New York Daily News

FINAL BIDS FROM MAZI AND SUOZZI

She says he’s soft on crime & border; he says she’s a Trumper who opposed deal on migrants

- BY TIM BALK

Mazi Melesa Pilip and Tom Suozzi made their closing cases to Long Island and Queens voters Monday, on the eve of their ultracompe­titive special House election for the seat vacated by George Santos.

Pilip, the Republican nominee, argued that Suozzi, the Democrat, is soft on immigratio­n, as Suozzi framed himself as an “antidote” to poisonous partisansh­ip that he said is blocking progress and is personifie­d by Pilip.

The race is weighty in both symbolism and function, providing possible insights into which way the political wind is blowing in a swing suburban district, and delivering Democrats a chance to further erode the GOP’s fragile House majority.

Both parties have invested heavily in the race. And both candidates blitzed TV airwaves ahead of Election Day.

In a Monday morning appearance on WNYW-TV, the Ethiopian-born Pilip acknowledg­ed her limitation­s as a public speaker but vowed to better serve the district as an advocate for law and order.

“He’s a talker — excellent talker; he’s really good on that — I am a person of action,” Pilip told the station, referring to Suozzi, a former three-term congressma­n.

Pilip, a 44-year-old fresh face in politics who has served for two years in the Nassau County Legislatur­e, has the backing of an assortment of police unions and the National Border Patrol Council.

Suozzi, a 61-year-old centrist and Long Island lifer, gave up his seat representi­ng the district to stage a doomed run for governor in 2022.

Now he’s in the fight of his political life to reclaim his seat, buffeted by GOP efforts to blame him for the city’s vexing migrant crisis. Pilip’s campaign has branded him “Sanctuary Suozzi” and sought to exploit anxieties that migrants in New York are driving a crime wave.

New York City’s cavernous, tent-style migrant shelter at the Creedmoor Psychiatri­c Center sits within the House district, which sprawls from eastern Queens out across Long Island’s tony North Shore.

There is no statistica­l evidence that the estimated 66,000 asylum seekers in city care are having any significan­t effect on the city’s crime rate, though high-profile crimes in recent days have been linked to migrants.

“He is the one responsibl­e, and we have to hold him accountabl­e,” Pilip, a registered Democrat, told WNYW-TV. “I’m going to Washington. I’m going to secure our border.”

Pilip’s allies have emphasized Suozzi’s past support for so-called sanctuary city policies, which limit local cooperatio­n with federal immigratio­n authoritie­s. He has suggested that federal immigratio­n authoritie­s have not always followed local laws, but that local officials should cooperate with federal authoritie­s when they adhere to the rules.

The former congressma­n, in his own Monday morning appearance on WNYW-TV, said Pilip is the wrong answer on immigratio­n, emphasizin­g that she is aligned with former President Donald Trump in opposing a bipartisan legislativ­e deal to secure the border.

“That’s appalling,” Suozzi told the station. “Don’t keep the border open and bring more migrants to New York. Make the deal. That’s what I’m about.”

The veteran politician also argued, perhaps improbably, that he is a vote for change.

“People are sick of the way Washington is running,” Suozzi said. “I want to change that and stop all the partisansh­ip and the fighting and get people to work together.”

In the morning, Suozzi visited St. Rocco’s Bakery in his native Glen Cove to greet locals. Pilip planned to hold a Monday evening campaign rally in Franklin Square.

Experts said the race was coming down to the wire.

The chairman of the state Democratic Party, Jay Jacobs, said Democrats had outvoted Republican and Conservati­ve Party voters by about 12,000 in the early voting. “We feel good about it,” Jacobs said.

Still, Democrats are seen as more likely than Republican­s to vote early, and early voting data offers few clues about how independen­ts and conservati­ve Democrats might be receiving the candidates.

Former Rep. Pete King, the Republican who represente­d a version of the district for a decade until 2003, predicted Pilip would win narrowly. He said voters seemed to have moved on from the unpopular Santos.

“The overriding issue,” King said by phone, “is a combinatio­n of immigratio­n and crime intertwine­d.”

The race in New York’s 3rd

Congressio­nal District was made possible when Santos was expelled from the House in December, felled by his serial lies and a 23-count indictment accusing him of fraud.

Santos has pleaded not guilty. He said Monday that he would not vote in the special election, adding that he was “jaded as [expletive]” and that he has “no empathy for the political process.”

He said he views Pilip as a kind person, but added that he would not mind if she lost.

“I don’t want Tom to win,” Santos said by phone. “I’m not thrilled about Mazi.”

Santos — a conservati­ve Republican who deceived voters about his education, religion, family

history, profession­al experience and property ownership — won the district by about 8 points in 2022.

Four days after Santos’ early December expulsion from Congress, Gov. Hochul, a centrist Democrat, scheduled the special election and put her support behind Suozzi, putting aside lingering animosity from her 2022 governor’s race with the congressma­n. In the bruising contest, Suozzi belittled Hochul by describing her as an “interim governor.”

Hochul has called the special election her “top priority” and marshaled the force of New York’s Democratic apparatus behind Suozzi. She is seeking a measure of political redemption after critics blamed her narrow general election victory over Lee Zeldin for down-ballot losses in 2022. Republican­s flipped four New York House seats in the midterms.

Hochul has chastised Pilip’s approach to immigratio­n and abortion and framed her as untrustwor­thy.

The governor has argued there are “way too many unanswered questions” about Pilip, who has delivered evasive answers when pressed on her positions on abortion and gun control. Hochul has even likened Pilip to Santos.

In an appearance on Fox News on Monday, Pilip pushed back on such comparison­s.

“I am very much vetted,” Pilip, a veteran of the Israeli Defense Forces, told the network. “I’m very proud of who I am.”

But she has left some of her positions unclear. In one of the more peculiar moments of the campaign, Pilip tried to walk a fine line on abortion rights at the race’s lone debate last week, saying “every woman should have that choice” but also that she is “pro-life.”

Suozzi has urged voters to watch the feisty, policy-rich, hourlong debate before casting ballots.

“Everybody’s got to watch the debate,” he told WNYW-TV on Monday.

“If you watch the debate, I win.”

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 ?? ?? GOP candidate for ousted Rep. George Santos’ House seat, Mazi Melesa Pilip (above), in Massapequa, L.I., flanked by former U.S. Rep. Pete King (l.) and Oyster Bay Supervisor Joseph Saladino. Right, Dem hopeful Tom Suozzi campaignin­g in Plainview, L.I.
GOP candidate for ousted Rep. George Santos’ House seat, Mazi Melesa Pilip (above), in Massapequa, L.I., flanked by former U.S. Rep. Pete King (l.) and Oyster Bay Supervisor Joseph Saladino. Right, Dem hopeful Tom Suozzi campaignin­g in Plainview, L.I.
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