Regional News
Partisan tensions rising in state Senate
Beleaguered Democrats already charge the Senate GOP has been using house rules to further stifle them. In Albany, Karen DeWitt reports.
A win by Brooklyn Republican Senate candidate David Storobin would
increase the Republicans’ Majority in the Senate from the one vote edge
of 32 seats to 33 seats. Senate Majority Leader Dean Skelos says that’s
an achievement in a district where Democrats outnumber Republicans by
five to one.
“Our Republican message in Albany about ending the
dysfunction, cutting taxes, cutting spending, and focused on private
sector job creation is really resonating throughout the state,” Skelos
said.
If the republican candidate’s lead holds it spells yet
another blow to Senate Democrats, who briefly held the majority from
2008 until 2010.
Last week, the legislature approved new
district lines that favor Republicans in the Senate, a deal that made
Democrats so angry they walked out of the Senate and boycotted the vote
on the new lines and several other items. Before they left, Senator
Michael Gianaris, a long time advocate of independent, non partisan
redistricting, lost his temper on the Senate floor.
“As far as I’m concerned…you can shove it,” Gianaris said.”
Since
then, Democrats say the Republicans have stifled their attempts to
attach hostile amendments to bills. Senator Bill Perkins a Democrat from
Harlem, tried to attach an amendment for the Dream Act, to give college
aid to children of undocumented immigrants, to a bill to award grants
to public libraries. He was shut down by Republicans, who declared that
the amendment was “not germane”.
“There has been a disturbing pattern on the part of the majority of stifling debate,” Perkins said on the floor.
A voice vote ended the debate, and Senator Perkin’s amendment.
The
following day, an amendment to enact security micro stamps on guns by
Senator Jose Peralta of Queens, was also ruled not germane, and
defeated, with little debate.
Senator Dan Squadron, a Democrat
who represents lower Manhattan and parts of Brooklyn, says Republicans
also pulled over 300 bills sponsored by Democrats from committees and
sealed them up in the Rules committee, which is under the control of the
Senate Majority Leader.
“It’s classic old Albany, which is
don’t talk about difficult issues, don’t talk about issues that folks
out there across the state want to talk about,” said Squadron, who
accused the GOP of keeping ”special interests happy, and “hoping nobody
notices”.
Senate Leader Skelos says Republicans’ actions to
limit debate are simply an attempt to maintain order in the Senate. And
he says Democrats are “being treated fairly”.
“They are getting
more bills passed on the Senate floor that has ever happened before to a
minority party,” said Skelos, who points out that four Democrats in the
Senate chair committees.
There are four Senate Democrats who
hold committee chairs, but they are members of splinter faction called
the Independent Democratic Conference, and have allied themselves more
often with the Republicans that the rest of the Senate Democrats.
Skelos says the hostile amendments are just an attempt by the rest of the Senate Democrats to cause disruptions.
“They’re
trying to stop the orderly process,” said Skelos. “And trying to bring
it back to their dysfunctional way of governing.”
Democrats did
have a rocky record during the brief two years that they held the
chamber, including a coup attempt by some Democrats, along with the
republicans, that led to a month long stand off, and helped earn New
York’s legislature the title from NYU’s Brennan Center of the most
dysfunctional state government in the nation .
And Senate
Leader Skelos says Democrats were behaving childishly when they walked
out of the redistricting vote, and he predicts those actions will come
back to haunt the Senate Democrats.
“That was totally irresponsible and derelict of their duties,” Skelos said.
Even
if the Brooklyn seat does go the Republicans, the GOP still holds a
precarious majority in the Senate, and there’s no telling for certain
what will happen in November. Senator Squadron speculates that maybe
the Senate Democrats have the Republicans just a little bit worried.
“They are certainly afraid of something,” Squadron said.


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