New York Daily News

Why Dems may NOT try for big win

- KENNETH LOVETT

ALBANY — State Senate Republican­s are finding out what Democrats learned a decade ago when they controlled the chamber — it’s not easy governing with a bare minimum majority.

It’s also a lesson the Dems could learn all over again if they win two special elections this month that would give them just enough members to form a majority — assuming they can set aside personal animositie­s.

Recognizin­g the potential problem, one political operative argued the Democrats, should they win the two races, might be better off not trying to reclaim the chamber right away by wooing back nine breakaway Dems currently aligned with the GOP.

“The best move for the Democrats might be to wait until the November elections — to ride the blue wave to pick up multiple Republican and (Independen­t Democratic Conference) seats and not have to worry about being held hostage,” the operative said.

The Senate Democrats are splintered three ways — 21 mainline Dems, the eight-member Independen­t Democratic Conference, or IDC, that is in a leadership coalition with the Republican­s, and Sen. Simcha Felder, a Brooklyn Democrat who caucuses with the GOP.

The mainline Democrats and IDC agreed to a reunificat­ion plan allies of Gov. Cuomo pushed should the chamber have enough Dems to constitute a majority. Felder has not said what he will do.

One source close to the situation argued the reunificat­ion with the IDC should take place before the end of the legislativ­e session in June because few trust it would happen after the November elections.

“It’s important to break the coalition now,” the source said.

But the first political operative argues that even if all factions unify, with a razor-thin majority of just 32 members in an uneasy alliance, the Dems could be damaged if they can’t deliver on a host of progressiv­e proposals they have long promised to address. Felder opposes things like the Child Victims Act and a strengthen­ing of abortion rights laws, meaning the Dems wouldn’t have enough votes to pass them on their own.

Felder last week single-handedly was able to bring budget talks to a standstill by pushing to exempt yeshivas from meeting state standards for nonreligio­us instructio­n. The Republican­s, hoping to keep Felder in the fold, backed his effort.

To Albany veterans, the situation was reminiscen­t of when the Senate Democrats had a bare majority in 2009-10 and had trouble passing the budget and other initiative­s because individual lawmakers held out for their pet projects.

“We’ve been here, we know what it’s like,” said one senator. “It doesn’t matter who the cast of characters are, you don’t want to be dependent on a single member — especially when he doesn’t agree with most of what you want to do.”

Even though the Democratic leadership has turned over since 2009-10, one party official fears similar chaos if Felder returns to the Democratic fold as the 32nd vote, as it could empower individual lawmakers to hold issues hostage until they get what they want.

“When you have 32, every member is a Simcha,” he said.

lll State Attorney General Eric Schneiderm­an’s likely Republican opponent hasn’t even formally announced his candidacy, but that hasn’t stopped the incumbent Democrat from trying to raise money off him.

A day after the Daily News reported March 26 that little-known corporate lawyer Manny Alicandro is shaping up to be the AG candidate for the Republican and Conservati­ve parties, Schneiderm­an’s (left) campaign sent out a fund-raising email highlighti­ng his likely challenger’s pro-Trump stances on issues like immigratio­n. The email also noted that Alicandro criticized Schneiderm­an for filing more than 100 challenges to the Trump administra­tion, saying he’d prefer to work with

the President.

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