Wednesday, February 14, 2024

How Democrats flipped the script

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Feb 14, 2024 View in browser
 
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By Nick Reisman, Jeff Coltin and Emily Ngo

With help from Irie Sentner

Tom Suozzi speaks.

Democrat Tom Suozzi defeated Republican Mazi Pilip in Tuesday's special election to replace former Rep. George Santos. | Stefan Jeremiah/AP

Democrat Tom Suozzi is heading back to the House. His victory over Republican Mazi Pilip to replace the scandal-scarred George Santos is a relief for Democrats, who can point to a clear victory in a bellwether suburban House seat.

Republicans now face a new political reality. The migrant crisis alone will not be their political salvation in New York in a presidential election year. Former President Donald Trump, the odds-on favorite to lead the ticket, is highly unpopular in the deep blue state.

New York will play a key role in determining which party controls the closely divided House next year with a half dozen seats up for grabs.

Here are five takeaways from the special election results:

BATTLE OF THE SUBURBS: New York Democrats had a Long Island problem. The results on Tuesday may have solved it.

Suozzi leaned into the migrant crisis. He acknowledged it's a problem for voters and blasted House Republicans for opposing a Senate-negotiated immigration package. Republicans couldn’t hold a district where the migrant crisis has dominated the news.

Republicans made gains in Nassau and Suffolk counties in the last three years, picking up key legislative seats in Albany, county executive offices and all of the House seats. Suozzi’s victory breaks the red tide on Long Island. Democrats will want to replicate this three more times in November in the districts held by GOP Reps. Anthony D’Esposito, Andrew Garbarino and Nick LaLota.

The race may have changed the calculus for both parties on the migrant crisis. Democrats can point to the Senate border bill as a deal they’re willing to make.

JACOBS LIVES: Sorry, progressives. Democratic Party Chair Jay Jacobs scored a win in his own backyard with Suozzi’s victory. Jacobs, also the party’s Nassau County chair, has described the Santos debacle as an affront he wanted to reverse. The special election victory will likely quiet Jacobs’ critics on the left — at least in the short term — who believe he’s too moderate and too timid to lead the party.

“You have to speak to the issues that are on the voters’ minds,” Jacobs said on Tuesday night. “Don’t shy away from your positions and be clear about it. But remember, Tom Suozzi has also laid out a very centrist position on many things. … I think that’s what the voters are looking for.”

Gov. Kathy Hochul, too, can breathe a sigh of relief. A truce was brokered between the governor and Suozzi last year after his primary challenge to her two years ago resulted in only angering her.

Hochul’s budget proposal initially became a problem in the race for providing migrant resources and resulting in cuts to schools. But she went on the offensive against Pilip and Republicans over immigration, hyping Suozzi’s candidacy along the way.

“This win kickstarts Democrats' path to regaining control over the House, and that path flows through New York,” Hochul said in a statement.

And while neither Trump nor President Joe Biden ever set foot in the district, former President Barack Obama cut a robocall for Suozzi in the final days of the race.

THE RIVALS: The two ambitious party leaders from New York in the House are facing off this year. Round one went to House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries over House GOP Conference Chair Elise Stefanik. Their political futures run through the state.

New York is a special project for Jeffries, who would become the first Black House speaker if Democrats gain a majority. He has launched a multilevel effort at the state and federal levels to make gains in key swing seats around the New York City suburbs. Jeffries placed a bet on Suozzi retaking the seat that paid off.

Stefanik, a potential running mate for Trump, has launched her own effort to defend Republican freshmen in New York, pouring money and resources into her home state. Stefanik campaigned for Pilip in the final days of the race.

This is only one race out of an estimated half done that will be closely watched in November and could determine the future of the House — and the country.

THE EARLY SHIFT: Will Republicans figure out how to get their voters to cast ballots early?

Suozzi picked up 57 percent of the combined early vote and absentee ballots in Nassau County, giving him a clear advantage that Pilip was never able to overcome. That edge was a glaring one for Democrats after a snowstorm blanketed the metropolitan area on Election Day itself.

“I think the snow was a factor, more against us than the Democrats,” Nassau County GOP Chair Joe Cairo said.

Voting early could have neutralized Mother Nature. The operational superiority of Democrats on early voting and absentee balloting is clear. Republicans late last year encouraged their voters to “bank” their votes. It’s an effort to gently persuade GOP voters to tune out Trump’s criticism of mail-in ballots. So far, it hasn’t worked.

THE GROUND GAME: This was an expensive race in a costly media market. But even with the bulk of the money spent on TV ads, there was also the labor factor that helped Suozzi.

For one example, the Hotel Trades Council’s vaunted field operation knocked on about 60,000 doors in the district, according to a representative of the organization. The union spent about $400,000 on the effort to help boost the Democratic candidate as well.

And the state’s AFL-CIO said union volunteers logged more than 200,000 voter contacts in the race

New York is among the most unionized states in the nation, and the results on Tuesday are a sign the unions’ muscles are still in good shape this election year. Nick Reisman

HAPPY WEDNESDAY: Got news? Send it our way: Jeff Coltin, Emily Ngo and Nick Reisman.

WHERE’S KATHY? Making a public safety announcement in Manhattan.

WHERE’S ERIC? In New York City with no public schedule.

QUOTE OF THE DAY: “Republicans just don’t learn, but maybe she was still a Democrat?” — Former President Donald Trump, posting on Truth Social and weighing in for the first time on the Long Island special election and GOP nominee Mazi Pilip

CITY HALL: THE LATEST

Hunter College of The City University of New York

The City University of New York Board of Trustees voted Tuesday for Nancy Cantor, currently chancellor of Rutgers University-Newark, to serve as the next president of Hunter College. | Drew Angerer/Getty Images

NEW PRESIDENT FOR HUNTER: The City University of New York tapped Nancy Cantor — currently chancellor of Rutgers University-Newark — to helm Hunter College.

The university’s board of trustees voted to approve her appointment at its meeting Tuesday night. Cantor, the daughter of two CUNY alumni, will assume the role on Aug. 12. She’s succeeding interim president Ann Kirschner, dean emerita of Macaulay Honors College.

“An iconic New York City institution like Hunter College requires a leader who is a champion of social mobility and an innovative thinker, someone ready to address ongoing challenges and embrace emerging opportunities on Day 1,” CUNY Chancellor Félix Matos Rodríguez said in a statement. “We have found this and more in Nancy Cantor.”

Cantor previously served as chancellor and president of Syracuse University and chancellor of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign — the first woman chancellor at all three institutions. Cantor began her career at Princeton University as a professor of psychology and later became the department chair. She then transitioned to higher education administration at the University of Michigan where she held various positions, including university provost and executive vice president for academic affairs.

Amid her appointment, the soon-to-be-chancellor said: “I am eager to collaborate with communities across New York City to highlight how higher education can answer the call of what the public needs, now and going forward.” — Madina Touré 

CITY’S S&P RATING: The cost to New York City of sheltering and caring for migrants, especially without state and federal government support, are “significant enough to strain budgets and could pressure credit quality,” according to an S&P Global Ratings report released Tuesday.

The city is currently rated AA/stable while Denver is AAA/stable and Chicago is BBB+/positive.

Adams regularly boasts about the city’s improved rating in telling the story of its comeback. “Bond raters — who determined if they’re going to invest in our city — gave us an increase in our bond rating because of how we managed the fiscal crisis that we were facing in the city,” he recounted on Monday at a Manhattan town hall.

The S&P report notes that of the 100,000 migrants Texas has transported since 2022, more than 83,000 were sent to these three cities. The mayors have banded together to ask the Biden administration for relief in the form of funding and work authorization. – Emily Ngo

More from the city:

Remote learning software crashed for 1 million city public school students — resulting in deep frustration with parents during a snowstorm. (POLITICO)

Adams’ breach of party unity has become a problem for Democrats as Joe Biden heads toward a rematch with Donald Trump. (Gothamist)

Adams said his policies were a “successful humanitarian response,” pushing back on state legislation that seeks to outlaw the 30- and 60-day limits on shelter stays. (Daily News)

NEW FROM PLANET ALBANY

Representative Elise Stefanik arrives for a House Republican Conference meeting on Capitol Hill on October 11, 2023.

Rep. Elise Stefanik, a potential running mate for former President Donald Trump, said New York Attorney General Tish James waged a “relentless lawfare campaign against" him. | Francis Chung/POLITICO

IN TRUMP’S CORNER: Republican Rep. Elise Stefanik wants New York Attorney General Tish James punished for waging a “relentless lawfare campaign against President Trump.”

Stefanik, a potential running mate for the former president, filed a formal complaint against James with the Committee on Professional Standards in an effort to have the Democratic attorney general suspended or disbarred following a disciplinary investigation.

“While all Americans possess the right to express their opinions on matters of public interest, attorneys–particularly state attorneys general–are held to a higher standard due to their unique role as officers of the court,” Stefanik said in a statement on Tuesday. “Her conduct not only constitutes a breach of her professional responsibilities but also risks irreparable harm to the public's already eroding trust in our legal institutions.”

The letter comes as James’ civil fraud trial against Trump. A ruling from Judge Arthur Engoron, who is considering millions of dollars in fines and other penalties against Trump, is expected this week. Engoron has previously found Trump acted fraudulently in the case stemming from allegations Trump purposefully inflated his business holdings.

And it comes Trump is the odds-on favorite to win the GOP nomination for a third time. Stefanik, a staunch Trump supporter, has not ruled out serving in his potential administration.

James’ office declined to comment. But one New York Democrat derided her attempt to derail James.

“This is Elise’s sad attempt to get a rose in the veepstakes,” the person said, who granted anonymity given the sensitivity of the legal proceedings in the fraud case. Nick Reisman

More from Albany:

Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie says he will run for reelection this year and wants to remain speaker. (Capitol Confidential)

Counties are beginning to move forward on legal challenges to a new state law that shifts most town and county elections to even-numbered years. (POLITICO Pro)

Democratic attorney Landon Dais cruised to victory in a special election for an Assembly seat in the Bronx (Gothamist)

NEW YORK STATE OF MIND

Rep. Jamaal Bowman is threatening to sue his opponent for defamation after George Latimer says he takes ‘money from Hamas.’ (City & State)

New York could make it easier for high school students to apply for college financial aid. (Spectrum News)

Two warring Orthodox Jewish organizations are now both advocating for additional state funding to help improve secular education in yeshivas. (Shtetl)

— Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso and City Councilmember Erik Bottcher started a group for politicians who hope to ease New York City’s housing crisis. (New York Times)

SOCIAL DATA

SOCIAL DATA

Edited by Daniel Lippman

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HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Mike Bloomberg Carl BernsteinMartha RaddatzStephen A. Schwarzman … Sir Martin Sorrell … NYT’s Alan Blinder … Karen L. Anderson … Amanda Litman Bobby Honold Jeremy Robbins … Dominik Goj (WAS TUESDAY): Howie Rose ... Is Kirzner ... Samantha Slater

YOUR NEW YORK NUMBER OF THE DAY

7,167

Families with children in emergency shelters who have been given 60-day notices, according to City Comptroller Brad Lander’s monthly economic newsletter

 

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