Rally for belittled pol
ALBANY — They’re “all in” for Andrea.
Frustrated public officials and community leaders will hold a Harlem rally on Monday in support of making Senate Democratic Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins the chamber’s first black female majority leader.
The rally takes on even more significance after hedge-fund manager and charter-school advocate Daniel Loeb on Thursday angered many Democrats with a Facebook post that accused Stewart-Cousins of having done “more damage to people of color than anyone who has ever donned a hood” by supporting public teacher unions over charter schools.
“Loeb’s comments remind us that race is still an issue,” said state Sen. Brian Benjamin, a Harlem Democrat who organized Monday’s event. "We can’t ignore it. What he did was remind people there are some structural issues that have made it harder for people of color to ascend to leadership.”
The Democrats have 32 members in the Senate, enough for a majority. But they do not control the chamber thanks to nine breakaway Democrats. One, Brooklyn THE REV. AL Sharpton on Saturday vowed to raise hell until hedge fund manager Daniel Loeb steps down as chairman of the Success Academy charter school board.
Loeb on Thursday wrote that Senate Democratic Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins, of Yonkers, has done “more damage to people of color than anyone who has ever donned a hood.”
“Loeb should not only resign as the chairman of the Success Academy, if he does not resign, then we will be moving NAN to say that they should not Sen. Simcha Felder, actually caucuses with the Republicans. The other eight, known as the Independent Democratic Conference, make up a leadership coalition with the GOP.
By focusing on the racial implications of keeping Stewart-Cousins from ascending to majority leader, Monday’s rally marks the latest escalation by frustrated progressive Democrats. Among those scheduled to attend, according to organizers, are former longtime Rep. Charles Rangel; Brooklyn Reps. Hakeem Jeffries and Yvette Clarke; Rev. Calvin Butts, pastor of the Abyssinian Baptist Church and president of the State University of New York College be receiving anymore public funds as long as he chairs that board,” Sharpton said from National Action Network headquarters in Harlem, where he also pledged to picket Success Academy’s lower Manhattan headquarters until Loeb is booted.
“To equate those that you may disagree with in the education debate with those that lynched us, killed us, raped and maimed us, and to do it on a day that white supremacists are marching in Charlottesville” is the “epitome of insult,” Sharpton said. at Old Westbury; and New York NAACP head Hazel Dukes.
A Senate Republican spokesman had no comment.
Plans for the rally were in place before Loeb took his shot on social media at Stewart-Cousins. His statement, apparently referencing the Ku Klux Klan, also applauded Bronx state Sen. Jeff Klein, the head of the Independent Democratic Conference, and others who “stand for educational choice and support charter funding that leads to economic mobility and opportunity for poor knack kids.”
“Knack” appeared to be a typo for “black.”
After the post kicked up controversy, Loeb took it down and issued an apology. But that wasn’t enough for many Democrats.
“Our main point is, we understand the historic nature of Sen. Andrea Stewart-Cousins becoming the first African-American woman leader of the state Senate,” Benjamin said. “We want to get African American leaders to say, ‘We’re going to fight for this to make sure it occurs.’”
The flier advertising the event says that “together, we will tear down the walls of discrimination working to stymie this historic moment for women, Communities of Color & democracy."