Japanese electronics maker Panasonic used to use the slogan
"Just slightly ahead of our time"
Readers of this blog have been treated to similar ahead-of-the-curve intelligence regarding various economic issues. And now, might I remind you what I wrote when Hillary Clinton announced she was stepping down from the Senate to serve as Secretary of State
New York's next Senator? by Ironman | November 23, 2008 at 1:21 PM
But with Eliot Spitzer and now most likely Hillary Clinton out of statewide office, Governor Paterson now gets to decide who will be the next great NY state politician.
The Albany Times-Union has a story about the choices facing Governor Paterson. He has taken his own name out of contention, but there are plenty of ambitious Democrats eager for a move up in the world. http://timesunion.com/AspStories/story.asp?storyID=742556
A few crass political calculations come to mind here. Appointing Attorney General Andrew Cuomo removes a possible primary opponent to Paterson. Having failed in 2002 to win the gubernatorial nod, Cuomo may try again; but as of yet Paterson's ratings are pretty good and he obviously would have a huge bloc vote supprting him in a primary race.
The other element here is the 2010 NY Democrat ticket violates the time honored "balanced ticket" approach. David Paterson and Chuck Schumer are both from NYC; which casts less than 30% of the statewide vote. Therefore there will be great interest in considering an upstate/suburban candidate; especially as Daniel Moynihan and Hillary Clinton were perceived as non-NYC candidates and the state legislature is now controlled by NYC Democrats.
The other demographic concerns are that the huge white Catholic bloc in NY (which frequently votes Republican) may not have a prominent statewide Democrat candidate in '10; nor is there a woman incumbent seeking re-election statewide for the Dems in '10. Hispanic political figures are also arguing it is time for a statewide Hispanic officeholder, but a candidate like Nydia Velasquez might struggle upstate trying to hold the seat.
Given those considerations, don't be shocked if suburban Albany Congresswoman Kirsten Gillibrand http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kirsten_Gillibrand gets picked by Paterson. She fits all the necessary balancing factors as an upstate catholic woman, who has a centrist record for a Northeastern house Democrat (She is a Blue Dog). She also has been a fundraising machine in her races.
Gillibrand would need to resign her Republican oriented house seat. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_York%27s_20th_congressional_district_election,_2008 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_York%27s_20th_congressional_district, but we might do well to get a stronger candidate for the special election than millionaire Sandy Treadwell, a rather low intensity figure.
One thing we should now be painfully aware of is the Democrats have stopped doing things for self-gratification that don't make political sense. I think David Paterson will help himself with his senate appointment; even if it is perceived as yet another step away from vocal leftism.
So, I saw Kirsten Gillibrand on the radar weeks ago. And now she's been seen again
Confirmed: Kirsten Gillibrand Chosen to Fill Clinton's Senate Seat
January 22, 2009
PIX11 News ExclusivePosted 6:02pm | Updated 7:35pm
PIX NEWS is being told that Congresswoman Kirsten Gillibrand is the reported choice of Governor David Paterson to fill the U.S. Senate seat vacated by Hillary Clinton. Two Congressional sources say members of the New York delegation have been invited to join Governor Paterson for the announcement in Albany at noon tomorrow.
Of course, there's the usual NY State political intrigue. Gillibrand's awareness the Consitution contains a 2nd Amendment offends some downstate liberals, and LI gun grabber Rep. Carolyn McCarthy is making noise about a possible primary.
I expect Chuck Schumer will put the kibosh on this; especially as McCarthy hasn;t shown any recent fundraising prowess ( Think SE PA libs whining about Bob Casey, circa 2006)
But, grab the popcorn!