New York Daily News

Hochul all in for ex-rival Tom Suozzi

Gov says Dem win for Santos’ old House seat is her ‘top priority’

- BY TIM BALK

Gov. Hochul on Friday offered her one-time bitter rival Tom Suozzi a full-throated endorsemen­t in his high-stakes special election race for the Long Island House seat vacated by George Santos.

On the eve of the start of early voting, Hochul, a centrist Democrat, said it was her “top priority” to help Suozzi win the seat for the Democratic Party, which is aiming to cut the Republican Party’s advantage in the House to two seats.

“I’ve been working closely with Tom Suozzi. I believe he is the best person to represent that district,” Hochul told reporters at a prosecutor­s’ conference in Midtown. “We want to win this seat.”

Hochul, who beat Suozzi in the 2022 Democratic primary for governor, described her former foe as a proven commodity and cast doubt on the qualificat­ions of his Republican opponent, Mazi Melesa Pilip.

Suozzi represente­d the Long Island district for three terms before giving up his seat to run for governor, challengin­g Hochul and aggravatin­g her by calling her an “interim governor.” He is now running hard to retake the congressio­nal seat, presenting himself as a straightfo­rward problem-solver and accusing Pilip of trying to mislead voters about her positions.

Though public polling of the race has been sparse, experts believe the contest is headed for a photo finish. The national leadership of both parties have been laser-focused on the outcome in the district, which includes swaths of Long Island and a sliver of Queens.

Santos won the seat by nearly 8 points in 2022. Suozzi led Pilip by 3 points in an Emerson College survey released last month. Election Day is Feb. 13

“Anyone who thought this race won’t be incredibly competitiv­e and incredibly close was fooling themselves,” said Alyssa Cass, a Democratic political strategist.

Suozzi, who visited Brooklyn for a fundraiser Thursday night, has handily outraised the Pilip, 44, according to federal campaign finance disclosure­s. Suozzi’s campaign had a $2.2 million war chest at the end of January, while Pilip’s had about $630,000 on hand, according to the records.

But recent events could be cutting to Pilip’s advantage: A caught-on-video attack on cops in Manhattan by migrants, according to authoritie­s, may offer the Republican a powerful talking point in the race’s final days. A debate is scheduled for

Thursday.

Pilip has sought to tie Suozzi to the immigratio­n crisis gripping Democratic-run New York. Her campaign has branded him “Sanctuary Suozzi,” and presented him as an extension of President Biden, who has been blamed by Democrats and Republican­s alike for the asylum seeker crisis.

“Joe Biden and Tom Suozzi created the migrant crisis by opening our borders and funding sanctuary cities,” Pilip asserted in a statement last week. “They caused runaway inflation. A vote for Tom Suozzi is a vote for Joe Biden’s disastrous agenda.”

Suozzi has in turn cast Pilip, a registered Democrat who serves in the Nassau County Legislatur­e, as an unknown and untrustwor­thy political trickster.

He has claimed Pilip is trying to confuse voters about her gun safety stances, which he has compared to the far-right positions of Santos.

On Friday, Hochul suggested that Pilip’s campaign carries echoes of Santos’ 2022 bid. In that run, Santos, a conservati­ve Republican, conjured a fictional résumé for himself, misleading voters about his education, profession­al experience, family history and property ownership.

Hochul said “there are way too many unanswered questions” about Pilip. “It feels very much like what we went through with George Santos,” the governor added.

Santos, indicted on fraud charges, was expelled from Congress in December. He pleaded not guilty to the criminal charges.

In a recent interview with Newsday, Pilip declined to say whom she voted for in the 2020 presidenti­al election or to provide her position on Roe v. Wade, the Long Island newspaper reported.

And her campaign has declined to clarify her positions on gun control.

On Friday, she met with the hard-right Republican House Speaker, Mike Johnson of Louisiana, at a fundraiser at King Umberto, a pizzeria in Elmont, L.I., according to her campaign spokesman. The spokesman, Brian Devine, said the local Republican Party appreciate­s Johnson’s support.

The interventi­on by the House speaker underscore­s how the race has become a national proxy battle.

Hank Sheinkopf, a Democratic consultant, said the race carries symbolic weight beyond the single congressio­nal seat, as Republican­s see it as an indicator of whether they can keep the House in November. And it is a key test for Hochul and Rep. Hakeem Jeffries of Brooklyn, the Democratic House minority leader, Sheinkopf added.

“What’s at stake here?” he said. “Losing this seat would be a tremendous setback perceptual­ly for Hakeem Jeffries, for Kathy Hochul and for the Democrats generally in the state.”

A 33-year-old worker was killed Friday when a floor collapsed on him at a Brooklyn constructi­on site that had no Building Department permits and whose owner or contractor never submitted plans to the city, officials said.

The first floor of a two-story building under constructi­on at 1266 50th St. in Borough Park collapsed at about 12:10 p.m. The worker was in a cellar when the floor crashed down in a V-shape on top of him, said FDNY Assistant Chief Joseph Ferrante.

Two other workers present during the accident escaped, said officials.

Firefighte­rs shored up the fallen floor, “dug the dirt out from underneath the victim and removed him from the collapsed area,” Ferrante said.

But despite the firefighte­rs’ quick work, they were too late. Medics pronounced the man dead at the scene.

Police did not immediatel­y identify the victim. But a man who said he’s the victim’s brother was at the scene late Friday afternoon, and said the dead worker was Juan Tamayo.

“We’re from Ecuador. He leaves behind two kids and one unborn,” the man said before leaving in a car with a crying woman.

City records show the site is owned by Juda Horowitz, who could not be reached Friday.

No constructi­on permit was ever issued for the site, Buildings Commission­er James Oddo told reporters at the collapse scene.

“There are absolutely no plans submitted to the Department of Buildings,” Oddo told reporters. “So this fatality absolutely should not have happened. They should not have been doing this work.”

The Buildings Department got a complaint about the work on Dec. 23, and an inspector visited Dec. 26, city records show. The work underway at the site included excavation and foundation work.

The inspector was not able to access the site, and posted a notice at an entrance advising the owner to get in touch with the department, the records show.

An inspector returned to the site Jan. 4, and found that there was no permit posted for the “excavation/foundation” work being done on a roughly 35-foot-long by 12-foot-high wall.

The Buildings Department issued a stop work order. City records state that constructi­on had taken place at the site “without permits issued by the Department of Buildings,” and that the “only work allowed is to make site safe.”

Oddo said the Buildings Department will pursue penalties in the case.

“We will use whatever is in our capability,” he said.

“It’s a $12,000 fine for the initial work [without a permit]. Violating the stop work order is another $25,000 fine.

“There could be multiple fines at this location so the amount may end up in six figures,” Oddo said.

 ?? ?? Gov. Hochul has been upfront about why she thinks it’s critical for ex-Rep. Tom Suozzi (below l.) to defeat Republican Mazi Melesa Pilip (below r.).
Gov. Hochul has been upfront about why she thinks it’s critical for ex-Rep. Tom Suozzi (below l.) to defeat Republican Mazi Melesa Pilip (below r.).
 ?? ?? Wreckage can be seen (inset) after the first floor of a constructi­on site in Borough Park collapsed, killing a worker. Below, he was declared dead at the scene after firefighte­rs dug him out. No city permits had been issued for the build.
Wreckage can be seen (inset) after the first floor of a constructi­on site in Borough Park collapsed, killing a worker. Below, he was declared dead at the scene after firefighte­rs dug him out. No city permits had been issued for the build.
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