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View Full Version : It's over Tommy. Go home and do your CE job.


*snicker*
05-30-2006, 02:35 PM
Democrats designate Spitzer for governor

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

May 30, 2006, 12:17 PM EDT


BUFFALO -- New York's Democratic Party on Tuesday designated Eliot Spitzer as its candidate for governor.

In his acceptance speech, he spoke of his grandparents, all immigrants, coming to Ellis Island and his father, who rose from a New York City tenement to become an engineer.

"People from across the country and all over the world looked to our state about what is best in America," Spitzer said. "I still believe that if we give everyone the same opportunity and everyone acts with integrity and plays by the same rules, there is no limit to what we can achieve in this great state."

"Something needs to change in this state, and it needs to happen right now," he said, after entering the convention center to the strains of Tom Petty's "I Won't Back Down."

"Ours is a crisis of leadership," he said.

He promised to reform Albany's ethics, taxes and spending.

"We cannot afford to be cautious, we cannot afford to be quiet because you don't change the world by whispering," he said.

The 46-year-old attorney general who forced nationwide reforms of Wall Street and corporate America is the front-runner to be the first new governor in New York in 12 years.

Soon after Spitzer's designation, 18 of the 22 Nassau County delegates walked out of the convention. County Chairman Jay Jacobs said the move was not meant as gamesmanship, but was in response to the party barring Suozzi from speaking at the convention.

"If there's only one candidate, and that's not the candidate that the bulk of the Nassau delegation is supporting, we're going to have to leave," Jacobs said prior to the walkout.

Outside the Buffalo Convention Center where the party leaders met, Democrat Tom Suozzi was scheduled to continue his outsider campaign at about the same time as Spitzer's acceptance speech. He wants to force a September primary with Spitzer to become the party nominee in November. The Nassau County executive is seeking thousands of petitions to get on the ballot and refers to the Democratic convention as Spitzer's "coronation" by bosses of the state's largest party.

The next governor will take on a state beset by a flagging upstate economy in places like Buffalo, which has little of its former industrial might. After three terms of Republican Gov. George Pataki the next governor will also face New Yorkers' anger over the highest taxes and the deepest debt in the country, an exodus of young adults, and Albany's notorious political gridlock.

The new governor will also face a skeptical public.

"They all say the same thing, just in different words," said Maxamillion Han, a 24-year-old theater major from Staten island. "So you have to see what they do first before you judge them." Even so, he said, "I think the elections are generally a popularity contest."

New Yorkers interviewed in the days leading up the conventions underscored common themes in recent polls. Residents haven't lost hope in Albany, but they have low expectations. None had yet decided if Spitzer, Suozzi or Republicans John Faso or Bill Weld could do the job.

Last week, a poll by the nonpartisan New York Matters found nearly three-quarters of New Yorkers agreed state government is doing only a fair or poor job on 18 of 20 issues residents consider most important, including taxes, education and jobs. Marist College pollster Lee Miringoff found the electorate unusually "grumpy."

Polls have found more New Yorkers think the state is headed in the wrong direction. The highest priority for New Yorkers in most polls is not some new bold initiative, but simply lower taxes and reduced state debt.

The cynicism is clear in Albany where stalemate was often the result of more than a decade of the same Republican governor, the same Democratic Assembly leader and the same Republican Senate leader -- all with low approval ratings.

"Give me everything free!" said 85-year-old Jane Mitchell of Albany County's Guilderland. The New York native insisted she wasn't joking now that she is living mostly on the sale of her family's home. She's tired of paying taxes for too little return.

"I'm on my way out and I want a little something before I go," she said, citing the need for a clear, reliable government prescription drug plan to lower her cost.

Carrie Ann Christie of Albany is a 27-year-old college graduate who, like many skilled and educated younger New Yorkers in "in between jobs." She leans Democratic, but considers herself an independent voter.

Schools are her priority. Although she is disappointed in the state's performance, she has a glint of optimism.

"Hopefully the next person who comes in will feel that way as well," she said, leaving her local public library.

"I tend to lean toward Spitzer," she said. "Just from what I've heard about him."

The Democrats designated Senate Minority Leader David Paterson of New York City, Spitzer's running mate, for lieutenant governor Tuesday morning.

iknewteddyhesnoteddy
05-30-2006, 03:04 PM
Who were the four that stayed?

05-30-2006, 05:46 PM
Who were the four that stayed?

Iannarelli (The Rock!)
Seeman
Nussbaum
Wnstn

Walk on By
05-30-2006, 05:51 PM
Spitzer accepts party's designation for governor

FROM STAFF AND WIRE REPORTS

May 30, 2006, 3:41 PM EDT

BUFFALO -- Eliot Spitzer accepted the New York Democratic Party's designation Tuesday to run for governor and reform Albany in what he said is a fight "for the very soul of government, the very future of New York."

In his acceptance speech, he spoke of his grandparents, all immigrants, coming to Ellis Island and his father, who rose from a New York City tenement to become an engineer.

"People from across the country and all over the world looked to our state about what is best in America," Spitzer said. "I still believe that if we give everyone the same opportunity and everyone acts with integrity and plays by the same rules, there is no limit to what we can achieve in this great state."

"Something needs to change in this state, and it needs to happen right now," he said, after entering the convention center to the strains of Tom Petty's "I Won't Back Down."

"Ours is a crisis of leadership," he said.

He promised to reform Albany's ethics, taxes and spending.

"We cannot afford to be cautious, we cannot afford to be quiet because you don't change the world by whispering," he said.

The 46-year-old attorney general who forced nationwide reforms of Wall Street and corporate America is the front-runner to be the first new governor in New York in 12 years.

The walkout, that was expected to involve 18 of the 22 Nassau County delegates, turned into a sit-in. As Eliot Spitzer was nominated for governor, only three Nassau delegates who support Tom Suozzi for governor had already left the hall, as plans by Nassau Democratic Chairman Jay Jacobs for the whole group to walk out in protest sort of fell by the wayside.

After learning that they could not abstain, because Spitzer would be nominated by acclamation -- essentially, a show of hands -- Jacobs earlier today said that 18 of the county's 22 delegates would leave the room.

Actually, only 11 of the delegates came to Buffalo, carrying proxies for the rest of the convention voters, and of those 11, only Suozzi supporters Jay Jacobs, Bill Biamonte, and JoAnn Taylor left before Spitzer's designation as the party's choice.

That left Spitzer supporters Stan Nussbaum, Lee Seeman, Rocco Iannarelli, and Cherry Wnstn, along with Suozzi backers Kevin Gorman, Robert Daly, Marsha Shulfroff, and Mary Altrui.

When he thought they could abstain, Jacobs tried to get the Spitzer backers to go along and not vote for anyone, even telling Seeman that she owed him because he had helped avert a primary against her as a North Hempstead town board member. But she had already comitted to Spitzer.

"Her integrity said she should stand by her word," said Nussbaum, of Atlantic Beach, who told Jacobs his own preference for Spitzer was nothing against Suozzi. "I go back a long way with Eliot, since before he became attorney general, and we have a close personal relationship.

Jacobs said, "There's nothing I can do to force them or put pressure on them."

In any case, nothing much came of it as even Suozzi supporters such as Daly sat through Spitzer's speech, and then walked down Main Street to attend Suozzi's own rally, which he held after saying the Democrats refused to let him speak at the convention.

"The fact that they're not allowing him to speak is just politics as usual," Daly said.

Newsday Staff Writer Michael Rothfeld contributed to this report.
Copyright 2006 Newsday Inc.

05-30-2006, 08:13 PM
Who were the 3 idiots that walked out at Jacobs request?

these three
05-31-2006, 10:38 AM
only Suozzi supporters Jay Jacobs, Bill Biamonte, and JoAnn Taylor
left

Goodshow!
05-31-2006, 11:37 PM
Bravo,Brava to Stan, Lee, Cherry and Rocco. I served with Stan and Lee on the State Committee when we represented our districts, as they have done, and before Sabbeth and Jacobs (who resembles Sabbeth in every way but the jail term, especially tempermentallly) made it thr aim to employ every state committee person around. We were, and they are, subject to voters in primaries. Also have worked with Rocco, and he's solid, too. Secondary congrats to Kevin Gorman and Marsha S, both of whom have patronage jobs but who are smart enough to understand that staying to hear the next governor speak is what they owe the voters of thr districts (Marsha never hesitated to stand up to chairmen, and Kevin has won primaries for state committee in the old 14th ad and the new 12th, so he "gets it", too). Happy also to see my state committeewoman, Mary, stick around, too. There's hope.

For them, not TRS. He's toast and needs to pack it in before he has no credibility anywhere.

Biamonte and Taylor
06-01-2006, 09:29 AM
Between the two of them and including Nedelka at the Boe, there are at l-at l--10 patronage jobs in the County!

cutting a deal
06-01-2006, 09:21 PM
It has been confirmed that Billy is trying to cut a deal with
Mondello. Billy is no assh***, he knows the Titanic is about to hit an iceberg.