Here And Now

Gov. David Paterson is in Lake Placid today to sign DWI prevention legislation into law and attend the addition of the bobsled track to the National Register of Historic Places.

Senate Democratic Conference Leader John Sampson tries to determine if he have sufficient votes to merit bringing members back to Albany this week – possibly Wednesday or Thursday – to try again to pass the budget revenue bill.

The trouble with Thursday: Both petitions and the latest campaign finance reports are due that day, making this week a political scramble for lawmakers who very much want to get paid, but also want to be re-elected.

Woops…I forgot: At 1:30 p.m. Senate Majority Leader Pedro Espada Jr. will “address his future with the Democratic Party” at a press conference outside the Bronx Board of Elections…hmmm, might he be dis-enrolling himself before party leaders try to do it for him? Stay tuned.

Today’s headlines…

The Paterson administration awarded a $297 million no-bid federal contract to GHI, the health-care provider that employs the governor’s wife.

While he’s running against special interests, AG Andrew Cuomo’s hand-picked state Democratic Party executive director, Charlie King, continues to count some of those same interests as clients.

President Obama’s spokesman Robert Gibbs said there’s “no doubt” the Republicans could take back the House this fall.

Mayor Bloomberg is very attached to his iPad.

Fred LeBrun supports Darren Dopp’s refusal to let the Troopergate issue go.

Basil Smikle has raised $130,000 to fuel his quest to unseat Sen. Bill Perkins in the September Democratic primary.

A former New Jersey GOP chairwoman accused NY-1 congressional hopeful Randy Altschuler, who has the Conservative Party nod, of being pro-choice in the past.
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The Weekend That Was

Meet Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Weiner.

The bride wore Oscar de la Renta; former President Clinton officiated.

RIP Bob Sheppard, voice of the Yankees.

Gov. David Paterson joked (?) that he most regrets not appointing himself to the US Senate to fill the vacancy left by Hillary Clinton.

Paterson insisted he still has some cards in his hand – namely calling lawmakers back to the Capitol for a special session in the absence of an FMAP deal.

The Senate Democrats are playing hardball with legislative paychecks, and the Assembly is feeling the pinch.

NYC has spent more than $15 million to pay for 236 part-time and full-time union representatives so far this year.

Taxpayers’ share of city pension costs has skyrocketed more than 900 percent in the last decade — from $703.1 million in 2000 to $6.5 billion in 2009, according to the NYC comptroller’s office.

“As ‘Stack’ goes, so may control of the Senate. And control of the Senate means everything,” writes Bob McCarthy.

Greta Van Susteren picks up the “is Mayor Bloomberg running for president” question.
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Weekend Open Thread

Sorry I’m a bit late to get this up.

Much to discuss this weekend – from the Democrats’ latest effort to distance themselves from Senate Majority Leader Pedro Espada Jr. to Gov. David Paterson’s latest veto to the war of words between Rick Lazio and AG Andrew Cuomo’s campaign/surrogates over the mosque proposed near Ground Zero.

…or whatever else you’ve got on your mind.

Have at it.

Schneiderman Blames Albany For Keeping Him Off $$ Trail

In a last-minute fundraising appeal, Sen. Eric Schneiderman seems to be engaging in a little expectation-lowering exercise, telling supporters that the extended legislative session kept him too busy to focus on raising campaign cash.

The e-mail, with the subject line “one day to go” arrived shortly after noon today. In it, the Manhattan Democrat says he has “assembled the deepest, broadest coalition of progressive supporters” in his bid to succeed Andrew Cuomo as attorney general.

But Schneiderman also acknowledges he was hamstrung by the never-ending budget battle, which required him to be in Albany while all but one of his rivals worked donors and hit the campaign trail (Assemblyman Richard Brodsky was in the same boat).

“While I’ve been working long hours to pass key measures like Ian’s Law (which prohibits insurance companies from dropping sick patients) and the Fraud Enforcement and Recovery Act (which is the strongest tool in the nation to fight taxpayer fraud and corruption), other candidates have been getting a head start on their fundraising, holding events and carrying over millions from previous campaigns,” the senator wrote. “Please help us counter their advantage by showing your support.”

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Extras

Michael Roston floats Alec Baldwin for US Senate in 2012.

The Senate has a tentative plan to return to Albany next Wednesday.

Mayor Bloomberg is headed to New Hampshire.

Assemblyman Nelson Castro is getting a divorce and defending himself against “outrageous allegations” about his personal life.

Here’s a list of bonus payments made to employees of state and local public authorities during the 2009 reporting year. (The final tally: $6.7 million).

Rick Lazio is going to California for a Republican Jewish Coalition luncheon.

The NYC Council’s Black, Latino and Asian Caucus wants Paterson to sign legislation that would ban the NYPD’s practice of keeping the stop-and-frisk database.

BCAT TV hosted a spirited debate about wine in grocery stores.

VP Joe Biden is campaigner-in-chief.

Wayne Barrett challenges Paterson’s FMAP argument in defense of his budget vetoes.

Could the BP leak be contained by Monday?

Paterson spoke to Jay-Z about LeBron James.

Senate candidate Desiree Pilgrim-Hunter responds to comments about the fact that she’s on disability.

A Firedoglake blogger takes Reshma Saujani to task.

NYC Public Advocate Bill de Blasio is helping Sen. Eric Schneiderman raise campaign cash for his AG run.

Rep. Barney Frank e-mailed for his colleague, Rep. Carolyn Maloney.

Could it be that the $125,000 a month the NYC OTB plans to shell out to its new executive is worth it?

The Rev. Clinton? (Updated)

Upon reading the AP report that Bill Clinton will officiate at the wedding of Rep. Anthony Weiner to Huma Abedin, a longtime aide to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, NY1′s Grace Rauh started making some calls to see if the former president needed to do anything to prepare.

She writes:

NY City Clerk Michael McSweeney tells me that being a former President does not make one eligible to perform a wedding ceremony in New York State.

So, it’s possible that Clinton became an ordained minister to officiate at the ceremony (perhaps through the Universal Life Church?)… Still trying to figure out if that’s the case (there’s no exhaustive list of ordained ministers that I’m aware of).

If the happy couple was getting married in the city, then whoever is officiating at his wedding would have had to register with the city. But since the wedding is on Long Island, those same requirements don’t apply.

The 45-year-old congressman and his 34-year-old fiancee are to be married Saturday at the Oheka Castle in Huntington.

They’ve been dating for about two years and announced their engagement last summer. Weiner is Jewish. Abedin grew up in Saudi Arabia and is Muslim. (As the former president said at a recent pre-wedding party for the couple, this is the embodiment of what “the future of the world should be”).

The Clintons are a bit wedding crazy this summer. They’re in the midst of preparing the nuptials of their daughter, Chelsea, and investment banker Marc Mezvinsky in Rhinebeck later this month.

UPDATE: A married reader writes: “Definitely not as good of a story as Clinton becoming Universal Life Minister, but I’m guessing that they will have a judge sign the papers before or after the ceremony. That’s what (we did) when we got married…We were technically already married before (my wife) walked down the aisle. I bet they will do something similar.”

Charter Revision Commission Plays It Safe

The preliminary report of the Charter Revision Commission has been released, and while it addresses the issue of term limits – ostensibly the main reason it was convened in the first place – it does not touch some of the more controversial topics, like nonpartisan elections (a past pet issue for Mayor Bloomberg).

The commission was established after Bloomberg successfully pushed a term limits extension through the NYC Council, enabling his successful run for a third term. (That would not be allowed to happen again under a recommendation in this report).

Ron Lauder, a billionaire cosmetics heir and the city’s leading term limits advocate, signed off on the switch based on a promise from the mayor that there would be a commission and he would be able to serve on it. Lauder later declined a position on the commission.

A source familiar with his thinking at the time told me Lauder believed he could “get more done on the outside than on the inside” to restore term limits.

According to the press release that accompanied this report, there will now be another series of public hearings. After several months of debate, the Commission will vote on a final set of proposals for consideration by the voters.

The report appears in full after the jump. You can read the appendices here.

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Paterson Puts Silver In His Crosshairs

Governor Paterson just blasted out a letter to some 250,000 New Yorkers slamming Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver for failing to bring an energy-related economic development bill to the floor for a vote.
Gov Letter

Paterson says the bill in question would create thousands of jobs and has already passed in the Senate in a landslide 59 to 2 vote.

The email also links to remarks by Silver in which he seems to express support for the program.

“Instead [of supporting the measure] – and in typical Albany fashion – the Assembly has offered a proposal that sounds good, but cannot be paid for,” Paterson writes.

“The Assembly bill would direct NYPA to offer cash-supported discounts to businesses, instead of low-cost power, which would be funded by NYPA revenue; however NYPA’s revenues vary from year to year and cannot be forecasted with a reasonable degree of certainty years into the future. This approach fails to achieve our basic objective, which is to provide businesses with certainty they need to invest in New York and New Yorkers.”

As this legislative session began to wind down last week, it was Silver who was often going on the offensive – directing his ire predominantly at Senate Democratic Conference Leader John Sampson, who insisted negotiations were ongoing while the Assembly was proclaiming mission accomplished.

ESPA Defends Cuomo

The Empire State Pride Agenda, New York’s largest LGBT organization, is defending AG Andrew Cuomo in the wake of a Times story that questioned his commitment to gay rights and same-sex marriage.

“The Pride Agenda’s experience with Attorney General Andrew Cuomo doesn’t match up with today’s story in The New York Times,” the organization wrote in its blog, “The Agenda.”

“On the same day that he announced his candidacy for Governor, Cuomo issued a video statement, shown at our Spring Dinner in Rochester, in which he clearly and directly gave his support for and pledged to work with us to win marriage equality, transgender rights and protections for LGBT students.”

The video in question appears below. In it, Cuomo says:

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Team DiNapoli Decribes Race As ‘Most Competitive’ In NY

A reader forwarded this Facebook post (actually re-post) from state Comptroller Tom DiNapoli’s campaign that describes his head-to-head against Republican Harry Wilson as “the most competitive statewide race in New York this year!”

The campaign is seeking interns (apparently unpaid, although school credit is available) to “support an honest and hard-working candidate.”

Wilson, a former hedge fund manager who has never before either run for or held elected office, is widely viewed by many Republicans as their best chance at statewide victory this fall. It seems DiNapoli agrees.

Although the playing up of one’s weaknesses to build excitement and rally the troops is a time-honored campaign tradition, this description might actually be real.

dinapolicompetitive