Rudy giulani biography

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  • Giuliani

    A New Yorker Best Book of the Year

    What happened to Rudy Giuliani?

    Andrew Kirtzman, who has been following Giuliani since the 1990s, answers that question in this “masterful and engrossing” (The Guardian) biographythat “cuts through the myth and caricature that has too often defined Giuliani” (Los Angeles Times).

    Rudy Giuliani was hailed after 9/11 as “America’s Mayor,” a national hero who, at the time, was more widely admired than the pope. He was brilliant, accomplished—and complicated. He conflated politics with morality, made reckless personal choices, and engaged in self-destructive behavior. A series of disastrous decisions and cynical compromises, coupled with his need for power, money, and attention gradually ruined his reputation, cost him political support, and ultimately damaged the country.

    Kirtzman, who was with Giuliani at the World Trade Center on 9/11, conducted hundreds of interviews to give us an insightful portrait of this polarizing figure from the beginning of his rise to his high-profile role as Donald Trump’s personal lawyer. Giuliani was a celebrated prosecutor, a transformative New York City mayor, and a contender for the presidency. But by the end of the Trump presidency, he was reviled and ridiculed after a series of embarrassing errors and misjudgments. He was a significant figure in both of Trump’s impeachments and ended up widely ostracized, facing both legal jeopardy and financial ruin.

    This is the “lively new biography” (The New Yorker) of how it all began and how it came crashing down.

    Rudy Giuliani

    American attorney and politician (born 1944)

    Rudolph William Louis Giuliani (JOO-lee-AH-nee, Italian:[dʒuˈljaːni]; born May 28, 1944) is an American politician and disbarred lawyer who served as the 107th mayor of New York City from 1994 to 2001. He previously served as the United States Associate Attorney General from 1981 to 1983 and the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York from 1983 to 1989.

    Giuliani led the 1980s federal prosecution of New York City mafia bosses as U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York. After a failed campaign for Mayor of New York City in the 1989 election, he succeeded in 1993, and was reelected in 1997, campaigning on a "tough on crime" platform. He led New York's controversial "civic cleanup" from 1994 to 2001. and appointed William Bratton as New York City's new police commissioner. In 2000, he ran against First Lady Hillary Clinton for a U.S. Senate seat from New York, but left the race once diagnosed with prostate cancer. For his mayoral leadership following the September 11 attacks in 2001, he was called "America's mayor" and was named Time magazine's Person of the Year for 2001.

    In 2002, Giuliani founded a security consulting business, Giuliani Partners, and acquired, but later sold, an investment banking firm, Giuliani Capital Advisors. In 2005, he joined a law firm, renamed Bracewell & Giuliani. Vying for the Republican Party's 2008 presidential nomination, Giuliani was an early frontrunner yet did poorly in the primary election; he later withdrew and endorsed the party's subsequent nominee, John McCain. After declining to run for New York governor in 2010 and for the Republican presidential nomination in 2012,

    Rudy Giuliani

    Rudy Giuliani


    KBE

    In office
    January 1, 1994 – December 31, 2001
    Preceded byDavid Dinkins
    Succeeded byMichael Bloomberg
    In office
    June 3, 1983 – January 1, 1989
    PresidentRonald Reagan
    Preceded byJohn S. Martin Jr.
    Succeeded byBenito Romano(Acting)
    In office
    February 20, 1981 – June 3, 1983
    PresidentRonald Reagan
    Preceded byJohn Shenefield
    Succeeded byD. Lowell Jensen
    Born

    Rudolph William Louis Giuliani


    (1944-05-28) May 28, 1944 (age 80)
    Brooklyn, New York City, U.S.
    Political partyRepublican (1980–present)
    Other political
    affiliations
    Independent (1975–1980)
    Democratic (before 1975)
    Spouse(s)

    Regina Peruggi

    (m. ; div. 1982)​

    Donna Hanover

    (m. ; div. )​

    Judith Nathan

    (m. 2003; div. 2019)​
    Children2 (including Andrew)
    EducationManhattan College (BA)
    New York University (JD)
    Signature

    Rudolph William Louis "Rudy" GiulianiKBE (born May 28, 1944) is a politician from New York in the United States. He is a Republican and campaigned to become President of the United States in 2008. Giuliani was mayor of New York City from January 1, 1994 to December 31, 2001. Giuliani became more well known during and after the September 11, 2001 attacks on the World Trade Center. In 2001, Timemagazine named him "Person of the Year" and he received an honorary knighthood from QueenElizabeth II in 2002, and acclaimed as one of the greatest mayors in American history.

    Rudy was campaigning in 1993 with the show Seinfeld where he appeared as the NYC Mayor candidate as the "over count" cholesterol man by eating too much yogurt. This "product placement" of Mayor Giuliani is often referred to as an excellent example of electioneering and booste

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  • Rudy Giuliani

    (1944-)

    Who Is Rudy Giuliani?

    Rudy Giuliani worked as a private attorney and with the U.S. Department of Justice. He later won the New York City mayoral race as the Republican candidate in 1993. He stayed in office for two terms, taking a tough view on crime while becoming a divisive figure because of his handling of police abuses and racial issues in cases. He later unsuccessfully campaigned for his party’s presidential nomination in 2008. Giuliani was also recognized for his focused leadership in the aftermath of the terrorist attacks that felled the World Trade Center in New York City on September 11, 2001. He later started his own security consulting firm and worked with Donald Trump during the 2016 presidential campaign, before joining the president's legal team.

    Early Life

    Rudolph William Louis Giuliani was born on May 28, 1944, in Brooklyn, New York, into a large Italian-American family that consisted mostly of cops and firefighters. "I grew up with uniforms all around me and their stories of heroism," Giuliani remembers. His mother, Helen Giuliani, was a smart and serious woman who worked as a secretary, and his father, Harold Giuliani, ran a tavern and worked for a brother's mob-connected loan sharking business.

    Although Giuliani only learned the full story as an adult, his father had been arrested in 1934 for robbing a milkman at gunpoint and had spent a year and a half in jail. "I knew he had gotten into trouble as a young man, but I never knew exactly what it was," Giuliani recalled. Nevertheless, Harold Giuliani was an excellent father who was determined not to allow his son to repeat his mistakes.

    When Giuliani was 7 years old, his father moved the family from Brooklyn out to Long Island to distance his son from the mob-connected members of the family, and he instilled in him a deep respect for authority, order and personal property. "My father compensated through me," Giuliani later said. "