "We are all liberal Democrats" and suggested Democratic mayoral hopefuls were all the same, differing on only a few issues such as stop and frisk. If elected, Liu would become the city's first Asian-American mayor. (credit:Getty Images)
Christine Quinn(04 of12)
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Christine Quinn is the current City Council Speaker of New York City. She is said to be Mayor Michael Bloomberg's favorite candidate. (credit:Getty Images)
Bill Thompson(05 of12)
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From 2002-2009, Bill Thompson served as New York City's Comptroller. Thompson, a Democrat, ran for mayor in 2009 against Bloomberg. He was outspent 14 to 1 by Bloomberg, and still only lost by a few percentage points. (credit:Getty Images)
Adolfo Carrion Jr. (06 of12)
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Adolfo Carrion, Jr. was the Bronx Borough President from 2002 to 2009 and was appointed by the Obama administration as the Regional Director for HUD's New York office. He is running for mayor as an independent. (credit:Getty Images)
Erick Salgado(07 of12)
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Staten Island's Rev. Erick Salgado announced his Democratic candidacy for mayor, despite a socially conservative agenda which includes anti-gay marriage, pro-life policies. (credit:Facebook)
Sal Albanese(08 of12)
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Sal Albanese is a former city council member also hoping to win the Democratic primary. He also worked as a New York City public school teacher. This will be his third bid for mayor of New York City. (credit:Facebook/© Callie Lipkin)
Joseph Lhota(09 of12)
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Before launching his GOP candidacy for mayor, Joseph Lhota served as MTA chairman and served as the City’s Budget Director in Mayor Giuliani’s first term, and Deputy Mayor for Operations during the second.In 1999, he fought a public battle against the Brooklyn Museum to remove a portrait of the Virgin Mary containing elephant dung. He lost. (credit:Getty Images)
John Catsimatidis (10 of12)
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John Catsimatidis . a Republican candidate for mayor, is a billionaire supermarket mogul. He is known for his pro-NYPD policies and supports the continuation of the department's controversial stop-and-frisk program. (credit:Getty Images)
George McDonald(11 of12)
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George McDonald is the founder and president of The Doe Fund, a non-profit that seeks to help homeless and formerly incarcerated individuals find work. He has never held public office.He initially identified himself as a Democrat but has since switched to the Republican party. McDonald has received criticism for trying to challenge campaign contribution limits. (credit:Facebook)
Anthony Weiner(12 of12)
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Former Democratic congressman Anthony Weiner finally announced his bid for mayor in May after months of intense speculation by the media and politicians alike. In 2011, an embarrassing sexting scandal forced Weiner to resign from Congress. The lewd photos, along with his denial and subsequent admission, have since dogged his political career, but a recent poll revealed many New Yorkers were willing to forgive and forget, with voters putting him at second only behind frontrunner Christine Quinn. (credit:AP)