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A New York court on Friday struck down a Long Island county order that barred transgender women from playing on women’s sports teams at county-owned sports facilities. The case had raised questions about whether the ban was legal under the state’s human rights law. But the ruling on Friday by Justice Francis Ricigliano of Nassau County Supreme Court turned on a technical issue: The county executive, Bruce Blakeman, had “acted beyond the scope of his authority as the chief executive officer of Nassau County” when he imposed the ban, Justice Ricigliano said. The right to pass such laws is reserved for legislative bodies, and chief executives of local governments cannot “unlawfully infringe” on those rights, the ruling stated. Gabriella Larios, a staff attorney at the New York Civil Liberties Union, said on Friday that the decision “deals a serious blow to county executive Blakeman’s attempt to score cheap political points by peddling harmful stereotypes about transgender women and girls.”
Persons: Justice Francis Ricigliano, Bruce Blakeman, Ricigliano, Gabriella Larios, Blakeman’s, Organizations: Nassau County Supreme, Nassau County ”, New, Civil Liberties Union Locations: York, Nassau County
The wintry mess left both parties racing to rewrite last-minute campaign plans and sophisticated models to understand how the storm might affect turnout. But many Republican voters still prefer to vote on Election Day, and their party is accustomed to closing a gap. The party has won nearly every major election on Long Island since 2021, partly on the strength of its turnout operation. Peter T. King, a former Republican congressman, conceded that the snow could cost his party a couple of percentage points. Still, he predicted that the recently revived Nassau County Republican machine was up to the task.
Persons: Stephanie Keith, Dave Sanders, The New York Times Stephanie Keith, The New York Times Tom Suozzi, Mazi Pilip, George Santos, ” Steve Israel, , Biden, Santos, Tom Suozzi, Suozzi, Mazi, , ” Jay Jacobs, Peter T, King, committeemen, Suozzi’s, haven’t, Mr, Jacobs, Delia DeRiggi, Bruce Blakeman, Blakeman, Ellen Yan Organizations: The New York Times, The New York Times Credit, Democrat, Republican, Queens and, Republicans, Democratic, Mr, Democratic Party, Nassau County Republican, Legislature Locations: Nassau, New York, Queens and Long, New York City, Long, Nassau County, North Shore, Whitton
But as the special election to succeed the disgraced former congressman has made painfully clear to Democrats, Santos’ victory was not a fluke or anomaly. (Less so 40 years ago, when Republicans ran roughshod here and Ronald Reagan alluded to Nassau County as a Republican’s idea of heaven.) Nassau County in 2024 is sharply divided and – in a word – angry. The year before, Democrat Laura Curran, the top official in Nassau County, was ousted by Republican Bruce Blakeman. But more liberal New York Democrats often point to the current problems as Cuomo’s legacy.
Persons: Republican George Santos ’, Santos ’, , Tom Suozzi, Ronald Reagan, Joe Biden’s, Donald Trump, , Alyssa Cass, “ George Santos, Chuck Schumer, Laura Curran, Republican Bruce Blakeman, Santos, Hakeem Jeffries, “ Hakeem, , he’s, Jay Jacobs, Jeffries, it’s, ” Jacobs, ” Curran, there’s, ” It’s, Curran, Suozzi, doesn’t, Andrew Cuomo, Jacobs, Cuomo, Kathy Hochul, , Mazi Pilip, Peter King, Adam Gray, Tom, Larry Levy, ” Levy, I’m, Joe Cairo, Mazi, it’s …, Mike Florio, Pilip, mailers –, Biden, Greg Abbott, George Santos ’, ” Suozzi, Trump, Alexandria Ocasio, Ilhan Omar, Ayanna Pressley, Rashida, unvetted ”, Roe, Wade, Court’s Dobbs, we’re, it’ll, Jim Fornaro, aren’t, ” Fornaro, “ I’m, bummed, “ Suozzi, Nestor Oginar, Suozzi canvassers Rachel Klein, Stephanie Visconti, ” Klein, ” Visconti, Stephanie Visconti's Organizations: New York CNN, Democrats, Republican, Congressional, Republicans, Democratic, Biden, Trump, GOP, New York Democrats, Democrat, Nassau County Democratic, CNN, Grassroots, New York City Hall, New York Rep, Bloomberg, Getty, National Center for Suburban Studies, Hofstra University, Nassau County Democrats, Democratic Party, Nassau County GOP, New York Post, Long Islanders Builders Institute, Psychiatric, Republican Gov, ICE, George Santos ’ volleyball, Senate, Suozzi, Long, Engage Locations: Plainview, New York, Long, Nassau County, Glen Cove, American, , Long Island, , York, Nassau, Massapequa , New York, Suozzi, Israel, ” Cairo, Pilip, it’s … Montgomery, Bucks, Pennsylvania, Oakland County , Michigan, America’s, New York City, York City, Queens, Texas, Cortez, Macedonian, North Carolina, New Hyde
But Republicans are thriving on Long Island, and they could win the upcoming special election. AdvertisementRepublican Anne Donnelly won the Nassau County district attorney's race in 2021. Republicans actually have a benchRepublicans in recent years have begun to claw back power across Long Island. Joe Cairo, the chairman of the Nassau County Republican Committee, is currently interviewing roughly 22 individuals for the seat. But Republicans can't be discounted in the district given the current political shifts on Long Island.
Persons: George Santos, , Trump, Joe Biden, they've, Santos, Kathy Hochul, Lee Zeldin, Nick LaLota, Anthony D'Esposito, Andrew Garbarino, Republican Anne Donnelly, Mary Altaffer Zeldin, Robert Zimmerman, Bruce Blakeman, Laura Curran, Sen, Todd Kaminsky, Republican Ed Romaine, Alex Brandon, Joe Cairo, Mazi Melesa, Elaine Phillips, Jack Martins, Mike Sapraicone, Kellen Curry, Tom Suozzi, Hochul, Suozzi, Hakeem Jeffries, Jay Jacobs, Anna Kaplan Organizations: New, Congressional, Service, Republicans, Republican, Gov, Democrat, Republican Long, Hochul, GOP, AP, Democratic, NYPD, Nassau, Nassau County Republican, Air Force, Long Islanders, The New York Times, Nassau County Democratic Party Locations: Long, North Shore, Queens, United States, Nassau, Suffolk, Nassau County, New York State, Mazi Melesa Pilip, New York City, Santos, Glen, Brooklyn
A video of a white-haired county executive in Long Island, New York, hit with water balloons as part of a local parade tradition is falsely described online as showing former U.S. Vice President Mike Pence. A pinned comment by the author reads: “The water balloons and soaker guns are a long tradition at the Stewart Manor parade. I had fun even if I got a little wet!”However, a tweet shared almost 9,000 times said: “Watch Mike Pence get smacked in the head by a water balloon!” (here), with many users responding to the post as though the video shows Pence. Another viral tweet was captioned: “Breaking News: After saying he doesn't care about struggling American cities - Mike Pence is hit by kids throwing water balloons” (here). The clip shows a Nassau County, New York politician hit by a water balloon as part of a parade tradition, not Mike Pence.
Persons: Mike Pence, Pence, Bruce Blakeman’s, Tucker Carlson, ” Carlson, , ” Pence, Read Organizations: Nassau, Mets, Yankees, Facebook, Republican, Reuters, Ukraine, SPAN, CBS Locations: Long Island , New York, Nassau County, Stewart, Iowa, Russia, U.S, United States, Nassau County , New York
“It is a crisis situation,” Ms. Hochul acknowledged on Tuesday. “There’ll be literally thousands more individuals coming across the border and ultimately find their way up to the State of New York.”Counties near the city are now bracing for overflow, some more willingly than others. The executive of the Democratic stronghold of Westchester County, just to New York City’s north, is open to welcoming some undocumented migrants from the city’s overflowing shelter system. “We are not a sanctuary county,” Mr. Blakeman said. Deputies with the Rockland County Sheriff’s Department sat a few yards away in cream-colored cruisers, ready to block the entrance of any approaching bus.
A Long Island Republican warned of a "suburban uprising" over Gov. Bruce Blakeman said that Hochul's plan would trample over the autonomy of local communities. For generations, Long Island was a GOP bastion, filled with fiscally and socially conservative voters from across the political spectrum. Hochul's proposal would push for more multifamily housing developments near Long Island Rail Road stations. Still, her plan remains a tough sell for other Long Island politicians.
Rep. George Santos has admitted he lied about his résumé, but has denied committing any crimes. Republican officials in New York said Rep. George Santos (R., N.Y.) should resign from Congress amid investigations into the freshman lawmaker, who has faced scrutiny for his campaign finances and lies he told during his campaign. “His lies were not mere fibs. He disgraced the House of Representatives,” said Nassau County Republican Chairman Joseph Cairo. He was joined in the call by Rep. Anthony D’Esposito (R., N.Y.), Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman and other officials.
“George Santos’ campaign last year was a campaign of deceit, lies and fabrication,” Nassau County GOP Chairman Joe Cairo said at a news conference with other party officials. But House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., said that Cairo’s call for Santos’ resignation doesn’t affect his thinking on the issue. The New York State Conservative party said it stands with the Nassau County GOP in calling for Santos’ resignation in a statement. It will work itself out in the end.”Nassau County GOP officials initially endorsed Santos in the 2022 election cycle. Wednesday's announcement from Nassau County officials also comes amid several investigations into Santos' campaign and other calls for him to resign.
WASHINGTON, Jan 11 (Reuters) - Embattled U.S. Representative George Santos said he had no plans to heed fellow New York Republicans' calls to step down, a plea they made on Wednesday due to what they called "lie after lie after lie" about his career and history. The New York Republicans made their plea at a news conference two days after a nonpartisan watchdog accused Santos of breaking campaign finance laws in a filing with the Federal Election Commission. "It's just lie after lie after lie. Republican Representative Nick Langworthy from western New York and Representative Anthony D'Esposito, who represents a district next to that of Santos, were also among those calling on the first-term congressman to step down. During the news conference, officials said they would direct Santos' constituents to Representative D'Esposito in some cases, who had agreed to help residents of Santos' district.
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