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Wednesday, April 25, 2018

An early blue wave

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Daily Point

A special set of special elections

New York State Republicans who fear a blue wave in November found new reasons to worry in the results of Tuesday’s special elections.

Let’s start in the 10th Assembly District in Huntington, where former Suffolk County lawmaker Steve Stern, a Democrat, defeated Republican attorney Janet Smitelli by 18 percentage points. This is a district that has been in GOP hands for 40 years. It most recently was represented by Chad Lupinacci, who easily won his last two elections for the Assembly, and then led a GOP takeover of town hall in November by winning the supervisor’s race.

Some context: Stern had more name recognition than Smitelli after 12 years in the county legislature. And his work as an elder care attorney made him well-known among seniors who typically turn out at higher rates in special and off-year elections. But both parties vigorously contested this one.

Reading the tea leaves most closely has to be Republican incumbent Carl Marcellino, whose Senate district overlaps the 10th A.D. The intense enthusiasm among Democrats and dislike for President Donald Trump could spell peril for the veteran Republican. In 2016, he squeaked past Democrat James Gaughran by 1,761 votes of nearly 160,000 votes cast. The two will pair off again this year.

Just to the west of Marcellino is GOP Sen. Elaine Phillips, who also had a tough race in her inaugural run in 2016. Phillips defeated businessman Adam Haber by fewer than 3,200 votes out of almost 148,000 cast. Her opponent in this go-round will be North Hempstead Town Councilwoman Anna Kaplan, an Iranian-American with a compelling story of coming to the United States alone as a 13-year-old Iranian Jewish refugee. A blue wave could put the seat in play.

Finally, will Stern’s win help Sen. Tom Croci make up his mind about running for re-election? The two-term Republican senator from Sayville has been waffling; the prospect of definitely being in the minority party might not be appetizing.

The upstate results

Assemb. Shelley Mayer easily kept her new Senate seat in Democratic hands after George Latimer won the job of Westchester County supervisor. Mayer’s 15-point margin on Tuesday eclipsed Latimer’s roughly 10-point win over the same opponent, Republican Julia Killian. Mayer benefited from the same enthusiasm on the ground that helped Stern.

Her victory, and that of Democrat Luis Sepulveda in the Bronx, gave the party 32 seats in the 63-seat Senate — but renegade Sen. Simcha Felder announced before the polls closed that he would continue to caucus with Republicans. One more Democratic pickup in November, never mind two or three, and he’ll be marginalized for the foreseeable future.

Still, Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo, noting that Felder is a registered Democrat despite running on the Republican and other ballot lines, released an open letter Wednesday morning imploring the Brooklyn pol to come back to the fold. The governor’s missive, however, read more like a message to the rest of the party: See, I’m trying.

And to widen the focus . . .

Two other state races might be worth noting — Republicans won the 102nd and 107th Assembly districts, which sandwich Albany, by less than 2 percentage points each, in districts where Democrats didn’t even field opponents in 2016. In 2014, the 102nd also was uncontested and the 107th went Republican by a 2-1 margin. The local results echo those nationally. Counting Tuesday’s special elections, Republicans have underperformed compared with previous elections in every congressional special election since Trump took office, according to a New York Times analysis.

But it’s still more than six months until Nov. 6. Anything can, and probably will, happen.

Michael Dobie

Talking Point

Spicey introduces Melania in NYC

As the world buzzes about Melania Trump’s broad-brimmed hat and her first state dinner, you might say Madame Tussauds nailed the timing to unveil its wax figure of the first lady in Times Square.

The menagerie is famous for lifelike figures that let you get up close and personal with celebrities. So how great it was to have Sean Spicer on hand on Wednesday for the unveiling, to tell more about the real Melania (the wax one features a cool stare, tense hands, and the blue Roland Mouret outfit she wore to a March 2016 Republican debate).

Unfortunately, the short-lived White House spokesman offered few specifics, despite near-desperate questioning from a marketing executive representing the museum.

Asked for an anecdote about the first lady, Spicer brought up the time she said goodbye to him after he resigned his post: “Those are the kind of interactions that mean a lot.”

The aide once known for his hyperbole about Inauguration Day crowd size tiptoed toward grandiose niceties: Melania, who wore a Chanel haute couture gown to the state dinner, has “impeccable taste,” is “very well-read” and “really has her finger on the pulse of what’s going on politically.”

When the naughty New York press corps squeezed in more pointed questions about the Trumps’ marital relations, Spicer said he never saw Melania mad at the president.

Actually, he seemed more comfortable talking about a different subject: his forthcoming book, “The Briefing,” whose cover had its own unveiling Wednesday morning.

“In some ways it’s a little therapeutic,” Spicer said of the writing process. Asked whether he had any regrets, he said, “My regret would be not to tell you to buy the book.”

So much for finding an answer to that perennial Twitter question about Melania, “What is she thinking?”

At least we have some idea what Spicer’s considering: the stratospheric sales figures for James Comey’s “A Higher Loyalty.”

Mark Chiusano

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Pencil Point

Campaign mode

Bonus Point

America the beautiful (word)

On this day in 1507, the word “America” made its debut — on a world map made by German cartographer Martin Waldseemuller that paid tribute to Italian explorer Amerigo Vespucci. The only known surviving copy is in the Library of Congress, which purchased it in 2003 after trying for more than 100 years.

The masterpiece is fascinating for conveying the European understanding of the New World at that time, and was the first map to depict a previously unknown continent situated between two huge bodies of water, the Atlantic and Pacific oceans.

More than 500 years later, as French President Emmanuel Macron departs Washington and German Chancellor Angela Merkel arrives Friday, it’s clear European views of America are still evolving.

Michael Dobie

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