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New York State Senate Now Tied After Party-Switching Dem Switches Back

After the New York Republicans won a state Senate majority in a fantastic feat of party-switching last week. they have now lost it. And now...nobody has the majority. It's a 31-31 tie.

State Sen. Hiram Monserrate, one of two Democrats who switched his organization vote to the Republicans, has now switched back to the Democrats -- and the old Democratic leader Malcolm Smith is now out of his leadership office, and has been replaced by a more amenable choice, state Sen. John Sampson.

At the same time the other Democrat who switched, Pedro Espada, insists that he is still Senate president -- the office that he, Monserrate and the 30 Republicans voted him into -- and that Monserrate still supports him.

The upshot of all of this is that the chamber is now at a 31-31 tie -- and there is no office for breaking the tie, due to the vacancy in the Lt. Governor's office that happened after David Paterson succeeded to the Governorship. Sampson and Smith have sent a letter to the GOP leadership, calling for a full power-sharing deal. Meanwhile, Senate GOP Leader Dean Skelos says he'll only negotiate if the Dems recognize his legitimacy as majority leader, after the Dems insisted last week's leadership vote was an unlawful coup.

New York may need outside intervention from a more stable body politic in order to resolve this impasse in leadership. Maybe Iran can help out?


5 Comments

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Um, think you mean a more "amenable" choice, not "amendable," unless of course, you were thinking that the Dems would go for the trifecta and replace Sampson as majority leader as well...

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Ah, I see. Thank you.

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With Patterson a year in office, why is there no Lt. Governor? Can he just appoint one?

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LOL, wow, this is kind of funny. Also, that the Senate president is the one doing the switching and, maybe, the staying.

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Maybe California could help. That state (where I leave) is not only dysfunctional, it's broke.

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