
 
        
         
		COURIER LIFE, APRIL 2-8, 2021 17  
 earned their turn to take  
 an elected post.  
 “It’s a concept that  
 very few people in politics  
 understand, it’s called  
 loyalty,”  Seddio said.  
 Not anyone can run  
 for an elected position  
 in their district, but Seddio  
 contends candidates  
 must have taken the time  
 to nurture ties in the community, 
  and furthermore  
 argued that crowded  
 races suck up tax dollars  
 due to the city’s campaign  
 matching programs.  
 “Everybody wants  
 things handed them to  
 them. The most important  
 thing if you decide  
 you want to run for offi  
 ce, you have to earn the  
 respect of volunteers and  
 others who are going to  
 help you get on the ballot,” 
  Seddio said. “We  
 have  over  500  people  in  
 the city of New York running  
 for the 51 council  
 seats…  if  each  of  them  
 meet the commitment  
 of  what  we’ve  done  with  
 public funding, which is 8  
 to 1, we are going to pay a  
 billion dollars!”  
 BY BEN VERDE &  
 JESSICA PARKS 
 After clearing the necessary  
 270 signatures required  
 for their names  
 to appear on the ballot, a  
 number  of  City  Council  
 hopefuls have received  
 challenges to their petitions  
 from opponents  
 claiming that the signatures  
 are illegitimate —  
 but the would-be pols are  
 shooting back, accusing  
 their detractors of engaging  
 in dirty politics during  
 a pandemic.  
 “It’s ridiculous to be  
 challenging signatures  
 during a pandemic because  
 candidates like myself  
 and our volunteers  
 are literally risking our  
 lives to collect these signatures, 
  and we’re also  
 putting voters at risk to  
 sign these petitions,” said  
 Chi Ossé, a candidate running  
 for the 36th District  
 in Bedford-Stuyvesant. 
 The petitioning  
 process 
 Under election laws,  
 politicians and their supporters  
 need to physically  
 collect the 270 signatures  
 from registered  
 voters in their districts.  
 While that threshold has  
 been lowered from the  
 previous requirement of  
 900 signatures due to the  
 pandemic, many politicos  
 had wanted the signature  
 provision abolished completely  
 — saying that inperson  
 contact put them  
 and the public at risk.  
 Signatures can be  
 deemed illegitimate for a  
 number of reasons — including  
 by proving the  
 person doesn’t live in  
 the district, or they simply  
 signed in the wrong  
 place. If a judge tosses  
 out enough signatures to  
 knock candidates below  
 the required threshold,  
 their name won’t appear  
 on the ballot for the June  
 2021 primary elections.  
 Often, however, those  
 who fi le challenges are  
 simply looking to tie candidates  
 up in costly and  
 timely litigation.  
 Ossé, for example,  
 fi led  over  2,000  signatures, 
  meaning the challenge  
 would need to fi nd  
 that over 1,700 are illegitimate, 
  which would be farfetched  
 — and yet, he still  
 needs to shell out the resources  
 to defend himself  
 in court.  
 ‘Democracy is being  
 manipulated’ 
 In  the  race  to  succeed  
 term-limited Councilmember  
 Alan Maisel  
 in  southeast  Brooklyn,  
 members of a political  
 club  headed  by  former  
 Brooklyn Democratic  
 Party boss Frank Seddio  
 fi led objections against  
 fi ve of the ten candidates. 
 “It does not surprise  
 me in the middle of the  
 pandemic… that Frank  
 Seddio and his candidate  
 would challenge our petitions  
 to run for offi ce,”  
 said Mercedes Narcisse, a  
 candidate running for the  
 46th District. 
 The candidates — Narcisse, 
  Dimple Willabus,  
 Donald Cranston, Shirley  
 Paul, and Stanley Scutt  
 — are running in the  
 election where Seddio’s  
 Thomas  Jefferson  Democratic  
 Club has endorsed  
 two other candidates, former  
 Community Board 18  
 chair Gardy Brazela and  
 retired NYPD detective  
 Judy Newton. 
 “In this instance, democracy  
 is being manipulated  
 in an attempt to  
 benefi t those who are intertwined  
 with the political  
 establishment,” Willabus  
 told Brooklyn Paper.  
 “It is a blatant misuse of  
 democracy. A simple review  
 of the objectors exposes  
 the fact that they  
 are all TJ club loyalists,  
 including its current  
 president.” 
 Seddio defended the  
 practice in an interview  
 with Brooklyn Paper —  
 arguing the tactic is regularly  
 used in politics.  
 “Quite frankly I am  
 more upset about the fact  
 that they’re amateurs,”  
 Seddio said. “It’s a game.  
 This is what we do, this  
 is part of the profession  
 of being in politics. We do  
 our  absolute  best  to  win  
 for our candidates.”  
 The former party boss  
 said  the  club’s  duel  candidates  
 have both shown  
 their loyalty to the club  
 for many years, and have  
 Candidates speak about petition objections.   Dimple Willabus 
 An old school move 
 Petition challenges persist amid the pandemic