New York Daily News

Pol pal battle

Council members fight Viv on elex panel pick

- BY ERIN DURKIN

WITH WEEKS left in her term, City Council Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito is pushing to install a pal for the Manhattan seat on the city Board of Elections.

But other Council members have balked — and a potential vote on Andrew Praschak, a lawyer and close ally of the speaker, at Tuesday’s Democratic conference meeting was called off after Manhattan pols resisted MarkViveri­to’s move, sources said.

“She’s trying to hold on to whatever political power she can,” said Barry Weinberg, executive director of the Manhattan Democratic Party.

“Even people who like Melissa aren’t willing to circumvent proper procedure,” he said. “She was going to steamroll her person in, and then in the end she was the only one pushing the steamrolle­r.”

The Manhattan Democratic commission­er seat is now held by Alan Schulkin — who was caught on tape making wild claims about voter fraud, and whose term expired at the end of 2016 but will remain on the job until his replacemen­t is approved.

Schulkin faced pressure to resign after a video — secretly filmed by the right-wing group Project Veritas — emerged where he claimed organizati­ons in black, Hispanic and Chinese neighborho­ods “bus people around” to vote at multiple poll sites and said there’s “a lot of voter fraud” in New York. He also claimed the city’s municipal ID program was enabling “all kinds of fraud.” The Manhattan Dems, led by ex-Assemblyma­n and Mark-Viverito rival Keith Wright, nominated Wright aide Jeanine Johnson for the seat late last year. Johnson, the county party’s pick, had baggage of her own, including a drunken driving case that ended in a plea deal in 2015. But the Council squelched the nomination by not voting on it in time — so under the arcane rules that govern the elections board, power shifts to the Council’s Democratic caucus to make the pick internally.

Mark-Viverito (photo) put up Praschak for the seat — but members of the Manhattan delegation objected that they hadn’t gone through their usual process of interviewi­ng picks for a seat, sources said.

They now expect to interview Praschak, a longtime federal lawyer and LGBT activist, and potentiall­y other candidates in the coming weeks.

A spokeswoma­n said only that the Council is considerin­g all options. Praschak could not be reached.

Allen Roskoff, president of the Jim Owles Liberal Democratic Club, blasted the move.

“If he gets on to the Board of Elections, he will have one master, and he’ll serve her,” he said.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States