New York Daily News

L.I. JUDGE SLAPS SENATE DEMS

Sez it was wrong to deny floor vote for gov’s chief jurist pick

- BY DENIS SLATTERY NEWS ALBANY BUREAU CHIEF

ALBANY — Senate Democrats were wrong to deny Gov. Hochul’s chief judge pick a floor vote and future nominees must be weighed by the full body, a Long Island judge determined on Tuesday.

Suffolk County Supreme Court Justice Thomas Whelan ripped Senate Dems and called their interpreta­tion of the state Constituti­on “contrary to logic” as he ruled in favor of Sen. Anthony Palumbo (R-Riverhead), who sued his counterpar­ts across the aisle for initially refusing to bring Hochul’s nomination of Hector LaSalle (photo) to be the state’s next chief judge up for a floor vote.

“It is time for this constituti­onal logjam to be broken asunder,” Whelan wrote as he tore into the Democrats over their insistence that a committee vote was enough to serve as a formal rejection of a governor’s judicial nominee.

“The appointmen­t here was not ‘lost’ ... but was still alive, awaiting final resolution by the full vote of Senate chamber,” Whelan added.

LaSalle was first rejected by the Senate Judiciary Committee last month and Democrats maintained a floor vote was unnecessar­y before reversing course in the wake of Palumbo filing his suit.

The Dem-led Senate rejected LaSalle’s nomination, 39 to 20, during a hastily called floor vote last week.

Hochul, who was not involved in the suit, and other LaSalle supporters had argued that the state Constituti­on explicitly instructs that the governor get the “advice and consent” of the full Senate on nomination­s.

Palumbo sued Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins (D-Yonkers) and 10 Democrats on the Senate’s Judiciary Committee who voted down LaSalle last month amid uproar from labor unions and others who opposed his appointmen­t to serve as the top judge on the Court of Appeals, the state’s highest court.

Whelan made clear that he agrees with Palumbo, Hochul and others who said a floor vote was mandated by the state Constituti­on.

“This court must conclude that the practice adopted by the defendants is not allowed under the Constituti­on,” Whelan wrote. “The Judiciary Committee can aid the full Senate by performing an investigat­ive function, but it cannot substitute for the power reserved to the Senate by the Constituti­on.”

He also knocked Senate Dems, writing that under their interpreta­tion a committee of one could decide the fate of any nominee.

Senate Minority Leader Rob Ortt (R-Lockport) applauded Whelan’s decision and slammed Democrats for adding members to the Judiciary Committee earlier this year.

“Instead of following the law, Senate Democrats stacked the Judiciary Committee with farleft legislator­s to defeat a historic Court of Appeals nominee,” he said. “This decision will have a significan­t role in protecting the independen­ce of New York’s judicial system from far-left politician­s.”

A spokesman for the Senate Democrats said the decision is being reviewed.

Attorney Andrew Celli, who represente­d the Democratic lawmakers during a court hearing last week, had argued that the suit is nothing more than a tiff among legislator­s and called for it to be dismissed.

“This case is an internal dispute between Sen. Palumbo and his colleagues in the majority, it’s not an appropriat­e dispute for a court,” Celli argued. “If the governor were here we’d have a different question to struggle with.”

Whelan disagreed, writing in his decision that he believes the courts were the right venue since the matter is “not a challenge to the rules of the Senate but an action to enforce, by declaratio­n, a constituti­onal direction.”

LaSalle was the first chief judge nominee to be rejected by the Senate since the current merit-based system was put in place in the late 1970s.

The 54-year-old jurist currently serves as the presiding justice of the 2nd Appellate Division in Brooklyn. He would have been the first Latino to lead the Court of Appeals if confirmed.

The Long Island native faced fierce pushback from a wide range of opponents who argued the former prosecutor’s judicial records showed him to be anti-union, anti-reproducti­ve rights and overall too conservati­ve to lead the state court system.

Progressiv­e lawmakers called for a more liberal-leaning candidate following the resignatio­n of former Chief Judge Janet DiFiore last summer. Critics had accused the seven-member Court of Appeals of taking a conservati­ve turn under DiFiore’s leadership.

Now, Hochul must wait for the Commission on Judicial Nomination to craft a new list of candidates before once again submitting her pick to the Senate for approval.

The governor said last week she will “work toward making a new nomination.”

“I remain committed to selecting a qualified candidate to lead the court and deliver justice,” she added.

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AP

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