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bob mcmanus

Bob McManus

Bob McManus is editorial page editor of The New York Post. He joined The Post in 1984 as chief editorial writer, specializing in state and local political and policy issues. He has written on national security and related matters. He was deputy editorial page editor from 1990 until March, 2000, when he assumed full responsibility for the newspaper’s opinion pages. McManus came to The Post from the Albany, N.Y., Times-Union, where he covered state and local issues as a reporter and as an editor. He was executive city editor of The Times-Union between 1976 and 1981. He is a veteran of the U.S. Navy’s submarine service, and was a member of the class of 1971 at Siena College, Loudonville, N.Y. McManus resides in Manhattan.

Latest Columns

  • Undoing Andrew

    Sheldon Silver has been speaker of the New York Assembly for going on 19 years now, and not for a moment of his tenure has he been his own man. But not until yesterday afternoon — when he openly removed himself from...   March 07, 2012

    From Oped Columnists
  • Trophy hunt

    Of all the cheesy stunts The Associated Press has pulled in its continuing calumny of the NYPD’s anti-terrorism efforts, the agency’s trip to Columbia University this past weekend will be hard to top. Finding Columbia...   February 28, 2012

    From Oped Columnists
  • Take ’em to school, gov

    Gov. Cuomo last week waded hip-deep into New York’s fetid education-standards swamp — picking a fight he must win if the state is ever to have real teacher accountability. Now he’s well-positioned to drain that swamp —...   January 15, 2012

    From Local
  • Your move, Governor – don’t blow it

    Mike Bloomberg didn’t precisely call Andrew Cuomo’s public-education bluff yesterday — but he sure did cover the governor’s bet. What happens next isn’t likely to be pretty. The centerpiece of the mayor’s theatrical...   January 13, 2012

    From Local
  • Remembering a war hero and a humanitarian

    It was late on a Sat urday night, and a long-retired Hugh Leo Carey -- his face wrapped in that forbidding scowl New York came to know so well -- seemed very bored indeed.   But he brightened when asked about the...   August 08, 2011

    From Local
  • Openers provide memories

    It was 90 minutes or so before the first pitch of what would become known as the Jeffrey Maier game of the ’96 playoffs when a commotion broke out aboard a very crowded D train en route to The Bronx.  Trouble?  Nothing...   March 28, 2011

    From Oped Columnists
  • A debt of honor to the FDNY

    For firefighters, as with fighter pilots, speed is life.   The sooner water is laid on flame, the sooner the fire is out. Get it on quickly enough, and a major blaze might be avoided altogether.   Conversely, when...   March 08, 2011

    From Oped Columnists
  • A crisis foretold

    Regarding Wisconsin, Pat Moynihan saw it coming. But did the last of New York's grand public intellectuals also divine the limits of the modern American welfare state?   The proximate cause of Wisconsin's high drama...   February 28, 2011

    From Oped Columnists
  • Columbia's dishonor

    They teach many things at Columbia University -- but common decency appears not to be among them.   Nor how to recognize personal honor.   Consider the treatment given last week to Anthony Maschek, a Purple Heart...   February 22, 2011

    From Oped Columnists
  • Irish eyes unsmiling

    Saints preserve us! Has Irish America lost its sense of humor?   Could be.   At least nobody was laughing at Mayor Bloomberg's off-the-cuff attempt at ethnic drollery, delivered Wednesday to the American Irish...   February 12, 2011

    From Oped Columnists
  • Meeting his match?

    Sheldon Silver of Manhattan is entering his 18th year as speaker of the state Assembly, a position in which he has proven that, in politics as in physics, nature abhors a vacuum.   Silver has certainly earned his...   February 08, 2011

    From Oped Columnists
  • Unionspeak: Gain is loss

    Gov. Cuomo smiled brightly yesterday, gazed out on a gaggle of Albany regulars -- and told them his new budget is meant to break their rice bowls.   Regulars like Billy Easton -- a shill for the state's public...   February 02, 2011

    From Local
  • Botching the basics

    It was Fiorello La Guardia, New York's greatest mayor ever, who said there is no Democratic or Republican way to pick up Gotham's garbage.   Which, in case you haven't noticed, hasn't been collected for more than a...   January 03, 2011

    From Oped Columnists
  • Andrew's long odds

    Think of him as Andrew Cuomo, odd man out.   That is, think of New York's governor-elect as a man committed to fundamental reform of a sort that the party he now heads considers wormwood and gall.   And that the...   November 04, 2010

    From Oped Columnists
  • A phony scandal

    Who would have ever suspected that Ray Kelly leads two lives?   There's Ray Kelly the former Marine and city police commissioner since 2002, hitherto thought to have been a model of rectitude.   And then there's the...   October 27, 2010

    From Oped Columnists
  • Soldiers know

    Defense Secretary Robert Gates wants a "unified" in quiry into the Army's in ability to recognize warning signs of the sort broadcast for months by its homicidal Islamist psychiatrist, Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan.   "This...   November 18, 2009

    From Oped Columnists
  • STERLING MEMORIAL

    USS Growler rode high in the water at the Intrepid Mu seum on the West Side of Manhattan Thursday, sparkling slate-gray in the midday sunshine though dwarfed by the historic aircraft carrier tied up across Pier 86.  ...   May 25, 2009

    From Oped Columnists
  • THE KING OF NY

    NO New York politician in modern times, not even the storied Gov. Nelson Rocke feller, ever wielded the influence now enjoyed by Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver -- a Lower East Side boy grown rich and famous in the...   April 02, 2009

    From Oped Columnists
  • OBAMA KEEPS DIGGING

    Barack Obama's loss of support among women - as measured in reputable polls - has been so sudden, so sharp and so damaging that it's impossible to imagine why he'd want to make matters worse.   But that's what he did...   September 11, 2008

    From Oped Columnists
  • GROUND ZERO IS BECKONING

    WHAT hath Mike wrought?  More than is immediately apparent, but much less than he would have liked.  But all is not lost.  His mayoralty maintains for 585 more days, enough time (though barely) to forge a legacy worthy...   May 25, 2008

    From News
  • MIKE'S LEGACY IN JEOPARDY

    It took Albany a little more than 24 hours this week to strip Mayor Bloomberg of his two "legacy" issues - congestion pricing and mayoral control of the public schools. Now the question is: How will Mike keep busy over...   April 10, 2008

    From Oped Columnists
  • SO, JUST WHO GAVE ORDERS FOR SPYING?

    ALBANY County District Attorney David Soares' eyeball glazer of a re port on the Spitzer administration's apparent effort to off a political enemy concludes that the former governor probably told a couple of untruths.  ...   March 29, 2008

    From News
  • FECKLESS FRIENDS

    GOV. Paterson got a lot of applause at yesterday's convocation of the usual suspects in Albany - but his inaugural ovation was no longer, nor more enthusiastic, than that tendered for state Comptroller Tom DiNapoli.  ...   March 18, 2008

    From Oped Columnists
  • READING NEW HAMPSHIRE:

    IT'S easy to champion change, if one has no past - as the remarka ble, if perhaps unsustainable, ascendance of Sen. Barack Obama demonstrates.   The very junior US senator from Illinois shot to the head of the...   January 09, 2008

    From Oped Columnists
  • PAY HEED TO THIS WARRIOR STATESMAN

    GEN. David H. Petraeus yes terday strode purpose fully into a Capitol Hill hearing room to the rattlesnake buzz of still-camera shutters and the muffled disapprobation of the ladies in pink T-shirts at the rear of the...   September 11, 2007

    From Oped Columnists
  • MONUMENT TO THE PILE

    THE Deutsche Bank building - tall, dark, forbidding and, in the end, deadly - was a Ground Zero afterthought right from the beginning.   Shattered on 9/11, it was abandoned shortly thereafter and soon devolved into a...   August 22, 2007

    From Oped Columnists
  • THE NASCAR GOV

    WHY is everybody so surprised that Eliot Spitzer says he likes automobile racing?   After all, for one NASCAR driver to win, all the others must lose. They drive in circles, have spectacular smash-ups - and every now...   August 15, 2007

    From Oped Columnists
  • COMPANY TOWN

    SAVAGE KINGDOM: THE TRUE STORY OF JAMESTOWN, 1607, AND THE SETTLEMENT OF AMERICABY BENJAMIN WOOLLEYHARPERCOLLINS, 469 PAGES, $27.50   HOW did America become America?   "Chance was to make the continent home to mankind...   May 27, 2007

    From Books
  • SYMPATHY FOR AUTHORS OF ATROCITY

    CLINT Eastwood can make a movie, that's for sure, but who'd ever have thought that the creator of uber-tough-cop Dirty Harry Callahan would someday embrace the Rodney King "Can't We All Just Get Along" school of...   February 25, 2007

    From Oped Columnists
  • ELIOT'S REVOLUTION

    One can only imagine what was running through George Pata ki's head yesterday afternoon as he sat in the damp and chill of an outdoors Albany afternoon in January and listened to the inaugural address of his successor,...   January 02, 2007

    From Oped Columnists

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