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  • What Tom Suozzi’s Win Means for Democrats

    What Tom Suozzi’s Win Means for Democrats

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    Tom Suozzi’s victory in yesterday’s special House election on Long Island brings Democrats one seat closer to recapturing the majority they lost two years ago. But in the run-up to Election Day, party leaders were leery about making too much of the closely watched contest—win or lose.

    “This is a local race,” House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries told me when I asked what a Suozzi win would say about the Democrats’ chances in November. Jeffries had just finished rallying a crowd of a few hundred health-care workers on the first day of early voting. The Brooklyn Democrat stands to become House speaker if the party can pick up another four seats later this year. His very presence in Suozzi’s district belied his attempt to downplay its significance.

    This was as national as a contest for a single House seat gets. Democrats poured millions of dollars into the compressed campaign brought about by the expulsion in December of Representative George Santos, the Republican who’d won this swing seat after selling voters on an invented life story. The election became a test case for the political salience of the GOP’s attacks on President Joe Biden’s handling of immigration and the influx of migrants over the southern border. Suozzi’s opponent, Mazi Pilip, used nearly all her campaign ads to tie him to Biden’s border policies. Suozzi, meanwhile, took a firmer stance on the border than many Democrats and assailed Mazi for opposing the bipartisan deal that Senate Republicans killed last week.

    Suozzi’s message prevailed, and his victory could offer Democrats, including the beleaguered president, a road map for rebutting Republicans on immigration in battleground states and suburban districts this fall. Notably, Suozzi broke with Democrats who have waved off voter concerns about the border as a GOP-manufactured crisis; he called for higher spending to fortify the border and urged the deportation of migrants accused of assaulting New York City police officers.

    Yesterday’s election drew outsize attention not only because it involved Santos’s old seat, but also because New York’s Third District is one Democrats will need if they want any hope of regaining the House majority. Biden carried the district by eight points in the 2020 election, but Santos won it by seven two years later. With about 93 percent of the votes counted last night, Suozzi was winning by nearly eight points.

    His win narrows a Republican majority in the House, which has already been nearly impossible for Speaker Mike Johnson to govern. In a signal of just how vital the contest was, the House impeached Homeland Security Secretary Alexander Mayorkas by a single vote hours before the New York polls closed. Had Republicans waited even a day longer, Suozzi’s vote might have saved Mayorkas the indignity. (His job is almost certainly safe; the Democratic-led Senate is expected to acquit him.)

    Political prognosticators frequently warn against reading too much into special elections, which usually attract low turnout and have a mixed track record of predicting future contests. And this race was even more special than most: A snowstorm that dampened turnout made drawing national conclusions more difficult. As usual, Democratic voters were more likely than Republicans to vote early or by mail, leaving the GOP reliant on voters braving the weather on Election Day.

    The election pitted two competing dynamics against each other. Democrats have recently overperformed in off-year and special elections across the country, benefiting from a political base of higher-educated, higher-income suburban voters who are more likely to turn out for lower-profile campaigns. But Republicans have bucked that trend on Long Island, capturing virtually all of the area’s congressional seats and local offices since 2020. Central to that comeback has been the resurgence of the Nassau County GOP, which for decades was known as one of the nation’s most formidable political machines. “We took the wind out of their sails for years,” Suozzi told me when I interviewed him recently, “but they’re back to being the strongest Republican machine in New York State.”

    Suozzi has been a fixture in the district for the past three decades. A former Nassau county executive, he held the House seat for three terms before giving it up to mount an unsuccessful bid for governor in 2022. Then came Santos. In Pilip, Republicans picked as their nominee a little-known county legislator who ran a cautious campaign aimed at minimizing mistakes that could cost her votes. She agreed to just one debate a few days before the election, and when the Nassau County Republicans held their biggest rally of the campaign in late January, they scheduled it for a Saturday, when Pilip, who observes the Jewish Sabbath, could not attend.

    Suozzi made himself far more accessible both to reporters and to voters, and he tried to define Pilip from the outset of the race as an extremist who would vote for a national abortion ban. With help from national Democratic campaign committees, Suozzi ran a huge number of negative ads about Pilip. The bombardment demonstrated that he wasn’t taking the race for granted. But it also carried the risk of giving Pilip visibility she wasn’t earning for herself. “She was basically unknown outside of Great Neck, which is a small area,” former Representative Peter King, a Republican who backed Pilip, told me. “Yet he was putting her picture up all over, and her name, And it’s an unusual name, so you remember.”

    The strategy reflected Suozzi’s belief that regaining the seat would be tougher than most political observers assumed. Sure, Biden had carried the district easily in 2020 and voters likely regretted electing a GOP con artist two years later. But Democrats discovered last fall that Santos’s election did not seem to hurt other Republican candidates in local races on Long Island. And they knew that tying Pilip to Donald Trump, who remains popular in many parts of Long Island, would not be a sufficient tactic.

    In the final weeks Suozzi leaned into his record as a bipartisan dealmaker, distancing himself from Biden while touting his work in helping found the Problem Solvers Caucus in the House. Polls had given him a slim but not insurmountable lead. By the time the race was called last night, Suozzi’s initial reaction was simply relief. “Thank God,” he said with a long exhale as he addressed his supporters. Suozzi was speaking for himself after a campaign filled with bitter attacks, but he might as well have been speaking for his party, too.

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    Russell Berman

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  • Tom Suozzi Flips Santos Seat, Shrinking House GOP Majority

    Tom Suozzi Flips Santos Seat, Shrinking House GOP Majority

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    Tom Suozzi speaks following his special election victory on February 13, 2024 in Woodbury, New York.
    Photo: Getty Images

    In a special election to fill the vacancy left by the expulsion of Republican congressman George Santos, former Democratic congressman Tom Suozzi defeated first-time Republican candidate Mazi Pilip in New York’s Third Congressional District. Souzzi won by a narrow but incontestable margin: 54 percent to 46 percent with 93 percent of the expected vote reported. His win reduces the already-small GOP House majority to three seats. The win continues a streak of strong Democratic performances in special elections since the 2022 midterms.

    Suozzi was helped by Santos’s messy exit from Congress and by snowy weather, which disproportionately affected Republican voters who prefer to cast ballots in person on Election Day. Pilip thought widespread unhappiness with crime and with the migrant crisis in the urban-suburban New York district (encompassing a small part of Queens and most of Nassau County) would be her ace in the hole. However, Suozzi closely identified himself with the bipartisan border-security legislation that House Republicans killed last month and has long been considered a party centrist (particularly during his unsuccessful primary challenge to Governor Kathy Hochul in 2022).

    Pilip’s unusual biography (she is a Jewish Ethiopian immigrant by way of Israel who once served in the Israeli Defense Forces) was a positive and negative factor in her race. Certainly there were voters post-Santos who wanted more of a known quantity. But her inconsistent relationship with the GOP and the MAGA movement may have been an even bigger problem in a low-turnout special election where the Republican base needed to show up at the polls. Naturally, Donald Trump blamed her defeat on her uncertain attitude about him, making this Election Night comment on Truth Social:

    Trump’s right that November could be a new ballgame in the Third District and generally. Turnout patterns in a general election differ from those of a special election — particularly if it doesn’t snow a lot on Election Day. There is also a significant chance that the district lines will be redrawn after the New York Court of Appeals tossed out the current map in December, as Politico reported:

    New York’s top court is giving Democrats another shot at drawing congressional lines in 2024, smoothing the path for pickups for the party in a state where they underperformed in 2022 and helped hand House control to Republicans.

    A 4-3 decision by Court of Appeals … ordered a bipartisan commission that deadlocked last year to reconvene and produce new draft plans by the end of February.

    The Democratic-dominated state Legislature will then vote on the new maps. If the maps are voted down by the commission, legislators would have the power to draw maps themselves.

    New York, along with its deep-blue West Coast counterpart, California, will likely offer a host of competitive House races that could determine control of the chamber in 2025. The Suozzi win, while a temporary victory, is a good sign for the Democratic Party’s prospects of flipping the House this fall.


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    Ed Kilgore

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  • The Special Election That Could Give Democrats Hope for November

    The Special Election That Could Give Democrats Hope for November

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    In late 2021, Tom Suozzi made an announcement that exasperated Democratic Party leaders: The third-term representative would give up a reelection bid for his highly competitive New York House district to mount a long-shot primary challenge against Governor Kathy Hochul.

    Suozzi got trounced, but the ripple effects of his ill-fated run extended far beyond his Long Island district. Democrats ended up losing their narrow majority in the House, in part because the seat Suozzi vacated went to a little-known Republican named George Santos. He’s not so little-known anymore. Nor is he in Congress, having been expelled in December after his colleagues discovered that his stated biography was a fiction and that his campaign was an alleged criminal enterprise.

    In a special election next week, Suozzi will try to reclaim the seat he abandoned—and bring the Democrats one step closer to recapturing the House. He’s made amends with party leaders (including Hochul), but he’s not apologizing. “I don’t regret any of my decisions,” Suozzi told me recently. “When things don’t work out, that’s the way it is.”

    A pro-business moderate, Suozzi helped start the cross-party Problem Solvers Caucus in the House after Donald Trump won the presidency. He told me that his penchant for bipartisanship makes him “a very poor candidate” in a Democratic primary—he’s now lost two such gubernatorial campaigns by more than 50 points—but a much better one in a general election.

    Officials in both parties give Suozzi a slight edge; he has more money and is much better known than his GOP opponent, Mazi Pilip, a county legislator who spent her teenage years in Israel and served in the Israeli Defense Forces. But Suozzi is trying to run as an underdog, shunning a Democratic brand that he believes has been soiled on Long Island by voter frustration with the migrant crisis, the high cost of living, and turmoil overseas. He’s kept his distance from President Joe Biden, who, according to both Democratic and Republican strategists, is no more popular in the district than Trump. “If I run my campaign to say, ‘I’m Tom Suozzi. I’m the Democrat, and my opponent’s the Republican,’ I lose this race,” Suozzi said at a rally before members of the carpenters’ union on Saturday.

    The third congressional district borders the blue bastion of New York City and includes a sliver of Queens, but Republicans have clobbered Democrats across Long Island in recent years. Tuesday’s special election represents the Democrats’ first attempt to claw back some of that territory and test out messages that they hope can resonate in suburban swing districts across the country this fall.

    Like other Democrats, Suozzi is emphasizing his support for abortion rights, an issue that has helped the party limit GOP gains since the overturning of Roe v. Wade. But he’s also pitching himself as a bipartisan dealmaker—his campaign slogan is “Let’s fix this!” Suozzi is betting that voters are angered as much by congressional inaction on issues such as immigration and border security as they are by Biden or his policies. If he’s right, the GOP’s rejection this week of a bipartisan border deal that its leaders had initially demanded will play into his hands.

    Whether Suozzi’s campaign proves effective next week will offer clues about the swing districts that could determine control of Congress. A win could point the way for Democratic candidates to redirect attacks on Biden’s record and ease fears that the border impasse could be an insurmountable liability this fall. But his defeat in a district that ought to be winnable for Democrats would suggest that the party is in real trouble as the general election begins.


    Next week’s election will also serve as a test of whether Democrats can turn out voters for a candidate who, like Biden, doesn’t inspire much enthusiasm.

    Suozzi, 61, is a familiar figure on Long Island; he became a mayor at 31 and then won two terms as a county executive overseeing a population of 1.3 million people in Nassau County. But he’s also suffered his share of defeats. Eliot Spitzer beat him by more than 60 points in the 2006 primary for governor. Suozzi then lost two campaigns for county executive before winning a House seat in 2016. “He felt that he was destined to be president of the United States,” former Representative Peter King, a Republican who served alongside Suozzi in the House and has known him for decades, told me. “Tom started off as the young superstar, and then suddenly you become old.”

    On Saturday, local labor organizers amassed several hundred members of the carpenters’ union in a banquet hall for the rally. Most of them had been bused from outside the district, and many of them weren’t exactly excited to be there. “We’re here under protest,” one union member grumbled as I searched for actual Suozzi supporters in the crowd. The murmuring laborers showed so little interest in the speakers who were touting Suozzi that the candidate at one point awkwardly grabbed the microphone and implored them to pay attention.

    Some of the attendees who did live in Nassau County weren’t thrilled about the Democrat, repeating attacks from GOP ads that have been airing nonstop in recent weeks. “Suozzi’s terrible on the border,” said Jackson Klyne, 44, who told me he didn’t plan to vote for either Suozzi or Pilip next week. A Biden voter in 2020, Klyne said that “it would probably be Trump” for him in November.

    Suozzi must also win over Democrats who are unhappy that he abandoned his congressional seat to challenge Hochul, leading to the election of Santos. “It was a dangerous choice,” Stephanie Visconti, a 47-year-old attorney from New Hyde Park, told me. “I thought it was self-serving.”

    Visconti volunteers with Engage Long Island, an affiliate of the progressive organizing group Indivisible that endorsed a primary challenger to Suozzi for Congress in 2020. But she fully backs him now; on Saturday, she and other members of the group were knocking on doors for his campaign. “He is the right candidate for right now,” she said, citing the need for Democrats to win back control of the House. “Looking at the global big picture, this for us is the first step toward making bigger and broader changes.”


    Biden carried the district in 2020, but Republicans have been ascendant on Long Island ever since. They swept the House races in the midterms and won big local races again last year. Santos defeated the Democratic nominee in the third district by seven points in 2022, and Suozzi isn’t sure he would have won had he been on the ballot. When I asked him what he’d say to people who argue that he bears some responsibility for Santos’s election, Suozzi replied, “‘Thank you for your endorsement, because you’re saying I’m the only person who could have won.’”

    Republican leaders are relying on Biden’s unpopularity and their party’s prodigious turnout machine to keep the seat. They picked Pilip as their candidate—the special election had no primary—in part because in the aftermath of October 7, they hoped that her connection to Israel would resonate in a district where about 20 percent of the electorate is Jewish. (Suozzi is also a longtime supporter of Israel. Within a week of Pilip’s selection, he traveled there to meet with the families of hostages held by Hamas.)

    With only a few exceptions, Pilip has kept a low profile for a political newcomer. She’s agreed to just one debate with Suozzi, three days before the election, and she hasn’t held many publicly promoted campaign events. (Her campaign did not make her available for an interview.) Nassau County Republicans scheduled their biggest rally of the election for a Saturday, when Pilip, who observes the Sabbath, would not be able to attend. She filmed a short video to be played in her absence. “The strategy is intentional,” Steve Israel, a Democrat who represented the third district in the House for 16 years, told me. “She is untested, and Republicans fear that she will say something that could effectively lose the election. They’d rather take their lumps for hiding her.”

    That approach could be risky given the district’s experience with Santos. “We’ve already had someone we didn’t know. We don’t want that again,” Judi Bosworth, a Democratic former town supervisor, said as she campaigned with Suozzi.

    Abortion has been a central issue in the race; Democratic ads have warned that a vote for Pilip could lead to a national ban. But in the closing weeks, the migrant crisis has come to the fore. GOP commercials blame Suozzi and Biden for the “invasion” at the southern border, and Suozzi has criticized Pilip for opposing the bipartisan border-security deal unveiled this week in the Senate. Although national issues are dominating the race, neither candidate wants to be associated with their party’s leaders in Washington. Pilip, until recently a registered Democrat, has declined to say whether she voted for Trump in 2020 and has yet to endorse his comeback bid. When House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries spoke at a rally for Suozzi on Saturday, the Democrat’s campaign did not invite the press. The day before, the Pilip campaign kept quiet about an appearance by Speaker Mike Johnson.

    The outcome next week could have an immediate impact in the narrowly divided House, where Republicans have only a three-vote majority. Earlier this week, Republicans fell just one vote short of impeaching Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas; a Suozzi victory would likely keep it on hold, at least for the time being. But Suozzi wants to make a deeper impression in a second stint in Congress. He has campaigned not as a dispassionate centrist but as an impatient negotiator anxious to get back to the bargaining table.

    He had wanted a bigger job altogether, but he assured me that he would not be bored by a return to the House. I asked him what message his victory would send. He rattled off a list of bipartisan deals he wants to strike—on the border, Ukraine, housing, climate change, and more. “If I win,” he said, “I can go to my colleagues in Washington and say, ‘Wake up. This is what the people want.’”

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    Russell Berman

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  • Early voting starts Saturday for NY-3 special election between Tom Suozzi, Mazi Pilip

    Early voting starts Saturday for NY-3 special election between Tom Suozzi, Mazi Pilip

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    NEW YORK (WABC) — Early voting starts in the NY-3 special election on Saturday, but since the district is split between Queens and Nassau, there are different rules in each county.

    In Queens, voters must report to assigned voting sites, while in Nassau, voters can use any of the early voting sites.

    The candidates looking to replace expelled Congressman George Santos include Republican candidate Mazi Pilip and Democrat Tom Suozzi.

    In Queens, early voting is 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday.

    In Nassau, early voting is 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Saturday.

    Queens voters can find their early voting location here.

    There are four in the district in Queens:

    Creedmoor Hospital

    79-25 Winchester Blvd

    Queens Village, NY 11427

    Korean Community Services

    203-05 32nd Ave

    Bayside, NY 11361

    Queensborough Community College

    222-05 56th Ave

    Queens, NY 11364

    St. Luke Roman Catholic Church

    16-34 Clintonville St

    Whitestone, NY 11357

    Nassau voters can go to any of the early voting locations:

    Oyster Bay Ice Rink

    1001 Stewart Ave

    Bethpage, NY 11714

    Plainview Mid-Island JCC

    45 Manetto Hill Rd

    Plainview, NY 11803

    Glen Cove City Hall

    9 Glen St

    Glen Cove, NY 11542

    Port Washington Public Library

    1 Library Dr

    Port Washington, NY 11050

    Great Neck House

    14 Arrandale Ave

    Great Neck, NY 11023

    Gayle Community Center

    53 Orchard St

    Roslyn Heights, NY 11577

    Hicksville Levittown Hall

    201 Levittown Pkwy

    Hicksville, NY 11801

    Williston Park American Legion

    730 Willis Ave

    Williston Park, NY 11596

    Massapequa Town Hall South

    977 Hicksville Rd

    Massapequa, NY 11758

    Yes We Can Community Center

    141 Garden St

    Westbury, NY 11590

    Nassau County Board of Elections

    240 Old Country Rd

    Mineola, NY 11501

    RELATED | Candidates to replace George Santos in Congress discuss migrant crisis on campaign trail

    Kemberly Richardson has the story.

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  • Candidates to replace George Santos in Congress discuss migrant crisis on campaign trail

    Candidates to replace George Santos in Congress discuss migrant crisis on campaign trail

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    QUEENS VILLAGE, Queens (WABC) — The candidates looking to replace expelled Congressman George Santos hit the campaign trail on Thursday.

    Republican candidate Mazi Pilip called out her opponent, former Congressman Tom Suozzi, a Democrat, for what she says is his open border policy when it comes to migrants.

    Pilip, an immigrant from Israel, and Congressman Anthony D’Esposito say the way Democrats are handling the migrant crisis is having a negative impact on communities through New York City and the neighborhoods surrounding the Creedmoor Psychiatric Facility.

    “Look around me, that playground used to be full of young kids playing here, now parents tell me they are afraid to bring their children here — why? Because just across the street in the back, a massive tent city was built to house 1,000 migrants,” Pilip said.

    So far in the campaign, Pilip is known better for what she doesn’t say than what she does — including everything from government funding to why she has only committed to one debate with her challenger Suozzi.

    “I have been available to the press every time when I got the request and I am happy to speak and I have a debate coming Feb 8th…only one,” Pilip said. “When they announced my name it was only six weeks ago, it’s a short time to meet people, engage myself to be available for press and do a debate.”

    After Pilip’s event on Thursday, her opponent arrived.

    “In this post-age of George Santos, I don’t know how anybody can think they can run for U.S. Congress for the 3rd Congressional district and not be transparent with the people, not make themselves completely available in every single way,” Suozzi said.

    Suozzi also blamed Republicans with trying to mislead the public about a complicated situation.

    He said people care about the issue and want to solve it.

    “They’re focused on this issue, they want the problem solved, they’re sick of the finger-pointing, also they want to get a deal on Ukraine, and on Israel, so this is the best opportunity to make a deal in 35 years, but President Trump said ‘I don’t want you to make a deal with the border because it would give a victory to Biden and I couldn’t use it as a political issue,’” Suozzi said.

    Many think the back and forth is a moot point as the race is falling along party lines with redistricting playing a key role.

    The Bronx, which is heavily Democrat, is no longer included — but Levittown and Massapequa, both Republican strongholds, are included.

    The special election is set for Feb. 13.

    RELATED | George Santos: The Man, the Myths, the Lessons | Full Special

    “George Santos: The Man, The Myths, The Lessons,” an ABC7 New York Eyewitness News investigation, explores the rise of the politician whose path to Congress was paved with lies.

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