About
The Albany Project seeks to return New York State Government to its rightful owners - the people.

Getting Started at the Albany Project

New York Blogwire



This belongs to you. Take it back...

Pieces of Silver

by: Dan Jacoby

Fri Oct 10, 2008 at 17:07:08 PM EDT


The Democratic Party is on the verge of claiming complete control of the New York State government. There is a Democratic governor, and Democrats make up about two-thirds of the state Assembly. The last remaining Republican holdout is the state Senate, and Democrats are only two seats away from a majority there. In addition, the watchword for this election is "change," and Democrats are on the "change bandwagon."

The major stumbling block to turning the state Senate blue is that Republicans have several million dollars available. The Senate Republican Campaign Committee (SRCC) has $1.7 million in cash, compared with just under $1.3 million for the Democratic Senate Campaign Committee (DSCC). As of a week ago, the Democratic state party committee had a tiny advantage over the Republican state party committee, $418K to $360K. In addition, over the last two months the SRCC had transferred far more to individual candidates than the DSCC had transferred to its candidates.

In other words, Democrats need a major transfusion of money, and there's no time to raise it.

There is a source of money that might be tapped. After a three-way primary in which he got 68% of the vote, Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver still has $2.5 million in his own campaign account. State law only allows him to transfer small amounts to other candidates' campaign accounts, but it also allows him (or any candidate) to transfer as much as he wants to the DSCC, which could then transfer all they want to individual Senate candidates' campaign committees.

In other words, he could send $1.5 million to the DSCC, which would give Democrats a huge leg up in the battle to win the state Senate, and still keep a million dollars.

But wait - there's more!

Dan Jacoby :: Pieces of Silver
The Republican Assembly Campaign Committee (RACC) has about $800K available, while the Democratic Assembly Campaign Committee (DACC) has over $3.1 million. Since the Democrats are guaranteed to remain in control of the Assembly for a long time to come, it should be easy to transfer another $1.5 million from the DACC to the DSCC.

An influx of $3 million would not guarantee a Democratic victory in Senate campaigns this November, but it could make all the difference. Right now, at least one Democratic incumbent is trailing in a major poll, while no Democratic challenger is leading by more than a couple of points.

The key is Sheldon Silver. He controls his own campaign committee and, for all practical purposes, he controls the DACC as well. He has the power to send $3 million where it will do the most good for the party (and if you're a Democrat, for the state as well), while keeping enough cash in reserve for his own and the DACC's future needs.

One might think that after nearly 15 years as the Assembly Speaker, most of it being the only Democrat among the "three men in a room" who make all the final decisions, Sheldon Silver would want to be able, finally, to get things done. If one were to think so, however, one might not be correct.

Sheldon Silver has reached the pinnacle of his political career. At this point, he has two options. He can use his power to achieve the changes that New York desperately needs, or he can utilize the Machiavellian technique of "failure and blame" to maintain power without actually achieving anything. In other words, if the state Senate remains in Republican hands, he can continue to blame the Republicans for his failure to accomplish anything significant. If, on the other hand, the Senate comes under the control of Democrats, then Silver has to make the changes because he won't have any excuse for failure.

Given the choice of sitting back and maintaining power, or actually having to work to earn that power, most people would prefer to sit back and relax. That's especially true when the power broker is sitting on almost six million dollars.

My dictionary defines "miser" as "one who lives in wretched circumstances in order to save and hoard money." If, for New York Democrats, "wretched circumstances" can be defined as the current situation where Republicans in the Senate block progress and change, then the question becomes whether Sheldon Silver chooses to change the circumstances by sending the money he has saved where it can effect that change, or whether he chooses to be a miser.

Tags: , , , (All Tags)
Print Friendly View Send As Email
Pieces of Silver | 8 comments
He's had 14 years to do this (0.00 / 0)
and failed miserably:

http://www.thealbanyproject.co...

not. one. red. cent.


An argument could be made... (0.00 / 0)
If Silver had given money to Democrats challenging incumbent Republicans in the Senate, at a time when Republicans were certain to retain control, he would have had to deal with a Joe Bruno who despised him.  That's not how you get things done.

Now, when Democrats can take control, is the time to come on board.  Now, when "getting things done" means winning the Senate, is the time for Silver to prove that he does care, or fail miserably.


[ Parent ]
It's easy to blame others (0.00 / 0)
But I for one don't buy your logic that failure to take over the Senate this fall is Silver's fault. And that it is now DACC's fault as well. That is what you're saying. If you know about other races taking place this fall you'd know there are many hotly contested  Assembly races going on all over the state. If you're looking for DACC to unilaterally disarm and send it's resources elsewhere it shows you don't understand nor care about the battles they fight. And to belittle them as if they are not important is well, your opinion. To think a major campaign committee would remotely have a warchest of some kind with 3 weeks to go is uninformed. Remember, DACC's majority at this point is built on Democrats sitting in Republican seats like Mr. Aubertine was.  And that my friend costs major money to do. You think that's a bad thing, or do you think having spent over a million on Aubertine and sticking with him after he lost his first attempt at the seat, and basically getting him to the popularity point he was, didn't remotely help the Senate more easily take the seat in the Special? Ask Darrel if you think I'm blowing smoke, he'll tell you. Anyway, I went to the NYS BOE and checked it out. After the 2002 general the Jan '03 filing showed DACC at a mere $4k, and after the 2004 general they were left down at $473k by Jan '05, after 2006 they only had $419k. My point is you are pointing to money committed months ago and already spent by the time the dust settles and bills are all paid. Remember too that DACC had to run major Special elections in even years, spending hundreds of thousands in 2005 on Marc Alessi and hundreds of thousands in 2007 when they failed to keep the Tonko seat in a Special election. As for Silver all I have to say is while Bloomberg may be pals with Paterson because Paterson gave a thumbs up to overturning term limits, Silver did not give a thumbs up. When your enemies are billionaires you really expect him to unilaterally disarm when this democratic website for one would be the first to promote a primary against him. Oh sorry, it already did, well when they do it again.

[ Parent ]
Say, what? (4.00 / 1)
First of all, my figures are taken from the committees' filings with the NYS Board of Elections -- you can check them.  (They're the 32-day pre-general filings.)  To say that "To think a major campaign committee would remotely have a warchest of some kind with 3 weeks to go is uninformed."  -- well, "my friend," YOU are the one who is uninformed.

Second, yes the DACC tends to finish each election season with a bank account that is, for all practical purposes, empty.  So what?  Seriously -- what's more important?  Is it keeping a 2-1 ratio in the Assembly, or taking control of the Senate?  Even by sending all this money to the DSCC, we'll still have a huge majority in the Assembly.  Yes, some Assembly seats would almost certainly switch, but there's always a price to pay, and it seems to me, as a reform-minded political activist, that the price is worth it.

Now -- Silver didn't spend a dime in past elections on Senate seats, and that is understandable.  After all, if the Democrats had no chance of taking control, and Silver butted in, Joe Bruno would have run roughshod over him afterwards, instead of working with him (on those occasions when Bruno actually did work with Silver).  But this is the time when Democrats can take control of the Senate, if they only have the resources to win enough races.  Silver, and possibly only Silver, has those resources; he should use them.

Regarding a primary challenge:  Do you think he won't be challenged again in 2010?  Of course he will.  And this will be a campaign issue.  If Silver helps put Democrats in control of the Senate this year, and then moves forward with the reforms the Assembly keeps passing, he will be unbeatable.  If, on the other hand, he sits on the sidelines, and if reforms don't pass, either because Republicans retain the Senate or because he backtracks on all those one-house bills he used to pass, he's in trouble.  My guess is that he won't lose in 2010, but by 2012 he'd probably be beatable.

I also notice you don't mention the $2.5 million Silver has in his own account.  He doesn't need it this time, and has proven that he can raise the money when he needs it.  Heck, he could send $2 million from his own account, and maybe $500K from the DACC.  That would do the trick, and leave lots of money available to support Assembly Dems in tough fights.


[ Parent ]
Yes What (0.00 / 0)
I'm all for the senate going democrat as I can't wait for progressive policy to become law. I just think some of what you profess is looking to place the blame elsewhere. Ok, you want me to look at Silver's $2.5million. I just went and checked it because you say "he can raise when he needs" but all I see (going back to 1999) is it took the guy a whole decade to grow the account by a million. I think there is no comparison to the $3million Paterson raised in his account in a matter of weeks. I just like to put things in perspective, Silver's snail pace of raising money amounts to $100k a year. That is not fundraising prowess in my book.  

Look, all I know is the last race DACC ran was a loss, it was the Tonko seat and the republicans took it by claiming the democrat Kosuir was too liberal on taxes and crime.  I think that committee needs to continue to beat back these damaging messages in every corner of New York and they need to continue growing Assemblymembers that can easily become Senators like Aubertine for those tough rural or republican seats. You may not agree but I think it's a win-win. As for conjecture on Silver doing this or that my honest opinion is for some people he can do nothing right no matter what. To others they see a real progressive worth keeping around for a very long time. His enemies have billions so the $2.5million it took him decades to raise is laughable. I want the senate to flip at all cost but I'm still politically intellectually honest enough to admit a scenario where he needs what he has and more.


[ Parent ]
Raising Obvious Questions (0.00 / 0)
Your post is aimed at one NewYorker, just one. I hope you do a follow up with a post mentioning Andrew Cuomo 2010 has $3million, or Spitzer 2010 literally poured down the drain $3million earlier this year, or even Friends of Suozzi sits on $1.6million and Friends of Steve Levy double that at $3.3million or Malcom Smith who just gave his second $100k still sits on over $600k when he doesn't even have an opponent! What does Malcom need with $600k in the next 3 weeks if not to flip the Senate? New Yorkers for Klein $755k, I can't even find a filing up for his opponent so there's no threat there. If you've got justifications for all of these people than all I can say is your goal is to only blame Silver no matter what. How would you like it if someone came along and said ok, let's look at who Dan Jacoby gives to. Do you really want to flip the Senate you give so much to others, did you give money to Foley, why aren't you giving to Foley, you must be a miser. You'd probably find that truly offensive, as would I.  

Nice try (0.00 / 0)
I don't have $100K to my name, much less $2.5M -- I'm not even close.  I also don't have a campaign committee with any money in it at all.  If I were sitting on a pot, you can bet I'd be giving to several campaigns, Foley's among them, and helping to bankroll the DSCC.

I note that Malcolm Smith did send $100K to the DSCC recently, and my own state Senator, George Onorato, sent $75K.  Even Brian Foley's campaign, Foley for Senate, transferred $66K -- which is surprising, since one would think the transfer would be in the other direction.  I hope it doesn't hurt his chances of winning that seat.  On that note, Rick Dollinger's committee sent $28K to the DSCC; I guess I don't understand high finance, campaign-style.  (Of course, under the "Expense Allocation Section" it lists $287K allocated for Dollinger and $358K allocated for Foley, so perhaps the transfer from campaign accounts to the DSCC was for a purpose.)

My point is that the really big money in our party is under the thumb of Sheldon Silver.  In response to your earlier comment above:  No, Silver hasn't raised a lot for his own campaign during any one cycle, but who do you think raises all that money for the DACC every two years?


[ Parent ]
You're Right on Slight of Hand Bookkeeping (0.00 / 0)
I have a link below you might be interested in. RACC gets money sent up from County Committees to pay for some of their races while DACC does not drain local democratic county coffers. On that note, they actually are not a drain on the state party structure either. I think there's golden opportunity to work off the momentum of such a self contained little campaign force under our noses but I don't run the state party. But expecting DACC to unilaterally disarm and lose a couple of seats when to me it's always appeared they are relegated to step child status in NY is anomalous. I'm not that smart at politics but I imagine all the attacks and running a primary against their Speaker and now demanding their money is a curious way to go about it all. Back to the oddity you picked up on, you are right. If you didn't catch it this week CapCon noted it. Here is the link. They said perhaps this movement of money allowed the NY DSCC to say it had record cash on hand. Who knows. I too don't have millions but my point was there's really big money in NY in many other committees. To just point to the one guy in NY with the hugest bulls eye on his back (Bloomberg, Golisano, NY Times, Daily News, Post and everyone in between) just needed to be raised.    

You ask who raises for DACC every two years. From the filings it looks to me like just short of auto pilot. Given all the seats they have I'd say they are actually grossly underfunded. Seriously, all the new and big money has not gone to them at all but rather Spitzer, State party and NY DSCC.


[ Parent ]
Pieces of Silver | 8 comments
The Albany Project

Please take my Blog Reader Project survey.

Menu

Make a New Account

Username:

Password:



Forget your username or password?


Search




Advanced Search


NY blogs

Politics

Adirondack Almanack
Buffalo Geek
Buffalo Pundit
Capitol Confidential
Daily Gotham
Daily Politics
DMI Blog
DragonFlyEye
Empire Page
Empire Zone
Gothamist
Gotham Gazette
Group News Blog
Jason Gooljar
Left of the Hudson
Living In Dryden
Lost In The Ozone
McHugh Watch
Nassau GOP Watch
Planet Albany
Politicker NY
Politics on the Hudson
Reform NY
Rochester Turning
Room 8
Simply Left Behind
Take19
The Community Alliance

Think Tanks

Brennan Center for Justice
Citizens Budget Commission
Citizens Union
Drum Major Institute
Fiscal Policy Institute
New Democracy Project
Progressive States

Organizations

Citizen Action
Citizens for Better Government in New York
Common Cause
New York Citizens for Clean Elections
Progressive States Network
>
National Blogs

Politics

AmericaBlog
Crooks and Liars
DailyKos
Digby
Eschaton
Firedoglake
MyDD
Political Cortex
Senate Guru
Skippy
Swing State Project
Talk Left
Talking Points Memo
The Right's Field

LBAN Network

Agonist
All Spin Zone
AlterNet
AMERICAblog
American Street
ArchPundit
BAGNewsnotes
BartCop
Big Head DC
Blogging of the Pres
BlogACTIVE
Bluegrass Report
Bluegrass Roots
Blue Indiana
BlueJersey
Blue Mass. Group
BlueOregon
BlueNC
Bob Geiger
Booman
BRAD Blog
Brendan Calling
Buckeye State Blog
Burnt Orange Report
Calitics
Capitol Annex
Carpetbagger Report
Chris Floyd
Clay Cane
Cliff Schecter
Comments from Left Field
Confined Space
Corrente
Cotton Mouth
Crooks and Liars
culture kitchen
Cursor
Daily Gotham
Daily Kos
David Corn
Democrats.com
Dem Bloggers
Deride and Conquer
Democratic Underground
Digby
DovBear
Drudge Retort
Ed Cone
ePluribus Media
Eschaton
Ezra Klein
Feministe
Feministing
Firedoglake
Fired Up
First Draft
Frameshop
Greatscat!
Green Mountain Daily
Greg Palast
Hoffmania
Horse's Ass
Hughes for America
In Search of Utopia
Is That Legal?
Jesus' General
Jon Swift
Juan Cole
Keystone Politics
Kick!
KnoxViews
Las Vegas Gleaner
Latino Pundit
Lawyers, Guns and Money
Left Coaster
Left in the West
Liberal Avenger
Liberal Oasis
Loaded Orygun
Mahablog
Majikthise
Make Them Accountable
Matthew Yglesias
MaxSpeak
Media Girl
Michigan Liberal
Minnesota Campaign Report
Minnesota Monitor
MyDD
My Left Nutmeg
My Left Wing
My Two Sense
Nathan Newman
Needlenose
Nevada Today
News Corpse
News Dissector
Newshoggers
News Hounds
Nitpicker
Oliver Willis
onegoodmove
OpenLeft
PageOneQ
Pam's House Blend
Pandagon
People's Rep. of Seabrook
PinkDome
Politics1
Political Animal
Political Wire
Poor Man Institute
Prairie State Blue
Progressive Historians
Raising Kaine
Raw Story
Reno Discontent
Republic of T
Rhode Island's Future
Rochester Turning
Rocky Mountain Report
Rod 2.0
Rox Populi
Rude Pundit
Sadly, No!
Satirical Political Report
Seeing The Forest
Shakesville
SirotaBlog
SistersTalk
Skippy the Bush Kangaroo
Slacktivist
Smirking Chimp
SquareState
Suburban Guerrilla
Swing State Project
Talking Points Memo
Talk Left
Tapped
Taylor Marsh
Tattered Coat
Texas Kaos
The Albany Project
The Blue State
The Democratic Daily
The Hollywood Liberal
The Reaction
The Talent Show
This Modern World
Town Called Dobson
Turn Maine Blue
Uppity Wisconsin
Wampum
War and Piece
WashBlog
Watching the Watchers
West Virginia Blue
Young Philly Politics
Young Turks

Register to Vote: Rock the Vote, powered by Working Assets Wireless

blog radio

Get the albany project in your inbox! Just enter your email address

Delivered by FeedBurner

____________________


Active Users
Currently 0 user(s) logged on.

Powered by: SoapBlox