New York Voters Are About To Tell Us A Lot About The State Of The Resistance

ballscout1

Rising Star
BGOL Investor


Keep your eyes on the attorney general race among Democrats Zephyr Teachout, Letitia James and Sean Patrick Maloney.

5b92e9ea190000930a503ad6.jpeg

PACIFIC PRESS VIA GETTY IMAGES
Progressive star Zephyr Teachout (right) gets an endorsement from progressive star Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.


On Thursday, the most important election until the November midterms will take place in New York ― a contest with national implications for the future of the Democratic Party, the strength of the American left and the viability of the Trump resistance. Nobody has any idea how it will turn out.

I am writing, of course, of the New York state attorney general’s race, which pits the best and the worst the Democratic Party has to offer against each other, for one of the most powerful offices in the country.

New York Democrats have long occupied a special place in the national party. Its leaders have a habit of vaulting to the presidency. But though the state is home to what may be the country’s most liberal constituency, New York’s own government is a perpetual mockery of progressive values. Its elected Democrats have offered Democratic voters nothing but disappointment and outrage for decades.

The state government is in bed with corrupt real estate mini-moguls and corrupt Wall Street mega-moguls. Its affordable housing programs are a sick, chronic joke. New York has the worst income inequality of any state in the nation and imposes nakedly racist restrictions on voting. Its police kill unarmed black men with impunity. It imprisoned a child in a state penitentiary without trial for years. The trains do not even run on time.

The president of the United States himself is a product of New York’s rancid political waters, a real estate hustler who bragged in the 2016 election about buying off politicians before deciding to become one himself.

But incumbency is a difficult force to beat in New York (or anywhere else in America), and the litany of failures listed above would count as policy achievements in today’s Republican Party. So even though two top aides to New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) were convicted on corruption charges earlier this year, it remains very likely that he will be re-elected in November.

That leaves the New York attorney general as the best hope for cleaning up politics in New York and, perhaps, Washington. The resistance will have a choice on Thursday, Sept. 13: In the Democratic primary, it can elect the best-known candidate with a “D” after his name, or it can take on the corrupt interests that propelled the president himself to the White House.

When disgraced state Attorney General Eric Schneiderman resigned in May, media attention quickly focused on Zephyr Teachout, a Fordham University law professor, and Letitia James, New York City’s public advocate, as potential successors. James has cultivated a progressive record working within the New York political establishment, but her ties to toxic members of that establishment, including the governor, have hampered her throughout the campaign.

The national left has rallied behind Teachout, a staunch anti-corruption advocate whose academic book on the subject is a minor classic. Teachout has vowed to use the attorney general’s office to break the stranglehold that big finance and big real estate exercise over public spending priorities and has talked about functioning as a “regulator of last resort” for the country at large.

Since so many major corporations are chartered in New York, Teachout has proposed opening investigations against them as a way to fight the Trump administration on everything from climate change to predatory lending. Like every other candidate in the race, she has vowed to relentlessly pursue any corrupt dealings within the Trump organization itself.

Bolstered by endorsements from The New York Times and the New York Daily News, Teachout has taken on the status of a front-runner. Several New York political figures, noting the way the wind is blowing, have defected to her camp. And in recent debates, James and other candidates have trained their fire on Teachout, all but ignoring one another.

The contest between Teachout and James is firmly within the established debate over how to go about reforming the Democratic Party ― not so much a question of values as one of tactics, a choice between a pragmatist who has notched small victories within a corrupt system and an idealistic outsider who promises to overhaul that very system.

Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney (D-N.Y.), who entered the race on June 6, does not fit within this paradigm. In 2013, he was one of just nine Democrats in the House who voted with Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) in his gambit to suspend implementation of Obamacare ― a clash that resulted in a government shutdown. Two years later, he was one of only four House Democrats who voted with Republicans to bar undocumented immigrants from receiving federal housing aid. He voted with Republicans on two major laws unwinding key parts of the post-financial crisis Wall Street reforms. One Maloney-backed repeal will enable banks to hide racial discrimination in mortgage lending, while another, authored by Citigroup lobbyists, provided federal subsidies to big banks trading in the risky derivatives at the heart of the 2008 crash. He has voted to increase Donald Trump’s military budget and expand his warrantless surveillance powers.

A Maloney campaign spokesperson declined to address the lawmaker’s voting record with HuffPost.

Maloney is even operating his campaign for attorney general as a test case on state campaign finance regulation. Teachout, a campaign finance expert, recently filed suit against him for moving $1.4 million raised for his congressional race into his state contest ― a move that, if upheld in court, would create a loophole to help politicians avoid state disclosure requirements and contribution limits.

Front-runners with comfortable leads do not file lawsuits against their political opponents in the closing days of a campaign. The case is a risky strategic move indicating that Teachout views Maloney as a serious threat to the nomination. What little polling exists for the race suggests her fears are justified. Two polls released over the summer ― before Teachout began receiving high-profile endorsements ― gave James the lead, followed by Maloney in second and Teachout a close third. More than 40 percent of the electorate were still undecided, and majorities indicated they had either never heard of or had no opinion about James or Teachout.

In a contest like that, name recognition matters more than any policy position. The congressman, who has represented a swing district in the Hudson Valley since 2013, benefits most in that regard. The two ways to boost name recognition are through good press ― of which Teachout has secured plenty ― and ample television advertising. Maloney’s $3 million war chest ― more than five times what Teachout had raised as of Aug. 6 ― has helped put his smiling face on TV screens across New York state, which may be enough to put him over the top. His biggest funders include Wall Street banks, real estate developers and corporate law firms, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.

A James or a Teachout victory on Thursday night would delight different factions of the Democratic Party. A Maloney win would be a triumph for big money, further entrenching the same interests that have rendered New York government so ineffective for so many communities.
 
Opinion

Zephyr Teachout Is the Right Choice as Attorney General for Democrats
The office is a potential firewall against an out-of-control president and a historically corrupt New York State government.

Zephyr TeachoutCreditCreditJesse Dittmar for The New York Times


By The Editorial Board

The editorial board represents the opinions of the board, its editor and the publisher. It is separate from the newsroom and the Op-Ed section.

  • Aug. 19, 2018
The most important choice facing New York voters this fall is whom they will pick as their next state attorney general. The office could be the last line of defense against an antidemocratic president, a federal government indifferent to environmental and consumer protection and a state government in which ethics can seem a mere inconvenience.

Even in the best of times the office plays a critical role, policing fraud on Wall Street and ensuring enforcement of state and federal laws, from regulating the financial system to preventing employment discrimination. Its influence is felt across the nation.

These are not the best of times. With the right leadership, the office could serve as a firewall if President Trump pardons senior aides, dismisses the special counsel, Robert Mueller, or attacks the foundations of state power. Only a handful of American institutions are equipped to resist such assaults on constitutional authority, and the New York attorney general’s office, with 650 lawyers and a history of muscular law enforcement, is one of them.

The next attorney general will have a full docket in New York as well. Albany has long been a chamber of ethical horrors. In March, Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s former senior aide Joseph Percoco was convicted on corruption charges. In May, former Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver, a Democrat, was also convicted of corruption. In July, the former Republican Senate majority leader, Dean Skelos, was convicted of bribery, extortion and conspiracy. Prosecutors said he used his office to pressure businesses to pay his son $300,000 for no-show jobs. The same month, Alain Kaloyeros, a key figure behind Mr. Cuomo’s “Buffalo Billion”economic initiative, was convicted in a bid-rigging scheme.

resigned in disgrace earlier this year after women who dated him accused him of choking them and beating them up.

New Yorkers who feel they deserve better — presumably just about all of them — have the chance this fall to elect a strong and unencumbered attorney general capable of delivering it.


You have 3 free articles remaining.

Subscribe to The Times


From a refreshingly strong field competing in the Democratic primary, to be held on Sept. 13, the best candidate is Zephyr Teachout, an independent-minded lawyer unusually well prepared to curb abuses of power and restore integrity and pride to this office. Ms. Teachout waged a strong primary challenge against Mr. Cuomo four years ago, lending her additional credibility and distance from a governor who remains all too cozy with the donors, contractors, union leaders and influence peddlers who dominate Albany and beyond.

The office of attorney general has been held by a long line of formidable lawyers and strong, if at times deeply flawed, men. No woman has ever been elected to the position. Barbara Underwood, the current occupant, assumed office after Mr. Schneiderman’s resignation. Ms. Teachout lacks direct experience as a prosecutor but is equipped with legal firepower comparable to previous attorneys general.

A Fordham Law School professor and activist, she’s widely respected among lawyers and academics. She’s known as a thoughtful and innovative scholar who has been a pioneering thinker in the legal case against Trump’s entanglements with foreign favor-seekers who are lining his pockets through his hotels, golf courses and other private holdings. We are persuaded she will not let a focus on the Trump administration detract her from other efforts on behalf of New York, including securing tenants’ rights and voting rights and pursuing criminal justice reform.


Ms. Teachout has written the book on political corruption — literally — and is recognized as a national expert on this scourge.

We believe Ms. Teachout would also be able to recruit some of the best lawyers in the country to the state attorney general’s office, which competes for talent with the Southern District of New York, the Department of Justice in Washington, top private law firms and prestigious public-interest groups.

Among the other contenders in the Democratic primary, Public Advocate Letitia James, an attorney who once led the New York attorney general’s Brooklyn office, has garnered substantial establishment support, including an endorsement from Mr. Cuomo. Ms. James has for decades been a standout fighter for tenants, children and other vulnerable New Yorkers. But she has embraced political contributions from donors to Mr. Cuomo, who held a fund-raiser for her earlier this summer.

Ms. James has countered that she is “unbossed and unbought,” and described suggestions she is too close to Mr. Cuomo as “disrespectful,” insinuating that they are asked only because she is poised to become the first black woman to win statewide office. But given the political landscape in New York and elsewhere, the state attorney must be absolutely independent. Such political contributions could become a conflict of interest for any candidate.

Leecia Eve, a graduate of Harvard Law School with years of experience in government and in the courtroom, is also impressive. Ms. Eve served as counsel to Joe Biden and Hillary Clinton when they were in the Senate, and as deputy secretary for economic development for Mr. Cuomo. If Ms. Teachout were not in the race, Ms. Eve would be the strongest candidate; we hope we haven’t seen the last of her on a campaign trail.

Representative Sean Patrick Maloney of upstate New York is also in the hunt. Mr. Maloney, whose congressional seat is up this year, is straddling two races. He is fighting to hold on to his seat in the 18th Congressional District — a race that could prove critical to Democrats’ hopes of winning the House — while also running for the Albany job. His acceptance of tens of thousands of dollars from real estate interests casts a shadow over his appealing résumé and solid government experience. Mr. Maloney has been effective in Congress; he and the state would be better served if he stayed there and moved into the leadership ranks.

The winner of the Democratic primary will face the Republican Keith Wofford, co-managing partner of Ropes & Gray, an international law firm, in the general election on Nov. 6.

New York needs a great lawyer. We believe that Democrats who are seeking a means of standing up to the Trump presidency and graft in Albany can find in Ms. Teachout their most effective champion for democracy and civil rights, good government and the environment, workers’ rights, fair housing and gender equality.
 
I was all set to vote for James...I REALLY like her.

but the last few weeks...

I don't know.

Teachout SEEMS to solid and a real anti Trump breath of fresh air. And not connected to the existing regime.
 
Governor »
Democratic Primary
CANDIDATE VOTE PCT.
Andrew M. Cuomo* 68,121 68.7%
Cynthia Nixon 30,966 31.3

191,308 votes, 14% reporting (2,143 of 15,083 precincts)

* Incumbent
 
Back
Top