Niagra State legislatures looking lame.
Sometime after November's election, New
York lawmakers are expected to convene in a lame-duck session that
could include more major actions than the next two years of regular
sessions combined, including a push to raise their own salaries.
But you won't hear the couple hundred incumbents talk about it while they campaign.
That's
because in the New York Legislature, the biggest votes are rarely won
or lost on merits. Instead, horse trading leads to deals.
In addition, candidates have
cover from talking about the issues because legislative leaders say the
session isn't on the calendar. So the word among incumbents on the
campaign trail is, "What special session?"
Such a session has
become almost routine in New York, and one is likely to convene
sometime in November or December. Among issues that legislative leaders
and Gov. Andrew Cuomo say are priorities are pay raises for legislators
and top commissioners in Cuomo's administration. They could be swapped
for an increase in the minimum wage to $8.50 an hour from $7.25, which
is a top concern of Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver.
The minimum
wage "needs to be a real issue in the state Senate elections," said
Stuart Appelbaum of the Retail Wholesale and Department Store Union. He
said voters need to ask candidates: "What are you going to do for the
overwhelming number of people who need it to make ends meet?"
Other
legislation could include a curbing of New York City's stop-and-frisk
policing and approval of a deal in which about 300,000 New York City
residents will get property tax rebates for their condominiums, each
sought by Cuomo.
On
the minimum wage and pay raises, the Siena College poll shows a
political trade-off: Three-quarters of New Yorkers oppose a pay raise
for lawmakers while three-quarters support a higher minimum wage.
Pay
raises for New York lawmakers are most often done in a lame-duck
session in an election year because legislators can't directly raise
their own salaries, but they can raise salaries before the next
legislature officially takes office.
Senate and Assembly leaders
have made clear a pay raise is a priority, although few outside
Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver have dared to make the argument
publicly. One, who is retiring this year and so faced no political
fallout, did.
The deal hinges on some
critical elements, including whether Republicans stay in charge of the
Senate. Another unknown is whether the Legislature would risk voter
wrath to approve a pay raise despite a new burst of scandals, including
a secret $103,000 settlement to end sexual harassment against an
assemblyman and an indictment against a senator.
Cuomo also seeks campaign finance reform, perhaps the most glaring unchecked item from his 2010 campaign priorities.
The
state's ethics board is also due for tweaking, as Cuomo puts it. It has
drawn criticism for its penchant for privacy, some press leaks, and for
a perceived lack of independence from Cuomo that prompted one member to
resign.
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