Tuesday, February 7, 2017

Breakaway Democrats in New York Feel Trump Backlash



ALBANY — Until recently, the acid rain of dissent that has nagged the young presidency of Donald J. Trump — the rallies and marches, the town-hall heckling, the phone lines jammed with calls from irate constituents — was aimed mostly at those in Washington, with no room to duck, even for the likes of Senator Elizabeth Warren.

On Friday, it found a far more obscure target.

“Traitor! Traitor!” a crowd of more than 100 protesters screamed outside a town-hall meeting held by State Senator Jose R. Peralta of Queens. They were louding venting at an assiduously uncontroversial state legislator who, as a Democrat in New York City, had been accustomed to cozier treatment.

“You are empowering the Republicans — everyone in this room knows it,” one woman inside told Mr. Peralta as protesters shut out of the meeting banged on the windows. “Your constituents are angry. We are probably going to vote you out.”

The mathematics of power in Albany resists simple divisions. There are Democrats. There are Republicans. There are the Independent Democrats, a breakaway group of eight legislators who control the State Senate in partnership with Republicans — an arrangement the Independent Democrats say empowers them to sway legislative priorities to the left, but that mainstream Democrats blame for blocking a more uniformly progressive agenda. And there is State Senator Simcha Felder, a Brooklyn Democrat whose alignment with the Republicans has supplied them with a fragile majority.

For many liberal New Yorkers who assumed their state was thoroughly blue, the Independent Democratic Conference’s very existence has come as a nasty, if galvanizing, surprise. 

Click here for the full article. 

Source: The New York Times (via The Empire Report) 

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