
 
        
         
		OPINION 
 A pandemic is no time to for us to  
 abandon basic law-and-order! 
 Now is the time for more democracy,  
 not more obvious voter supression! 
 The coronavirus outbreak  
 has laid bare a lot of  
 harmful elements of our  
 culture. I’d like to address a  
 particularly obscure one: designating  
 petitions. 
 Designating  petitions  
 are what politicians in New  
 York  use  to  make  themselves  
 eligible to run as candidates  
 of  a  political  party.  
 The candidates must collect  
 a  certain  amount  of  signatures, 
   in  a  given  period  of  
 time  (normally  about  five  
 weeks), from voters who live  
 in the district they are running  
 for and are enrolled in  
 the  party  they  wish  to  represent. 
  The signatures must  
 be gathered by someone also  
 enrolled  in  that  party,  or  a  
 notary.  New  York  requires  
 far  more  signatures  than  
 any other state. 
 Among  those  who  follow  
 this sort of thing, New York is  
 well-known to have the most  
 restrictive ballot access laws  
 in  the  country.  To  navigate  
 the process safely, candidates  
 COURIER LIFE,22      MARCH 27-APRIL 2, 2020 
 need to hire election lawyers,  
 which  costs  them  thousands  
 of  dollars.  It  appears  a  majority  
 of  all  election  lawyers  
 practicing in the country are  
 New Yorkers. 
 This  year,  because  the  
 process  of  gathering  signatures  
 is emphatically not social  
 distancing,  the  time  period  
 for collecting signatures  
 was  abruptly  curtailed  and  
 the number of signatures required  
 for any offi ce was cut  
 by 70 percent. The sky did not  
 fall  with  these  much  lower  
 requirements. 
 Nevertheless,  scores  of  
 campaigns  across  the  city  
 are  having  the  validity  of  
 their  petitions  challenged.  
 If  they  lose  the  challenge —  
 and  a  signature  can  be  declared  
 invalid,  for  instance,  
 by  an  eligible  voter  printing  
 instead  of  signing  their  
 name, or signing in ink that  
 isn’t blue or black — the candidate  
 will  be  knocked  off  
 the ballot. The process of defending  
 their ballot position  
 will  expose  the  candidates,  
 their  campaign  workers,  
 and  Board  of  Elections  employees  
 to  the  risk  of  viral  
 infection. 
 The  purpose  of  the  petition  
 law is a fl awed one: making  
 it  harder  to  get  on  the  
 ballot  curtails  “nuisance  
 candidates,” candidates with  
 no shot  at winning who  clog  
 up  the  ballot  and  notionally  
 make  it  diffi cult for voters  
 to  fi nd  their  preferred  candidate. 
   But  no  one  has  ever  
 been  able  to  show  that  nuisance  
 candidates  cause  any  
 harm.  The  most  extreme  
 case, the California gubernatorial  
 recall  of  2003,  had  134  
 candidates  but  the  top  four  
 garnered  97.3%  of  the  vote.  
 America’s  best  Republican  
 governor of the 21st Century,  
 Arnold Schwarzenegger, was  
 elected by over a million vote  
 margin. 
 What the petition laws actually  
 do  is  protect  the  status  
 quo,  by making  it  easier  
 for incumbents to avoid even  
 having  to  face  elections.  In  
 my  own  experience,  I  have  
 seen  the  same  errors  get  
 minor  candidates  knocked  
 off  for  fraud  while  being  ignored  
 when  perpetrated  by  
 the  campaigns  of  members  
 of congress. So as usual, our  
 current  system  in New York  
 really just stems from an instinctive  
 fear  of  democracy  
 by our politicians. 
 Nick Rizzo is a Democratic  
 District  Leader  representing  
 the  50th  Assembly  District  
 and  a  political  consultant  
 who  lives  in  Greenpoint.  
 Follow  him  on  Twitter  at  @ 
 NickRizzo. 
 WORDS OF  
 RIZZDOM 
 Nick Rizzo 
 Our  progressive  friends  
 are  now  demanding  
 that  due  to  the  coronavirus, 
   we  let  criminals  
 out  of  jail  and  lay  off  arrests  
 and  prosecutions.  Unfortunately, 
   our  Democrat  
 elected  officials  are  dutifully  
 following their marching  
 orders. 
 Here’s a novel idea: don’t  
 commit  crimes  against  innocent  
 New Yorkers and you  
 won’t  have  to  worry  about  
 being  in  jail  during  these  
 times.  
 Brooklyn  Councilman  
 Brad  Lander  said,  “New  
 York  City  and  New  York  
 State  have  a  responsibility  
 to shrink the jail population  
 by halting arrests.” 
 Indeed,  there  may  be  legitimate  
 concerns about the  
 population on Rikers Island  
 under  these  circumstances,  
 but  telling  criminals  they  
 are free to commit their bad  
 deeds without fear of arrest  
 is  ludicrous.  Since  the  jail  
 population  is  about  half  of  
 what  it  was  six  years  ago,  
 there  is  plenty  of  room  to  
 socially  space  inmates  and  
 provide proper medical  service. 
  Doing this makes more  
 sense  than  releasing  criminals  
 and halting arrests. 
 Now, more  than  ever, we  
 need  order.  However,  our  
 own Brooklyn District Attorney, 
   Eric Gonzalez,  publicly  
 announced  that  his  office  
 will  immediately  stop  prosecuting  
 certain  offenses.  
 His  spokesman  actually  
 said  that  one  of  the  specific  
 crimes that will get a pass is  
 shoplifting. This is nuts.  
 During these times, Gonzalez  
 is  telling  everyone  
 that they can steal from our  
 local  supermarket  or  any  
 other  business  that  is  still  
 permitted  to  be  open.  Some  
 businesses are going to have  
 a tough enough time staying  
 af loat,  but  now  they  must  
 also  worry  about  losing  
 money  to  shoplifters.  Now,  
 managers  and  employees  
 will  also  have  to  act  more  
 as  security  guards,  rather  
 than  getting  needed  stock  
 to  the  shelves  and  helping  
 their paying customers. Announcing  
 that you can steal  
 without  worrying  about  
 prosecution  is  negligence  
 by anyone, but even more so  
 for a top “prosecutor.”  
 Mayor Bill de Blasio has  
 also  jumped  on  the  bandwagon. 
   He  recently  announced  
 that  the  city  will  
 be  reviewing  200  inmates  
 in city jails  for release on a  
 rolling basis. 
 Thankfully,  NYPD  Commissioner  
 Dermot  Shea  has  
 said  he  is  not  going  along  
 with  the  advice  of  the  Legal  
 Aid  Society,  New  York  City  
 Public Advocate Jumaane  
 Williams,  Councilman  
 Lander and many  other  lawmakers  
 to  slow  down  on  arrests. 
   He  said,  “We  have  no  
 intention of strategically cutting  
 enforcement specifi cally  
 related  to  the  coronavirus.”  
 At least there is one adult in  
 the room at City Hall. 
 We already have a public  
 health  crisis; we  don’t need  
 a public safety one also. 
 Bob  Capano  has  worked  
 for Brooklyn Republican and  
 Democrat  elected  officials,  
 and has been an adjunct political  
 science  professor  for  
 over 15 years. Follow him on  
 twitter @bobcapano 
 THE RIGHT  
 VIEW 
 Bob Capano