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MCLAUGHLIN |
In his bid for a third term, Assemblyman
Steve McLaughlin, R-District 107, is forced to wage a write in campaign for the
Independence Party line.
Evidently, the party extended his
Democratic opponent, East Greenbush Councilman Phil Malone, permission to run
on its line but snubbed McLaughlin for the first time in three election cycles.
An email sent by Troy Chairman Mark Wojcik asks
a number of Republican loyalists to volunteer to collect a second round of
signatures on McLaughlin’s behalf. The signatures gathered the first time were specifically
for McLaughlin to run on the Independence Party line, but they are null and
void without the party giving its permission, known as a Wilson Pakula.
McLaughlin will now have until July 13 to collect at least 5 percent of
registered Independence Party members within the Assembly District who voted in
the last gubernatorial election to force an opportunity to ballot, or write in.
“If you can spare 1 or 2 nights we
would really appreciate the extra effort for Steve,” Wojcik wrote.
If McLaughlin does get on the
ballot – in the form of an OTB, which opens up the ballot for anyone to write
in anyone’s name – he still faces an uphill, if not impossible, battle to win
the primary in such a fashion against someone whose name already appears on the
machine.
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MALONE |
The Independence Party – which is
independent in name alone and infamous for giving (selling) its line to the
candidate (bidder) who can give the most in return – is the third largest party
in the state and coveted by any candidate. In the 107th Assembly
District there are 26,011 registered Republicans, 25,096 Democrats and 7,304
Independence Party members with 27,536 not enrolled in any party. There are
also 3,734 enrolled Conservatives and 854 enrolled in the Working Families
Party.
McLaughlin has had the Independence
Party’s endorsement in his two successful bids for Assembly – even in 2010 when
he unseated the only enrolled Independence Party member to ever get elected to
the Legislature, Tim Gordon of Bethlehem. In other words, the Independence
Party stands strong for nothing nearing a platform, value or belief.
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CONNOLLY |
Statewide, the Independence Party endorses
Republicans and Democrats equally depending on which candidate has the best
chance of success. But, since the party’s vice chairman is Tom Connolly, of
North Greenbush, who a decade or so ago pledged his allegiance to the Democrats
but now works for the GOP, there is only one reason a local candidate like
McLaughlin didn’t get the line this time around – Gov. Andrew Cuomo.
McLaughlin has been the most vocal
Republican Cuomo critic in the state, hitting he governor about everything from
the SAFE Act to giving state workers time off to watch the USA play in the
World Cup. The Melrose resident toyed with the idea of running for the state’s
top elected office earlier his year but opted out and Westchester County
Executive Rob Astornio took the plunge instead. McLaughlin, however, continues
to make statewide news as the party’s defacto attack dog and is constantly
nipping at Cuomo’s heels.
Also, the governor has much more
to offer the Independence Party than a Republican from Melrose. And the state
Republican Party has more important things to worry about - like trying to get
Astorino at least a respectable showing as opposed to getting crushed in a
landslide and holding onto a semblance of influence in the Senate.
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CUOMO |
If nothing else, the potential new
ballot dynamic is going to make for an interesting race since Malone, already an
elected official, will get the WFP line too and McLaughlin’s write in campaign
is a longshot at best. That said McLaughlin is popular in his district. Two
years ago he ran against Cheryl Roberts, a popular attorney from Columbia
County who was backed by the Democratic Assembly Campaign Committee to the tune
of $300,000, and he beat her by more than 3,000 votes – but he had the I line.
It’s unclear if DACC will throw its considerable resources behind Malone.
The 107h Assembly District includes
the majority of Rensselaer County, nearly half of Columbia County and the towns
of Cambridge and White Creek in Washington County.