Tuesday, January 2, 2024

Five things that’ll define 2024

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Jan 02, 2024 View in browser
 
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By Nick Reisman, Jeff Coltin and Emily Ngo

With help from Jason Beeferman

New York City Mayor Eric Adams at the 2024 New Year’s Eve ball drop.

Mayor Eric Adams starts the countdown for the 2024 New Year’s Eve ball drop in Times Square. The year ahead will bring a slate of challenges for state and city politics in New York. | Benny Polatseck/Mayoral Photography Office

A big year stretches ahead with the presidential election topping the list of political events to watch. But throughout New York, several challenges will define — and redefine — the political landscape. Here are five we’re covering closely at Playbook:

HOUSE FIGHT: House Speaker Hakeem Jeffries? A leadership promotion for Elise Stefanik?

The fate of two New Yorkers from very different ends of the state lies with voters in swing districts come November.

Millions of dollars are pouring into New York to influence the outcome of an estimated half dozen House districts that could determine which party controls the chamber after 2024.

Adding to the uncertainty in the high stakes battle for the House: The district lines are going to change in two months’ time.

Democrats are playing more offense than defense after disappointing results in 2022. The party hopes to unseat Republican Reps. Brandon Williams, Marc Molinaro, Mike Lawler and Anthony D’Esposito. And the party hopes to flip the seat once held by disgraced former Rep. George Santos in a special election slated for Feb. 13.

Republicans, meanwhile, have zeroed in on the district held by Democratic Rep. Pat Ryan in the Hudson Valley.

Brooklyn’s Jeffries, the House minority leader, and the North Country’s Stefanik, currently the House GOP conference chair, are playing pivotal roles in leading the campaign efforts in their home state. And for good reason: Future leadership posts depend on it.

HOCHUL AND THE LEGISLATURE: All is not well between Gov. Kathy Hochul and her fellow Democrats in Albany.

Hochul rankled lawmakers last month when, amid the usual flurry of year-end vetoes, her team sought to defend the rejection of bills for criminal justice law changes and others the business community opposed.

Or, as Hochul’s communication director Anthony Hogrebe put it, “a number of extreme legislative proposals that would have put public safety or the state's economic recovery at risk.”

Vetoes are not unusual and neither is the legislative bellyaching that follows.

But the statement, coming from an executive who is ordinarily focused on collaboration like Hochul, was out of the ordinary.

One Democratic aide said the statement “made no sense” and compared it to the Hector LaSalle debacle of a year ago, when lawmakers in Hochul’s own party scuttled the governor’s chief judge selection.

“It is another misplay just like the judge fiasco last year,” the Democrat said. “These guys never seem to learn their lessons and can’t seem to help themselves.”

BUDGET BUSTING: There’s good news for New York’s budget. The projected $9.1 billion gap was sliced in half, thanks in part to some federal decision-making on the Medicaid program and better-than-expected tax revenue.

But there’s also bad news: New York lawmakers and Hochul still need to find more than $4 billion to close the current gap for the fiscal year that starts April 1.

The state budget fight once again could come down to a battle over taxes — namely whether to raise revenue from the state’s oft-tapped resource: millionaires and billionaires.

Progressive Democrats are expected this year to make a renewed push to raise taxes to avoid reduced spending for big-ticket items like education and health.

Hochul, for her part, has said she wants to keep funding in place for mental health programs, where she believes there has been a lack of support from the state over the last decade.

But she has drawn a firm line on taxes. And her top budget aide has signaled the state will shift its spending on migrants from unlimited hotel stays to helping them find jobs and other longer-term solutions.

FLOW OF MIGRANTS: The New York City budget clash between Mayor Eric Adams and the City Council, meanwhile, revolves in large part around service cuts to offset spending to support the tens of thousands of migrants being housed in city shelters.

Adams last week sought to disrupt the flow of buses sent to the Port Authority terminal by Texas Gov. Greg Abbott with an executive order limiting the arrival of migrants to between 8:30 a.m. and noon on weekdays.

The strategy is part of a united front he’s established with the mayors of Chicago and Denver in the face of limited aid from President Joe Biden’s administration — a situation that has hurt Adams’ relationship with Biden.

But already, there are complications with the plan. More than a dozen buses from Texas and Louisiana with hundreds of migrants were taken to New Jersey train stations, in an apparent attempt to sidestep Adams’ bus order.

The migrant crisis no doubt will be a defining issue of Adams’ term in office. How he challenges the right to shelter consent decree requiring him to house those in need and how he emerges from a city budget battle with service cuts and lawsuits are questions that kick off the year for Adams.

ADAMS’ LEGAL WOES: Will U.S. Attorney Damian Williams bring charges in the Turkish influence investigation? And if so, how close will it get to Adams? Will the mayor himself get indicted?

There’s been a shadow over City Hall since the FBI raided the homes of people close to the mayor on Nov. 2. He’s denied all wrongdoing, but it’s not hard to imagine a court case sucking all the air out of City Hall — where some folks have been gasping over the investigation alone.

Legal experts seemed to agree the raids, and seizure of Adams’ phones, suggest the investigation was in its late stages, so if arrests are made, they could come sooner than later in 2024.

Others in Adams’ orbit have already been ensnared in corruption probes. Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg has accused contributors to Adams’ mayoral campaign with running a straw donor scheme, and charged Adams’ former adviser, Eric Ulrich, in a bribery case. Both cases could be tried in 2024 — potentially shedding light on the inner workings of Adams’ campaign, all while the mayor fundraises for his 2025 reelection bid and his legal defense fund at the same time.

IT’S TUESDAY. HAPPY NEW YEAR. WE’RE BACK! Got news? Send it our way: Jeff Coltin, Emily Ngo and Nick Reisman.

WHERE’S KATHY? In Manhattan unveiling her first proposal of the 2024 State of the State.

WHERE’S ERIC? Appearing on FOX5’s “Good Day New York” and holding an in-person media availability session in City Hall.

QUOTE OF THE DAY: “This is a year of family for me, and I’m hoping all of us do the same.” — Mayor Eric Adams on the Times Square Alliance’s New Year’s Eve webcast.

ABOVE THE FOLD

Employees of NY State Solar, a residential and commercial photovoltaic systems company, install an array of solar panels on a roof, Aug. 11, 2022, in the Long Island hamlet of Massapequa, N.Y.

Environmental groups and pro-business organizations are at odds over how the state should best transition to renewable sources of energy. | John Minchillo/AP

CLIMATE CLASH: The Spring Street Climate Fund this week will launch its first salvo of the new year to defend the state’s sweeping plans to convert to renewable and cleaner forms of energy in the coming decades.

The five-figure ad campaign comes after The Business Council of New York State launched its own advertising campaign meant to urge caution on the transition away from fossil fuels.

The pro-clean-energy ad makes a clear play for the suburbs and highlights a Long Island homeowner touting a reduced energy bill after receiving state assistance to install solar panels.

The campaign’s launch is also coinciding with the return of the state Legislature on Wednesday, and lawmakers are likely to consider yet another package of climate-related measures over the next six months.

The dueling efforts spaced weeks apart also underscore how environmental organizations and business-aligned groups are increasingly at odds over how to transition New York to renewable sources of energy that will affect everything from how energy is generated for homes and business to how cars are powered.

“Corporate polluters are trying to unravel New York’s powerful climate plan, but we’re not going to let them get away with it,” John Raskin, the president of Spring Street Climate Fund, said in a statement to Playbook. “Climate policy saves money and saves lives.” Nick Reisman

WHAT CITY HALL IS READING

Council Member Marjorie Velรกzquez holds inauguration in 2022.

After losing her East Bronx City Council seat, Marjorie Velázquez now has plans to run again for district leader. | William Alatriste/NYC Council Media Unit

MARJORIE, OUT: Marjorie Velázquez wouldn’t have just come back from the Dominican Republic on a trip led by Rep. Adriano Espaillat with other members of the so-called Squadriano — Councilmember Oswald Feliz, Assemblymembers Yudelka Tapia, George Alvarez and Manny De Los Santos — if she were going to leave politics entirely.

Velázquez lost reelection for her East Bronx City Council seat to Republican Kristy Marmorato in November. And she told Playbook the D.R. trip was an incredible experience. She hasn’t decided what she’ll be doing next, except she does plan to run again for district leader this year.

She agrees with NY1 anchor Errol Louis: Negotiating an upzoning deal for more housing was “the right thing,” even if the backlash contributed to her loss. But Velázquez said she regrets not telling voters “how and why building hundreds of units of senior and veteran affordable housing was important.”

Could she have used more support from allies? “The Republican party has been good at mastering the boogeyman. And using fear mongering as a way to engage voters,” she said. “For me, no amount of help would have prevented that.” — Jeff Coltin

ERIC ADAMS’ OTHER BROTHERS: Three months after Adams and top NYPD brass joined the freemasons, the Prince Hall Grand Lodge — a historically Black branch of the secretive fraternal organization — added more political members.

Brooklyn District Attorney Eric Gonzalez, New York City Councilmembers Yusef Salaam and Kevin Riley, former Councilmember Robert Cornegy, Assemblymember Al Taylor, Westchester County Legislator Tyrae Woodson-Samuels, and pastors Michael Walrond and Conrad Tillard were all initiated Saturday.

“Prince Hall masons are dedicated to the elevation of good men to greatness,” Grand Master Gregory Robeson Smith Jr., said in a press release. — Jeff Coltin

LONG READ: On the life of Jordan Neely, who was killed in a chokehold on a subway in May. (New York)

LONG THINK: Adams aide Winnie Greco inexplicably joined Adams on the dais at midnight on New Years Eve — despite being under investigation for reportedly trying to personally benefit from her position. (h/t Katie Honan)

More from the city:

City Hall finally released 14 months of Adams’ schedules — but they fail to illuminate some of the most basic aspects of what the mayor is doing. (POLITICO)

Homicides and shootings were down in 2023, for the second straight year. (NY Daily News)

Tonight at midnight, illegal vendors will get booted from the Brooklyn Bridge pedestrian path. (New York Post)

WHAT ALBANY'S READING

New York state Sen. Brad Hoylman-Sigal speaks.

State Sen. Brad Hoylman-Sigal said he is confident a bill to expand New York's wrongful death law will once again be passed in the next legislative session. | Hans Pennink/AP Photo

WRONGFUL DEATH REJECTION: Sen. Brad Hoylman-Sigal isn’t giving up on a push to expand New York’s wrongful death law.

The measure was vetoed by Hochul at the end of 2023 — the second time she’s rejected the Legislature’s version of the proposal to allow emotional anguish to be considered.

“I’m confident we’ll be seeing this bill pass again in the upcoming legislative session,” Hoylman-Sigal told Playbook in an interview. “We’re disappointed, but undaunted in our effort to reform the wrongful death statute.”

It’s not yet clear if lawmakers will introduce a revised version of the bill or make tweaks to satisfy concerns raised by the governor.

Whether supporters of the legislation — which include the state’s powerful trial lawyers’ association — can convince Hochul is another matter.

In her veto message, the governor warned of “unintended consequences” such as higher insurance premiums for public hospitals.

“While I remain open to working collaboratively to find holistic solutions that support impacted families without producing potential unintended consequences, I believe that further deliberations are needed,” Hochul wrote. Nick Reisman

More from Albany:

Bird blasting lasers at the state capitol … aren’t working. (Times Union)

Nearly 200,000 students skipped standardized tests in reading and math in 2023. (New York Post)

Mazi Melesa Pilip, the Republican-backed candidate for ex-Rep.George Santos’ vacated seat, failed to vote for years in key elections — including for the congressional office she’s running for. (New York Post)

AROUND NEW YORK

The winner of the election for a Westchester town's supervisor is still being disputed as a drawn-out court battle continues. (LoHud)

Two Buffalo-area school districts are seeking reimbursements from New York City for educating asylum-seeker students sent from the city to Western New York. (Buffalo News)

A pro-Palestinian protest on Monday caused delays and traffic jams near Kennedy Airport, affecting holiday-season travelers for the second time in a week. (AP)

SOCIAL DATA BY DANIEL LIPPMAN

ENGAGED — Max Tanner, an associate attorney at Sher Tremonte, on Thursday proposed to Leah Finnegan, a freelance writer and editor and former editor-in-chief of Gawker. The couple met on Bumble, and he proposed after their nightly viewing of “Law and Order.” InstapicsAnother pic

WELCOME TO THE WORLD Alexander Campanha Wheaton, born Dec. 18 to Stephanie Campanha Wheaton, director of scheduling and executive operations for New York City Comptroller Brad Lander, and James Wheaton, a New York City paramedic. Instapics

MAKING MOVES — Morrison Cohen has promoted John B. Fulfree, Bryan R. Joggerst and David J. Kozlowski to partner as well as promoting Chaim Bueno, Timur N. Eron, Yuliya Neverova, Collin A. Rose and Amber R. Will to senior counsel.

IN MEMORIAM — Matt Napolitano, a Fox News radio reporter, died Dec. 23 at 33 years old (New York Daily News) … Marland Jeffries, father of House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, former substance abuse counselor, and Assembly candidate, died Sunday at 85 years old. … Dr. John Flateau, a Medgar Evers College administrator and redistricting expert, died Saturday. (Amsterdam News)

HAPPY BIRTHDAY: John Thornton of Barrick Gold … NYT’s Annie Tressler Lizzie LangerJane Krause … Fox Business Network’s Elizabeth MacDonald 

Real Estate

A new New York City plan calls for building affordable housing in wealthier neighborhoods. (New York Times)

A former Vanderbilt mansion on the Upper East Side may soon become a single family home. (Crain’s New York Business)

 

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