Thursday, October 14, 2021

Bail reform means

  I thing when nasssu oTB cannot run a payroll system

and has little or no respect for a scintilla of the Puritan work ethic

Bail reform ha ha

When you have the Kevin mccaffrey gangbteamsters local 707 running wild at Nassau itb

Surprising that kaminsky has not discussed Douglas Diana

Jay jacobs and Joseph Cairo are like Mutt and Jeff

reform paranoia in a key race this November

A race for district attorney may serve as a preview of New York Republicans’ 2022 chances statewide. 

Anne Donnelly is the Republican candidate for Nassau County district attorney.

Anne Donnelly is the Republican candidate for Nassau County district attorney. MIKE DEERY

Republicans have not won a statewide race in nearly two decades. They now have less than a third of the seats in the state Senate and Assembly. Their chances of electing a governor next year appear far-fetched in a state where registered Democrats outnumber them by more than two to one. Yet, their chances may not seem so slim if the GOP somehow wins the November election for Nassau County district attorney.

Their candidate in the race – career prosecutor Anne Donnelly – is running a campaign almost entirely based on her opposition to new limits on cash bail. That is no accident considering how well “law and order” politics play in suburban swing areas like Nassau County, according to veteran political strategist Hank Sheinkopf. “Attacking bail reform is an attack on Albany, which is an attack on Democrats – which is an OK thing for high propensity voters in Nassau County,” he said in an interview. Internal Democratic polling shows that the race against state Sen. Todd Kaminsky, who has helped craft criminal justice reforms in recent years, remains surprisingly close despite Kaminsky’s fundraising edge reflected in the latest campaign finance filings. 


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