panaritisp

unread,
Oct 25, 2021, 5:21:35 PM10/25/21
to Six on History

Welcome back to Six on History  

PS: If you like what you find on the "Six on History" blog, please share w/your contacts. 


And please don't forget to check out the pertinent images attached to every post

Go to the Six on History Archive to search past posts/articles click "labels" on the left when there and the topics will collapse.
Thanks 

Sir-Peter-Parker Sir Peter Parker by Lemuel Francis Abbott.jpg

Phil Panaritis


Six on History: Election Day

1) NYC General Election Prep: What to Know Before Heading to the Polls on         Nov. 2, The CITY

"Ready to vote again?

Following a never ending primary in June, on Nov. 2 we’ll get to lock in our final choices for several open seats in city government. Not only are we choosing a new mayor, comptroller and five new borough presidents, term limits mean the bulk of the City Council is turning over, too.

The primary had relatively high turnout, as nearly three in 10 registered voters cast ballots (It’s a low bar). Now, the city returns to the polls to finalize our picks in the General Election.

But Election Day is merely the last day you can cast your ballot: Keep these key earlier dates in mind:

When do we get to see the candidates face off?

There are just two official mayoral debates before the general election, both sponsored by




2) From CNN: Early front-runners like Yang usually win NYC mayoral                        primaries, April 26, 2921

"CNN) The New York City Democratic mayoral primary is now less than two months away, on June 22. The polls indicate that businessman and former 2020 presidential candidate Andrew Yang continues to hold a clear lead in the first New York City mayoral election being held under ranked choice voting.


While Yang's lead is surmountable, a look back over history suggests that front-runners at this point usually go on to win the primary.

When voters were asked who their first choices are, Yang averaged 22% of the vote in my aggregate of recent polling. Behind him are Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams at 14%, New York City Comptroller Scott Stringer at 9% and attorney and former MSNBC legal analyst Maya Wiley at 8%. The other four major candidates come in at 5% or less.
    Of course, these standings do not take into account ranked choice voting. In this system, voters are asked to rank their candidate preferences from 1 to 5. Voters who choose the candidate with the fewest votes in a given round will have their ballots reallocated to their next highest preferences, until a candidate receives a majority of the vote."



    3) New York Mayor’s Race in Chaos After Elections Board Counts 135,000          Test Ballots, NY Times

    The extraordinary sequence of events threw the closely watched Democratic primary contest into a new period of uncertainty and seeded further confusion about the outcome.

    " ... Then, around 10:30 p.m., the board finally released a statement, explaining that it had failed to remove sample ballot images used to test its ranked-choice voting software. When the board ran the program, it counted “both test and election night results, producing approximately 135,000 additional records,” the statement said. The ranked-choice numbers, it said, would be tabulated again.

    The extraordinary sequence of events seeded further confusion about the outcome, and threw the closely watched contest into a new period of uncertainty at a consequential moment for the city.

    For the Board of Elections, which has long been plagued by dysfunction and nepotism, this was its first try at implementing ranked-choice voting on a citywide scale. Skeptics had expressed doubts about the board’s ability to pull off the process, though it is used successfully in other cities.


    Under ranked-choice voting, voters can list up to five candidates on their ballots in preferential order. If no candidate receives more than 50 percent of first-choice votes in the first round, the winner is decided by a process of elimination: As the lower-polling candidates are eliminated, their votes are reallocated to whichever candidate those voters ranked next, and the process continues until there is a winner.

    The Board of Elections released preliminary, unofficial ranked-choice tabulations on Tuesday afternoon, showing that Mr. Adams — who had held a significant advantage on primary night — was narrowly ahead of Kathryn Garcia in the ballots cast in person during early voting or on Primary Day. Maya D. Wiley, who came in second place in the initial vote count, was close behind in third place. The board then took down the results and disclosed the discrepancy. 

    The results may well be scrambled again: Even after the Board of Elections sorts through the preliminary tally, it must count around 124,000 Democratic absentee ballots. Once they are tabulated, the board will take the new total that includes them and run a new set of ranked-choice elimination rounds, with a final result not expected until mid-July." ...





    4) What the Five Ballot Proposal Questions Mean for New Yorkers this                November, The CITY 

    "The city is not just choosing a new mayor in November. This fall, New York voters must also decide on five proposed changes to the state constitution.

    Five ballot proposals are up for a vote in the general election on Nov. 2. They include questions on the future of political representation in Albany, environmental protections, easier voter registration and absentee balloting, and how New York’s civil courts function.

    The full text of the five proposals are listed on the Board of Elections website and at Ballotpedia, the nonprofit political encyclopedia. But voters who aren’t political mavens may need a bit of context:

    Where do these ballot proposals come from?

    Unlike California, for example, where citizens can initiate a ballot proposal, New York is one of 24 states where the measures must come from legislators only, not directly from the people.

    The five proposals up for consideration in November all came from Albany, where our reps voted for them in both the Assembly and the State Senate before they could arrive on your ballot, noted.

    An absentee ballot for the November 2021 general election in New York City. Hasani Gittens/THE CITY

    Before getting on the ballot, the proposals must be approved by both houses of the legislature, then voted on again in both chambers after the Senate and Assembly have had one election cycle. Since New York legislator’s terms are two years long, it could take between two and four years to pass a ballot measure.

    Then, when it’s ready for voters, the state Board of Elections converts the often dense, legal language passed by the legislature into fairly plain text on the ballot.

    “The Board of Elections is not only designing the ballot itself, but they’re writing the question that voters see,” Ryan Byrne, leader of the Ballot Measure Project at Ballotpedia.

    That doesn’t necessarily mean the ballot measures are easy to understand.

    Ballotpedia tallies how difficult it is to read ballot measures across the country, and this year, New York’s five proposals are at a grade level “14,” on average — meaning two years after high school “halfway through a bachelor’s degree,” Byrne said.

    But that’s on the low end, relatively speaking. In Colorado, he said, state ballot measures are at a grade level “32” this year — the equivalent of a doctoral degree and then some.

    How likely is it that the proposals will pass?

    Statistically speaking, pretty likely. In New York, voters approved 74% of statewide ballot measures between 1985 and 2020, Ballotpedia found.

    “Overwhelmingly, they get approved,” said Rachael Fauss, senior research analyst for Reinvent Albany, a government watchdog group.

    Ballotpedia found that in odd-numbered election years, proposals in New York have been approved 65% of the time. In even-numbered years, that number goes up to 83%.

    Typically, the people who vote on ballot measures are “the people who are paying attention to them, generally,” Fauss said.

    Plus, it takes a bit more effort to read and fill out ballot proposals. Often, they’re on a second page.

    “A lot of people leave them blank,” Fauss said.

    What happens to a ballot proposal after we vote?

    New York voters have the final say on ballot measures and, if they’re approved, they’ll go into effect on Jan. 1, 2022.

    “The enactment process for state constitutional amendments is the voter. So, voters are essentially acting as that signature or veto,” he said.

    If the measure is voted down, it’s scrapped and would have to be reintroduced and passed by the Legislature again to appear on a future ballot.

    The Ballot Measures Proposal 1 — Redistricting

    The first ballot proposal is really several questions rolled into one, all on the subject of redistricting.

    Redistricting is the process that state lawmakers go through to redraw the boundaries of Congressional and state legislative districts based on the new population numbers reported from the once-a-decade census.


    It’s a complicated and important process that will shape political representation at all levels for the next decade.

    Proposal 1 asks voters to approve several constitutional changes to the redistricting process. Supporters say the proposal is fundamental to making sure it all gets done on time and with less partisan bias. Detractors, particularly from the Republican Party, say the measure is Democratic scale-tipping that leaves the political minority with less power.

    There are more than a dozen individual changes to the constitution wrapped up in Proposal 1, but voters must vote yes or no on them all together. Here are the top changes, according to experts:

    • Cap the total number of state senators at 63
    • Require that incarcerated people be counted at the address where they lived before going to jail or prison for the purposes of redistricting — not where they are being detained
    • Move up the timeline by two weeks for when redistricting plans must be submitted to the legislature
    • Change the vote total needed to adopt redistricting plans when one political party controls both legislative houses

    The state senator cap is an attempt by Albany lawmakers to prevent future legislators from creating new districts to tip the partisan balance of the legislature.

    The measure regarding incarcerated people will ban what’s called “prison gerrymandering” — or counting inmates where they are incarcerated rather than where they lived before going to prison or jail, said Jeff Wice, a New York Law School professor and redistricting expert.

    The measure would, on the whole, boost the population of downstate counties, especially in New York City, and take away from the upstate counties where many state prisons are located. State law already includes a ban on prison gerrymandering for state-level political districts, but Proposal 1 would enshrine it in the constitution for Congressional-level redistricting, as well.

    The proposal would also stipulate that when one political party controls the Assembly and State Senate — as the Democrats do now in Albany — just a simple majority would be required to approve of the redistricting plans that come from the so-called Independent Redistricting Commission.

    Currently, two-thirds of each house must approve redistricting maps if one party controls the Legislature. Democrats in the Senate and Assembly both have a supermajority in their chambers.

    Wice supports the proposal and says though there are many important pieces to it, the most crucial may be a seemingly dry calendar change.

    To cope with a pandemic-related delay in the release of 2020 Census data and New York’s relatively new June primary date, Proposal 1 would move back the date the Commission must first submit its redistricting maps to the Legislature by two weeks, from Jan. 15 to Jan. 1, 2022. If the Legislature rejects the first plan, the Commission would then have to submit another draft by Jan. 15 instead of the current deadline of Feb. 28, 2022.

    For future once-a-decade redistricting processes in 2032, 2042 and so on, Proposal 1 would set the first and second deadlines from the commission on Nov. 15 and Jan. 1, respectively.

    This is important to give enough time for the Commission to hammer out the new election districts before candidates must, by state law, start gathering signatures — a process known as petitioning — to get their names on the ballot in those districts. (But state lawmakers can still take matters into their own hands and draw the boundaries themselves if they don’t like what the commission comes up with.)

    If voters don’t approve the change and the boundaries aren’t set for election districts before candidates must start petitioning and campaigning, that could mean a messy rush for hopefuls competing in a June primary, Wice said.

    “That’s, in part, why this amendment was crafted and put forward,” he said.

    But opponents of the proposal — especially those among the state’s Republicans — are pushing back hard. In an interview on the issue with Spectrum News, former U.S. Rep. John Faso described Proposal 1 as “a very cynical maneuver” by the Democrats to “consolidate their power.”

    “The true purpose of this entire thing is to eviscerate any ability of the minority party, in this case Republicans, to have a role in the redistricting process,” he said.

    Good government groups in the state are split on the measure. New York Common Cause and New York Public Interest Research Group called it an imperfect but necessary change.

    The two groups cheered the 63-senator cap, proposed rules for counting incarcerated New Yorkers, timetable changes and other measures while noting “the proposal falls short of the full reforms we believe would provide truly independent [redistricting] commission,” they said in a joint statement earlier this year.

    The League of Women Voters of New York State wants voters to reject the proposal. The group said Proposal 1 “would weaken the role of the minority party.”

    Want more info? The full text of Proposal 1 can be found here from the state Board of Election, Ballotpedia’s guide on the proposal is here and this deep-dive on the measure from Spectrum News is a great resource for understanding the issues at play.



    Proposal 2 — Environmental Rights

    The second ballot measure would add a broad new right to the state constitution: “Each person shall have a right to clean air and water, and a healthful environment.”

    Sounds simple? That’s by design. Environmental advocates who advocated for this measure wanted the language to be general — to push government officials into “making sure that the environment is given that highest level of recognition and protection,” said Maya K. van Rossum, CEO of the Delaware Riverkeeper Network, a Pennsylvania-based environmental group.

    In New York, supporters include the League of Conservation Voters, Environmental Advocates of New York, the Adirondack Mountain Club and the NYC Environmental Justice Alliance.

    Similar state amendments have been on the books in Pennsylvania and Montana since the 1970s. Van Rossum says her group and several municipalities used Pennsylvania’s measure in 2013 to successfully block provisions of a law that would have expanded fracking across the state.

    The simplicity of the language, however, is a chief concern for those who oppose the ballot measure. They say the new proposal will invite a slew of unnecessary lawsuits.

    Michael Giaimo, Northeast region director for the American Petroleum Institute, warned that “as written, the provision could result in extensive and costly litigation as the courts will invariably need to interpret the new constitutional amendment.”

    Tom Stebbins, executive director of the Lawsuit Reform Alliance of New York, which opposes the measure, said: “We need public servants to regulate our environmental laws. We don’t need profit-seeking attorneys to litigate our laws.”

    But Peter Iwanowicz, executive director of Environmental Advocates of New York, said only those harming the environment have a reason to think negatively.

    “If you’re not polluting the air or making water dangerous to drink, then you should not have any problems with this amendment,” he said.


    Proposals 3 and 4 — Elections and Voting

    The third and fourth ballot measures both aim to change rules to allow easier access to the polls.

    Proposal 3 would remove a current constitutional rule that you must register to vote at least 10 days before an election in New York.

    That would give the green light for same-day voter registration in New York — if the legislature approves it down the line.

    Jordan Pantalone, intergovernmental liaison for New York’s Campaign Finance Board, said the measure will make it easier on the many New Yorkers who don’t tune into politics until the last minute.

    “Every election we’re getting messages from voters saying, ‘Hey I want to go vote,’ and it’s five days before the election, so they’re unable to do so,” he said.

    If voters approve Proposal 3, the Assembly and State Senate can write a new law explicitly allowing would-be voters to register on Election Day. Democratic leaders in both houses have indicated they plan to do so if the ballot measure goes through.

    Similarly, Proposal 4 would nix a state constitutional rule that says voters must have an excuse, or valid reason, to vote with an absentee ballot. If the proposal gets voter approval, it would clear the way for the state Legislature to make no-excuse absentee voting a permanent option.

    During the COVID-19 pandemic, widespread voting by absentee ballot was effectively allowed for any New Yorker due to an emergency executive order from then-Gov. Andrew Cuomo. The order said any voter at risk of contracting the virus could legally request an absentee ballot.

    Voters took advantage of the option and cast absentee ballots five times as much as they had in previous elections. This ballot measure aims to clear a pathway for doing away with the need for any excuse.


    Proposal 5 — Civil Court’s Claim Limit

    The fifth ballot proposal seeks to change the monetary limit on claims in the city’s civil court, which is regulated by the state constitution.

    Currently, in New York City’s Civil Court, only cases involving claims worth $25,000 or less may be heard. Proposal 5 would lift that limit to $50,000.

    Why do this? At the time it was proposed and approved in the Legislature, bill sponsor State Senator Luis Sepulveda cited a need to reduce the caseload in the court system, especially State Supreme Court, which currently takes on any cases involving claims over $25,000.

    Sidney Cherubin, a Brooklyn Law School professor and director of legal services at the Brooklyn Volunteer Lawyers Project, supports the amendment as “an attempt to make the judicial system more efficient and to better serve the needs of New Yorkers,” he said.

    “It doesn’t solve everything, but it’s a step in the right direction,” he said.

    But he stressed that more cases in Civil Court will make a busy court even more bogged down — and, ballot measure aside, lawmakers need to allocate funding and more staff to the court system to make sure it runs smoothly.

    If Proposal 5 passes, it will be the first time the claims jurisdiction has changed in Civil Court since 1983. Voters considered a nearly identical ballot measure to increase the claims jurisdiction to $50,000 in 1995, but it was narrowly defeated.

    “It may have to do with the fact that this affects New York City and not the rest of the state,” Cherubin said. “So, people don’t care. It doesn’t affect them, so why bother?”




    5) Early Voting Kicks Off In NYC With Voters Trickling In To Polls To                      Choose Next Mayor, Gothamist 10-24-2021

    "The election for the next mayor of New York City and other offices kicked off with seemingly muted turnout at 106 early voting sites that opened at 8 a.m. on Saturday across the city.

    At a polling site on the Upper East Side, around 20 people had trickled in by 9 a.m. According to several of them, casting a ballot was still a prized ritual even if the outcome might seem pre-determined in a city dominated by Democrats.

    “It’s an honor and a privilege and a duty to vote,” said Asfar, a woman who was born in Iran. Asfar, who was among the early voters at Eleanor Roosevelt High School on 76th Street on the Upper East Side, said she had actually expected more of a crowd.

    "Just before 9 a.m., Hector and Maling Feliciano went to vote inside the Bronx County Courthouse. The couple said they found the experience hassle-free.

    Maling Feliciano, a former recreation coordinator at a shelter in Tremont, said voting was a way of ensuring her voice matters. “If anything, if I need any help, they could see that I’m a voter,” she said.

    Hector Feliciano was driven to vote because he felt the city had grown unsafe and overburdened by the ongoing pandemic. He had no qualms about disclosing who he voted for: Curtis Sliwa, the Republican nominee for mayor, who Hector Feliciano said was best suited to handle any crisis affecting the city.

    Bronx resident Natasha Jackson stood on the opposite end of the political spectrum, revealing she voted for Adams, citing his deep roots in the city and his career in the NYPD.

    “He actually — and not to say Sliwa didn’t — but he grew up in the city, he knows the city, he was a police officer,” Jackson said after she cast her vote at the Bronx County Courthouse. “So he knows the ins and outs of the NYPD. And I think the NYPD, they’ve gotten a bad rap.”

    Jackson said she hopes Adams would be able to address the ongoing violence in city public schools for the sake of her high school-aged son.

    Unlike the the primary elections in June which introduced ranked-choice voting, voters praised the general election’s early-voting process as smooth.

    “I like the fact that it’s early, and I like the fact that I can come in and out,” said Jackson in the Bronx. “I like this early voting. I can come early, do what I have to do, and have the rest of my day to go.”

    He argued that if Eric Adams—the current Brooklyn borough president, retired NYPD captain, and Democratic nominee for mayor—can’t control the high number of shootings in Brooklyn, how could he be expected to successfully lead the city?

    “If he can’t do a good job in his borough, how [is] he going to do a good job in the five boroughs?” Hector Feliciano said.

    Borough presidents have no real authority over the NYPD, unlike the mayor who appoints the commissioner and oversees the police budget.

    Larry Brabham, 74, sailed in and out of the polling site at the Masonic Temple in Fort Greene. “It went well, very well,” he said of the process to cast his vote. Brabham said he voted for Adams because “he stood out to me more, and I knew him from past experiences,” he said, and added with a chuckle, “he’s from Brooklyn, too.”

    Along with voting for the top office, voters will select the next public advocate, comptroller and their five borough presidents. Five proposals are on the ballot citywide while all 51 City Council seats are up for election. There are also a number of candidates for a judgeship appearing on the ballot.



    Haley Keizur, who recently moved from Puyallup, a town in Washington state with a population of around 42,000, was voting for her very first time in New York.

    “I was a little overwhelmed at first, but I just did a lot of research online,” she said at Eleanor Roosevelt High School.

    Keizur, who wore a blue shirt with the words, “Please Vote,” said she appreciated the ability to vote early on a weekend. In her home state, voting is also done by mail. “It’s just a lot easier process,” she said.

    Over at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, voting was taking place in a small and tightly packed room on the building’s south side.

    Not exactly the Temple of Dendur, remarked one poll worker.

    But Emily Kurtz nevertheless appreciated the convenience of early voting. “All elections are important to me, especially with what’s going on currently in Washington,” she said. "So I want to be the first one and get it out of the way. Plus what could be nicer than voting at the Met?”

    Kurtz, like some voters, shied away from saying who they voted for.

    Manya Alston of Fort Greene emerged from the Masonic Temple and declined to say who she voted for, but she urged fellow citizens to head to the polls by Election Day. “I just hope that folks will come out and vote, and put the right person in office so we can move forward,” Alston said.

    Mitchell Ratchik, 51, of Fort Greene also declined to reveal his vote: “I've known both candidates for a long time,” Ratchik said of Adams and Sliwa outside the Masonic Temple. “I'm not going to tell you who I voted for, but let's just say...let’s make sure that the crazy doesn't get in.”

    Ratchik did offer thoughts on the importance of making elections accessible. “I hope that they can continue making it as convenient as possible for people to do their civic duties and to engage in the democratic process,” Ratchik said. “I think it's the most important thing that we have going for us, especially when you look at other countries.”

    Early voting went into effect in the city in 2019 and runs for nine days this year, ending on October 31st, two days before Election Day. The city Board of Elections tracks the number of people who cast a ballot on each early voting day.

    Back at the Met, Barbara Rose, 75, a retired high school teacher, was among those who said they voted for Adams.

    Asked why, she offered, “Anyone’s better than de Blasio.”

    Early Voting Kicks Off In NYC With Voters Trickling In To Polls To Choose Next Mayor





    6) The New York State Democratic Party Really Is a Joke, Political Currents
        by Ross Barkan

    "This week, Jay Jacobs said that the New York State Democratic Party, which he chairs, should not always endorse the winners of Democratic primaries because sometimes bad people can win them. The example he used to underscore this point was the hypothetical victory of a noted white supremacist. “Let’s take a scenario, very different, where David Duke, you remember him, the grand wizard of the KKK, he moves to New York, he becomes a Democrat, he runs for mayor in the city of Rochester, which is a low primary turnout and he wins the Democratic line. I have to endorse David Duke? I don’t think so,” Jacobs said.


    Jacobs was responding to a question about the odd decision of the State Democratic Party to not endorse India Walton, who in June defeated Byron Brown in the Democratic primary. Brown is currently running a write-in campaign, with the assistance of Trump-backing Republicans, and could very well win. The scale of the effort—and the chutzpah involved—is unprecedented in New York. “Now, of course, India Walton is not in the same category, but it just leads you to that question, is it a must? It’s not a must,” Jacobs added. “It’s something you choose to do. That’s why it's an endorsement. Otherwise, they call it something else, like a requirement.”

    If technically true—Democratic Party organizations are allowed to spurn their own nominees—the comparison was unhinged, and Jacobs was rightly condemned by a wide range of elected officials. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, among others, called for his resignation. Both Brown and Walton are Black, which made the invoking of Duke even more disturbing. Jacobs should be dumped immediately and it’s unclear why Governor Kathy Hochul, who also refuses to endorse Walton, hasn’t called for his ouster already.

    Jacobs, who is in his second tour of duty as chair of the statewide party, has mostly distinguished himself as an ineffectual Andrew Cuomo loyalist over the course of his career in politics. He has been wrong about plenty. In 2019, he did Cuomo’s bidding and tried to stop State Senate Democrats from passing legislation that would grant driver’s licenses to undocumented immigrants. Jacobs fearmongered, warning that any votes to support the bill would cost Democrats seats in the suburbs, where he is from. Instead, the legislation passed and Democrats added enough seats to form a supermajority following the 2020 elections. Nassau and Suffolk Counties did not revolt. After Cuomo was accused of sexual harassment in 2021, Jacobs was a steadfast ally until it became politically untenable, in the late summer, to support Cuomo any longer. This probably allowed him to cling onto his unpaid party post under Hochul.




    But Jacobs, who runs expensive day camps in his working life, is more symptom than cause here. He is not the first lousy, useless leader of the State Democratic Party and he probably won’t be the last. Unlike a lot of other states, New York does not have a functioning, centralized Democratic Party apparatus that recruits and trains candidates, funding them against Republican opponents. It has its various fiefdoms, along with elected officials who cultivate their own followings; the actual Democratic Party of the state doesn’t really exist at all. This has been mostly by design. For decades, the Democratic Party in New York has been a self-dealing, incompetent mess, often propping up Republicans to damage the progressive left.




    Cuomo, of course, was the exemplar of this. As perhaps, at one time, the most powerful Democrat in the country outside of the president, he presided over a party that was little more than a second gubernatorial campaign account and slush fund. In tough election cycles, he refused to allow the State Democratic Party to aid State Senate Democrats trying to retake the majority from Republicans. Jacobs and other Democratic leaders blessed the Republican Party’s power-sharing agreement with the conservative, breakaway Democrats known as the Independent Democratic Conference. Like Jacobs, past Democratic Party leaders have been apologists for whatever scheme Cuomo had cooked up to undercut Democrats. David Paterson, the former governor who later served as party chair, would attack Senate Democrats too and defend the IDC when speaking publicly. Before Andrew Cuomo, before Paterson, there was Mario Cuomo, the popular liberal governor who, like his son in later years, made almost no attempt to build the Democratic Party in his own state.



    New York could’ve used an organized, active, and decent Democratic Party in the last 50 years. Such a machine could’ve sped up the passage of many bills that only made it through the legislature in 2019, when Democrats, with no assistance from Cuomo, rode the blue wave to a clear majority. But the truth is Democrats are dominant enough now in New York that the atrophied infrastructure of the party means relatively little. There are NGO machines like the Working Families Party, the socialist DSA machine, and enough candidates who fundraise to build their own functioning operations. Congressional candidates who are serious can raise millions with no assistance from Jay Jacobs. This is not better or worse; it’s simply the world we live in now. The Republican Party in New York is, in large parts of the state, unable to compete. Jacobs should be gone, but his successor will preside over an entity that has outlived its usefulness.



    Yet we should take a moment to contemplate what has been lost. Local organizations used to matter a lot. The old municipal Democratic machines, so faded from their 20th century heyday, were both hotbeds of corruption and genuine organizers of working-class votes. With control of patronage, these machines could deliver the goods for voters. There was a tangible feel to democracy that no longer exists. The consultant class was also a minor feature of the process in this period. Parties themselves did the messaging, the organizing, and strategized around voter contact. Today, they are dominant, forming a layer of the permanent government. Consultants often lobby or advise the candidates they help elect on behalf of wealthy clients and corporations. Under Bill de Blasio, it was Berlin Rosen that grew immensely influential, becoming one of his “agents of the city.” Consultants, like the old party bosses, become power brokers. In all the recent races for City Council speaker, consultants and lobbyists were almost as pivotal as the party leaders themselves.



    When Campaign Aides Are Lobbyists, Questions Mount

    Some of the top firms advising candidates for state and local office also lobby those offices for clients like c...


    If New York is now deep-blue, with Republicans in terminal decline, it’s worth considering what role a healthy State Democratic Party should have. If there aren’t as many Republicans to defeat, there is talent to incubate. A strong party would be seeking out new candidates, bringing them into the political fold, and offering the guidance and fundraising contacts that can be hard to come by in other contexts. Party leaders could do what consultants are supposed to do, and do it free of charge. Rather than needlessly and toxically opine, like Jacobs, they would actually seek to engage volunteers, politicians, and the electorate writ large to figure out where the party should be going. Jacobs must go, but that will only fix so much."

    New York City Republican mayoral candidate Curtis Sliwa pets one of his cats as he speaks during an interview with The Associated Press in his apartment,.jpg
    City Council Districts mayoral.png
    Front_Cover-17 Running against Socialists Adams mayoral.jpg
    District Data CC 43 Bay Ridge mayoral.png
    NYPD officers at a protest in Union Square, 2020..jpg
    Early voting at Eleanor Roosevelt High School, 10-24-2021 mayoral.jpg
    Eric Adams, Democrat candidate for New York Mayor, center, speaks during a campaign event, Tuesday, Oct. 19, 2021, in New York. mayoral.jpg
    On Aug. 30, 2021, family and friends of Michael Rosado march to the 46th Precinct demanding justice and accountability from the NYPD for their involvement in Rosado's death. police.jpg
    The Rev. Al Sharpton, center, hosted Alvin Bragg, left, and Eric Adams, right, in Harlem on Saturday mayoral.jpg
    Reply all
    Reply to author
    Forward
    0 new messages