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URBAN JOURNAL: Reform New York? Abandon all hope

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This year's election may have been quiet, but next year, when we elect state legislators and a governor, there should be some fireworks. Will it do any good for us to go to the polls?

Obviously, we need change. New York, as a recent New York Times editorial put it, "is a national embarrassment, a swamp of intrigue and corruption, a $131 billion monster controlled by a crowd of smug officials whose main concern is keeping their soft jobs."

We've had a governor who resigned in the face of a prostitution scandal, a state comptroller who pleaded guilty to a felony. The former Senate majority leader is on trial, charged with using his powerful position to enrich himself. A Queens Assembly member resigned a few months ago and pleaded guilty to fraud.

And then, of course, there was June's Albany circus, with our own good-government crusader Tom Golisano engineering a brief Republican takeover of the Senate, persuading two Democrats to switch parties. One of the change artists was found guilty recently of assaulting his girlfriend. The other routinely ignores campaign finance requirements and is under investigation on accusations that he doesn't live in the district he represents and that he has diverted state funds into his own personal business.

State leaders' personal foibles are the least of our worries, though. Far more important are the mushrooming state budget, deficit, and debt. And the biggest embarrassment of all? State government in New York is a democracy in name only. The leaders of the Assembly and the Senate really run things. Ordinary members of the State Legislature are powerless; most do what they're told.

Once we elect legislators, it's almost impossible to get rid of them. The legislators themselves draw up the lines of each election district, and they draw them to protect themselves. New York's notoriously weak campaign-finance regulations let special interests - business groups, unions, wealthy individuals - buy loyalty and clout.

Incumbents dole out millions of taxpayer dollars as "member items" to pet recipients in their districts: medical, cultural, and educational institutions; youth projects; local governments. And the grateful recipients respond with public tributes.

Both Democrats and Republicans have been involved in these shenanigans. But the Democrats' voter-registration advantage is growing, and at some point, their tenuous hold on the Senate will be a dim memory and they'll be solidly in charge of the whole show. Only if you think New York Democratic leaders are saints can you think this is a good thing. (Five of the six officials I cited earlier were Democrats.)

What to do? Campaign-finance reform would be a good start, but the state legislature isn't likely to approve it. Having a non-partisan group draw the district lines might level the playing field for non-incumbents, but only slightly. The incumbents would still have the edge in campaign donations. And they'd still have their member items.

Kent Gardner at the Center for Governmental Research thinks that giving the governor more power would help. He agrees that the governor, like legislators, can be bought by special interests, but at least there's the potential for the governor to act independently.

The governor, says Gardner, is the only elected official "who looks out for the center, for the whole." Maybe a reform-minded governor could knock heads, shame the legislators into cleaning up the place. Maybe, says Gardner, a coalition of good-government groups could push reform. Maybe the media could endorse only the candidates who agree to specific reforms.

Gardner also thinks there could be hope in third parties. But building a strong third party takes time. New York's recent third-party history is pretty grim. And without campaign-finance reform, third-party candidates have almost no chance.

So I dunno. We're all upset, but I don't see anything changing unless party leaders suddenly find their conscience, or enough lowly legislators band together to force a change. Hope springs eternal. But then I go back and read the rap sheets on the leaders, and I despair.

Comments for "URBAN JOURNAL: Reform New York? Abandon all hope" (3)

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David Lum said on Nov. 04, 2009 at 6:41pm

Our state's ethics have crumbled, as has the economic climate. We ordinary NYS citizens have come to view the Albany machine as either:
1. a giant Halloween treat provider, or 2. the temper-tantrum stooges of special interests.

What does this breed? Apathy. And the apathy shows up in low voter turnouts, which exacerbates the problem.

But there is good news. There's North Carolina. One way tickets are $150 or so. Return tickets are $75 or so.

Anyone?

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Robert Nassau said on Nov. 08, 2009 at 12:20pm

I assume that the passage of legislation still requires a majority vote. Why, then, do we have this three-men-in-a-room system? Why doesn't the person representing me (and all of the other representatives other than the two chamber leaders) simply say: "We are not voting on anything unless our voices are heard?" What's so hard about that? Why don't we all agree to elect only people who pledge to follow that principle?

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Peter Royle said on Nov. 17, 2009 at 10:28am

Dear Ms Towler,
I enjoyed your views in "Reform New York?, abandon all hope" in the 11-4/10 issue of the paper. Although I am 68 and definitely a conservative I enjoy the paper as much for opposing my views as for the editorials that hit it right on the money. After growing up in NYS and thoroughly enjoying the experience over the years I am disgusted and disheartened to say the least as to where the state has fallen.
I have discussed this with friends (those that will still listen to me) and now have even less hope than you have. For some time now I have believed that the only possibility of any hope is for a number of cities and towns to go broke and have to file for bankruptcy for starters. Taxes have to increase much more than has happened (as may well happen in 2011 when the pension fund adjustment is made) so that a large number of people will file for bankruptcy. What is the state going to do when 50% of the population has to walk away? The Indians got it right. Threaten violence and the state backs off on collecting taxes. What an awful way to have to make a point! I think the first time it worked was the Boston Tea Party!
There seems to be no possibility of reform. The current gang in Albany is so arrogant that they make no attempt at being subtle with their outrageous behavior, there is no possibility of any legal change to the constitution, etc. with the current systems in place.
Enough about my frustration. Keep up the edge in your editorials and I might even admit to the fact that even the left has good thoughts!

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