Jonathan Bing

Staying Close to Carolyn Maloney

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So there may be a little less at stake now for the officials girding for the opportunity to succeed Upper East Side-based Representative Carolyn Maloney. That unofficial mini-contest, of course, was contingent on Hillary Clinton having a chance of becoming president, and on Maloney having a chance of taking Clinton's place in the Senate.  read more »

Bing: Lancaster the 'Isiah Thomas of City Government'

So, there have been calls for Buildings Commissioner Patricia Lancaster's resignation since the crane collapse last month. It finally happened today, and Assemblyman Jonathan Bing thinks that's because there is an assembly hearing on the subject this Thursday.

"I was going to delve very deeply into the issue of why a building was built that caused the crane collapse, without proper permits,” Bing says.  read more »

Bing Defends Albany-Style Democracy

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Michael Bloomberg and his aides have presented the demise of their congestion pricing plan, which occurred without a floor vote in the Assembly, as an example of Albany’s well-noted dysfunction.

Not surprisingly, the view from within the Democratic-held Assembly is different.  read more »

Campaigning for Delegate



Here's a flier from Assemblyman Jonathan Bing, who is running to be a Hillary Clinton delegate from the 14th congressional district in Manhattan.

It sort of looks like he's trying to hide who he would be a delegate for, but actually, thanks to some complicated McCain-Feingold rules, delegate candidates can't feature too prominently the presidential candidate they're supporting.

Weathering Iowa

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It’s not easy being a volunteer in Iowa.

Assemblyman Jonathan Bing, who is volunteering for Hillary Clinton in Davenport, Iowa, emailed me this morning to say: “Right now I'm sitting in my car waiting for it to thaw. It's 2 degrees here right now. The wind chill is negative 12.”

An Assemblyman Does Iowa Duty for Clinton

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Council member and Hillary Clinton volunteer Bill de Blasio will be joined in Iowa by Jonathan Bing, an Upper East Side Assemblyman who will is heading to Davenport on Jan. 1 to do his part.

"They asked me to do some driving of supporters," said Bing, speaking from from North Carolina, where he’s visiting in-laws.

More after the jump.  read more »

Hillary's New York Delegates, Part One

The jostling for New York's official Democratic convention delegate spots has been quietly playing out in political circles here for some time. And since a Hillary Clinton win in New York is kind of a foregone conclusion, it's really a contest to be named by her campaign.

Officially, delegates have to run and win the spot in party elections, so anyone can still grab a slot. But the campaign has its own list, which is pretty determinative.

Here’s a list of a few of those delegates, this one coming from the 14th congressional district, based on information from two Democratic sources:  read more »

A Manhattan Fund-Raiser for Bruno, a Big Donor for Bing


Here's an invitation to Joe Bruno's Fall Fest at 7th Avenue and 51st Street, on October 17. That's quite a way away from Bruno's Rensselaer district and right in Eliot Spitzer's backyard. It's also taking place around the time some people expect the state's new Commission on Public Integrity to issue its report on Spitzer's use of state police to track Bruno's traveling. (It'll be interesting to see how he's getting there.)

This fund-raiser should, if nothing else, provide some indication of how enthusiastically donor-class Republicans are rallying around Bruno.

On an unrelated fund-raising note...On October 1, Jonathan Bing is having an event featuring Chef David Burke. It's being hosted in the home of Sally Minard, who is a pretty generous contributor to local and national Democrats.

UPDATE: A reader brought to my attention the fact that three of the four people listed on Bruno’s fun-raiser as members of the Senate Republican Campaign Committee are also members of the committee investigating the governor.

UPDATE 2: Bruno's spokeswoman, Lisa Black, emailed to say, "Members of any Senate committee are chosen by the Majority Leader based on seniority. (Just look at the members of the highly coveted Finance Committee - Majority members sitting on that committee have a decade or more of Senate tenure).  The Investigations and Government perations Committee members were in place far before the Governor's dirty tricks campaign, aka 'Troopergate.' "

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Maloney Raises for the Future



Tonight's "Party in the Garden" at the home of Congresswoman Carolyn Maloney might be about more than raising money for Democrats and for her congressional reelection. According to one close Maloney supporter I spoke to, tonight also serves to build her election war-chest for a 2010 Senate run if Hillary Clinton wins the presidential election.

Asked directly about the possibility that funds raised tonight are at all connected with the prospect of a Senate campaign, Maloney's office was dismissive.

"New Yorkers already have two great U.S. senators who, working with the rest of our congressional delegation, are providing strong and effective representation for the Empire State on Capitol Hill," Maloney said in a statement read to me by consultant George Arzt.

"The funds that I am now raising will be devoted to preserving and enhancing the Democratic majority in the house as well as my own reelection to Congress."

But Conrad Foa, a supporter who said he will be attending the party, seemed open to the idea that the money could be used for another possibility.

"That door is there for her to knock on," he said. "Maybe she stands first in line or very close to first in line to that door, but I feel that she has an unerring political sense to do what's best for her constituency. The question is what does she perceive her constituency will be, and I think she'll at least have the funds to do what's best."

Either way, tonight's event -- which will be held at her 92nd street home -- will only be the latest event to invite chatter about Maloney eyeing the Senate seat, according to one Democratic operative.

"There has apparently been fund-raising events the congresswoman has held so far where she has been introduced as 'the next U.S. senator from the state of New York'," the operative said, adding that whether or not the funds will be set aside for her own run, "what she would be able to do is use that money to raise her profile nationally."

Assemblyman Jonathan Bing, who will be attending the party tonight, told me he did not know how the funds would be spent. But he did say that he'd like to see Maloney in the upper Capitol chamber.


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Ed Ott Gets Going on Affordable Housing

Practically every major Democrat in the city was at the corner of 14th Street and First Avenue yesterday afternoon to announce the formation of a what they say is the largest housing coalition in the city’s history.

The group, New York Is Our Home, includes labor and tenant groups, the Working Families Party and others.

The most heated rhetoric (video here) came from the Central Labor Council's Ed Ott, who said, “The price of housing in this city is effectively theft” and that affordable housing units, like the ones in Stuyvesant Town behind him, “are being stolen by the greed of developers and the market.”

Which drew applause and energetic head nods from the crowd of elected officials behind him.

In attendance at the rally were Christine Quinn, Bill Thompson, Betsy Gotbaum, Tom Duane, John Sabini, Ruben Diaz, Jr., Keith Wright, Jonathan Bing, Linda Rosenthal, Dan Garodnick, Eric Gioia and Charles Barron, among others. Most of them spoke but none matched Ott’s directness.

After the speeches, the group formed a human chain around Stuy Town, which is several blocks long, and marched down to Union Square.

Practically every major Democrat in the city was at the corner of 14th Street and First Avenue yesterday afternoon to announce the formation of a what they say is the largest housing coalition in the city’s history.

The group, New York Is Our Home, includes labor and tenant groups, the Working Families Party and others.

The most heated rhetoric (video here) came from the Central Labor Council's Ed Ott, who said, “The price of housing in this city is effectively theft” and that affordable housing units, like the ones in Stuyvesant Town behind him, “are being stolen by the greed of developers and the market.”

Which drew applause and energetic head nods from the crowd of elected officials behind him.

In attendance at the rally were Christine Quinn, Bill Thompson, Betsy Gotbaum, Tom Duane, John Sabini, Ruben Diaz, Jr., Keith Wright, Jonathan Bing, Linda Rosenthal, Dan Garodnick, Eric Gioia and Charles Barron, among others. Most of them spoke but none matched Ott’s directness.

After the speeches, the group formed a human chain around Stuy Town, which is several blocks long, and marched down to Union Square.

UPDATE: Adolfo Carrion, Brian Kavanagh and Adam Clayton Powell IV also attended.

More (Pre-)Endorsements for Assembly

Another development in the Assembly race that's not quite underway:

City Councilman Dan Garodnick and Assemblyman Jonathan Bing have endorsed Micah Kellner.

Kellner is running against Susan Chamlin, an aide to state Senator Liz Krueger.

-- Azi Paybarah

Klein: Never Mind

Democratic candidate Barry Klein, who is Assemblyman Jonathan Bing's chief of staff, is about to drop out of the race for the Pete Grannis Assembly seat, according to a source familiar with the campaign. -- Azi Paybarah

Maloney for Kellner

U.S. Representative Carolyn Maloney will endorse Micah Kellner for that East Side Assembly seat, according to a knowledgeable Democrat.

Also running are two candidates currently on staff for other elected officials. Barry Klein is Assemblyman Jonathan Bing's chief of staff and Susan Chamlin is an aide to state Senator Liz Krueger. Kellner works for city Comptroller Bill Thompson.

The race, on some level, is a proxy fight for East Side supremacy. While the immediate prize is the Assembly seat, the race could also turn out to be a useful demonstration of strength for anyone looking to run for Maloney's congressional seat when she retires.

-- Azi Paybarah

Ben, I think I have

Ben,

I think I have a good one for you. I don't know if you remember Zachary Greenhill, the former Reagan era CIA agent who ran against Jonathan Bing for Assembly in 2002. I believe you wrote an article for the New York Sun regarding Zach's exploits in South America during Iran-Contra. Well I learned yesterday that Zach requested an application for the Independent Judicial Screening Panel for a vacant Upper East Side/Chelsea Civil Court Seat and that he is planning to run in the September primary. If you have any questions please feel free to email me or give me a call.

Clubbing

We've been deluged with news from a busy night at Manhattan's political clubs last night, the bottom line being that Carolyn Maloney, while she may not look it, is a street-fighter. The inside favorites -- Giff, Stringer, Jessica Lappin and Dan Garodnick for City Council, and Eve Rachel Markewich for Surrogate -- all won handily at the Lexington Democratic Club, as Maloney and Jonathan Bing put down a little revolt in what's become a really riotous corner of city politics.
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East Side Hardball

We hear that some serious arm-twisting is being conducted on Giff's behalf at the moment among the well-bred members of the Lexington Democratic Club.

The outline, as we understand it, is that Gifford thought he had the club's support until Fields partisans, led by Trudy Mason, starting engaging in the time-honored practice of packing the club with new, pro-Virginia members.  read more »

The club's executive board is meeting tonight, with the former president of the club, John Mills, leading the push to set an earlier date for the endorsement meeting, in order to keep those new members off the books. It has gotten a bit, we're told, "raucous."

We also hear that Giff himself, along with Jonathan Bing and an aide to Rep. Carolyn Maloney, have been making calls and twisting arms. The folks at the Lex Club must be feeling rather important today.