New York Daily News

He’s an Uber politico

Talks up his state Senate run in car with gov’t plates

- BY DENIS SLATTERY L. Stephen Brescia

ALBANY — An Orange County legislator running for state Senate has been moonlighti­ng as an Uber driver — in a car with official county plates on it.

Republican L. Stephen Brescia, the chairman of the Orange County Legislatur­e, is hoping to unseat first-term Sen. James Skoufis (D-Orange County) in the general election in November.

In a recent interview with Hudson Power Broker, a conservati­ve aggregate news site run by Assemblyma­n Kieran Lalor (R-Dutchess County), Brescia said he’s been driving for the ridehailin­g service for the past four months and chatting with riders about his campaign.

“You know without being able to fund-raise, it’s been very difficult, but I’ve been out Uber driving a little bit and I’ve enjoyed it,” Brescia told Lalor when asked about how he’s been campaignin­g given the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“It gets me around the district, I meet a lot of people and [spread] the word,” he added.

Brescia uses his personal vehicle, an Acura TL, per his Uber profile, when picking up fares. The car has plates identifyin­g him as a county official, which a spokesman said Brescia pays for.

“Under state law, county legislator­s are able to have plates they pay for on their personal vehicles which identify themselves as county legislator­s,” Orange County spokesman Justin

Rodriguez told the Daily News. “Mr. Brescia doesn’t have a county-owned-or-issued car. He uses his private vehicle.”

Rodriguez did not say whether driving the car forhire with the plates presented any ethical issues.

Brescia’s Uber profile, in which he uses the first name Louis, features a patriotic picture of the local elected standing in front of an American flag. The same photo appears on his official Orange County page.

The longtime public servant noted that he’s been a member of the County Legislatur­e for more than 26 years and has had the plates for “many of those years.”

“Ninety-five percent of my customers don’t even notice my plates, but, if it is a requiremen­t that I can’t have them as an Uber driver, then I will turn them in,” he told the Daily News.

Unlike in the city, Uber drivers upstate do not need commercial insurance or special livery plates. A spokesman for the company did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Specialty plates aren’t the only perk of Brescia’s decades in local government.

In addition to pulling in nearly $50,000 in taxpayer money as a legislator and voting for a raise for himself this year, Brescia also makes just over $17,000 a year as mayor of Montgomery, a small village about 12 miles west of Newburgh. Brescia has held that post since 1990.

In his interview with Lalor, Brescia, who was busted for DWI in 1998, slammed Skoufis as soft on crime and too generous with taxpayer dollars.

“He’s just a tax-and-spend liberal Democrat and there’s no way around it,” he said.

Skoufis declined to comment on his opponent’s side gig.

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