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With new voting laws, Democrats flex newfound power in New York

With New Voting Laws, Democrats Flex Newfound Power in New York
With New Voting Laws, Democrats Flex Newfound Power in New York

ALBANY, N.Y. — After years of lagging behind other states, New York was set to radically overhaul its system of voting and elections Monday, taking up several bills that would allow early voting, preregistration of minors, voting by mail and sharp limits on the influence of money.

The bills, which were expected to be passed by the state Legislature by Monday evening, would bring New York in line with policies in other liberal bastions like California and Washington, and they would quiet, at least for a day, complaints about the state’s antiquated approach to suffrage.

Their expected swift passage marked a new era in the state Capitol. Democrats, who assumed full control this month after decades in which the Legislature was divided between the two parties, say they will soon push through more of their priorities, from strengthening abortion rights to approving the Child Victims Act, which would make it easier for victims of childhood sexual abuse to sue their assailants.

“Today we are saying to New York that we are about tearing barriers down,” Sen. Andrea Stewart-Cousins, leader of the Senate Democrats, said earlier Monday.

“We should not fear making it easier for those who are eligible to vote, to vote,” she said, adding, “We should not fear restricting the flow of money into our electoral system.”

Gov. Andrew Cuomo, a Democrat elected to a third term in November, is expected to sign the package of voting bills, which would also merge state and primary elections into the same day; New York was the only state that held separate state and federal primary elections last year, potentially depressing voter turnout.

Legislators also were close to passing a major change to the way candidates can run and fund their campaigns by closing the LLC loophole, which has long allowed corporations to pour almost unlimited amounts of money into election races through multiple limited liability companies. Often set up by powerful real estate interests, the beneficiaries of such LLCs — whose backers often are difficult to identify — have included Cuomo himself, who has received millions from such entities but has nonetheless repeatedly called for the loophole to be closed.

“We are finally beginning to see New York’s elections begin — just begin — to catch up with the rest of the country,” said Susan Lerner, executive director of Common Cause New York, a good-government group.

For years, the state Capitol has learned to function in a perpetual equilibrium: Democrats led the Assembly, Republicans ruled the Senate, and Cuomo usually fell somewhere in between, strengthening his reputation as a centrist. Several of the voting measures that were likely to be passed Monday had previously won the Assembly’s approval, only to fail in the Senate.

Indeed, virtually nothing emerged from Albany without the benefit of a backroom handshake, with concessions on one deal facilitating an agreement on another, and neither party getting anything close to its full agenda.

But the political tenor shifted last year, when a blue wave of disenchanted Democratic voters pushed for more immediate change. As Cuomo ran for re-election in November, he became a more forceful advocate for the party; he supported Democratic candidates challenging Republican Senate incumbents and repeatedly spoke out against the policies of President Donald Trump. And he did so again before the votes in the Legislature on Monday, setting the stage for his annual State of the State address Tuesday.

“I think you’re going to see the most aggressive agenda that I have put forward,” Cuomo said in a radio interview on WAMC on Monday morning. “Why? Because I now have the ability to get it passed with a Democratic Senate where I had a Republican Senate.”

Even before the Legislature appeared set to approve the changes, Cuomo had promised to expand voting hours at upstate locations, make Election Day a state holiday and ban corporate contributions, a talking point of many progressive candidates in last fall’s campaigns.

He is also expected to unveil elements of his plans to embrace a “Green New Deal,” a promise to prioritize a collection of environmentally minded policies, including renewable energy and avoiding the use of fossil fuels.

The sudden Democratic enthusiasm has naturally been met with skepticism from their Republican counterparts, who are now in the unfamiliar position of responding from behind.

“Democrats are racing each other to the left to get credit for being the most progressive without stopping to think about the negative ramifications,” said Scott Reif, a spokesman for the minority conference. “In the meantime, hardworking New Yorkers are overtaxed and overregulated, and upstate is facing an economic emergency. It’s time to find real solutions to the economic challenges facing real people.”

Throughout the Capitol on Monday, there were clear signs that the old way of doing the people’s business was being redefined by a crush of new members and a Democratic monopoly on power: committee meetings packed with members, hallways jammed with optimistic good-government groups and legislators touting the power of democracy in action.

The morning began with dozens of advocates crowded into a conference room on the first floor of the Capitol, with more spilling into the hallway, for what is typically a desolate meeting of the Senate elections committee. They brought posters, buttons and T-shirts, then filled the hallway outside later for a news conference to declare victory.

A subsequent gathering of the Senate Democrats was no less jubilant, with activists hoisting signs and cheering loudly, and Stewart-Cousins beginning a news conference by issuing a false plea for Republicans to take up the Democrats’ bills — much as she often did when her party was in the minority.

“I’m just kidding,” she said, a moment later, breaking into a wide smile.

Stewart-Cousins also issued a warning of sorts to Cuomo, noting that he had included $7 million in his executive budget the year before to finance early voting and other reforms, when the Senate Republicans had blocked those changes.

“The reality is that we expect that money to be there again,” she said, “because now he has willing partners here in the Senate.”

New York is also poised to pass a barrage of other bills in coming weeks that will place the state among the nation’s most liberal, including plans Tuesday to pass a pair of bills aimed at preventing “conversion therapy” from being practiced on gay minors, and passing the Gender Expression Nondiscrimination Act, which prohibits discrimination based on “gender identity or expression.”

Next week, the Legislature is expected to take up bills to protect and expand abortion rights, pegged to the anniversary of the Roe v. Wade decision, which could be threatened by a more right-leaning Supreme Court.

The action in the Senate was applauded by many in the state Assembly, which had passed such protections before only to see them stall in the Republican-led Senate.

“It’s really nice that a lot of the things that we’ve been working on, sometimes for decades, are finally going to happen,” said Richard Gottfried, an assemblyman from Manhattan who is the chamber’s longest serving member. “I’m happy to be cheering the Senate on.”

Cuomo’s timetable for his agenda — which he also outlined in a speech in mid-December and in his inaugural address on New Year’s Day — is the first 100 days of the session.

If anything, however, legislators seemed to be agitating to move even faster than the governor, nearing passing all seven election-related bills on just their second day in session and before his State of the State address.

Part of that urgency came seemingly from past frustration; similar efforts to pass early voting, which is already legal in some form in 38 states, died amid opposition from Republicans, who already face uphill battles in elections in New York, where there are 3.5 million more registered Democrats than Republicans. And the three new bills that were close to passing Monday that would ease voter registration may only exacerbate that gap.

Carl E. Heastie, the Bronx Democrat who leads the Assembly, made clear again Monday that his colleagues viewed the change in election laws as an immediate priority.

“I promised to hit the ground running,” Heastie said. “And I am keeping that promise.”

His counterpart in the Senate agreed. “There’s an amazing amount of things that had not been done,” Stewart-Cousins said. “We’re just going to keep it moving so that we can catch up. And move ahead, frankly.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

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