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Legislative Leaders And New York's Governor Agree The 2019 Session's Accomplishments Were Many

ALBANY, NY (WSKG) - The 2019 legislative session was among the most productive in several years, with the passage of bills that ranged from strengthening abortion rights, to allowing undocumented immigrants to get driver’s licenses. If you’re a liberal democrat, there’s a lot to like. But conservative republicans are not as pleased.

The 2019 session ended when the Assembly gaveled out shortly after 7 AM Friday morning.

Governor Cuomo took a victory lap after a session that saw the codification of the abortion rights in the US Supreme Court decision Roe v Wade into New York law, and end to most cash bail, new rights for women, transgender New Yorkers and farm workers, a permanent property tax cap, and an end to single use plastic bags and a ban on the de-clawing of cats.

Cuomo says the achievements make New York the “social progress capital of the United States of America”.

He credits the all Democratic- led legislature, the first time there’s been a decisive democratic majority in the Senate and Assembly in 40 years, and a moment of change that he says was spurred as a backlash to the policies of President Donald Trump.

“President Trump has frightened people,” Cuomo said. “People now demand protection in response to the direction of the federal government. The state government is here to protect people when the federal government won’t.”

Cuomo found himself sidelined on some of the negotiations, for the first time ever in his governorship. The Senate and Assembly agreed on their own to strengthen New York City’s rent laws and extend the option to upstate. That did not please the governor, but he agreed to sign the new rent regulations into law anyway.

The governor, in his day after news conference, also took a couple of shots at the new leadership in the legislature, when he discussed a few items that did not get finished in the session.

A measure to legalize adult recreational marijuana failed, when the Senate could not come up with enough votes to pass it. The governor asked lawmakers to include it in the state budget, where there might be more political cover for a controversial topic. The bill did not become part of the budget, and in recent weeks Cuomo has refused requests from Democrats in the Senate to help convince Senators who were on the fence on the issue.

“I don’t want to say I told you so,” sad Cuomo “so I’ll say everything but that.”

Advocates for legalizing marijuana say they blame the governor as well as the leadership in the senate and assembly for the bill’s failure. Kassandra Frederique, with the Drug Policy Alliance, says all three leaders are “at fault”.

Cuomo and the legislature instead agreed to further decriminalize cannabis, something Frederique says is a poor substitute.

Late on the final night of the session, a bill to allow automatic registration for voting had to be withdrawn, after lawmakers realized that a glitch in the language would have allowed undocumented immigrants to vote. Cuomo called that an “amateur mistake”.

Meanwhile, in the Senate, Leader Andrea- Stewart-Cousins, the first woman and Africa-American woman to lead the chamber, was saluted with cheers and a standing ovation. In her speech to the chamber she said Democrats proved their detractors wrong.

“Over the past moth we fought to break down barriers and we’ve chosen the path of creating opportunities,” she said.

The Stewart-Cousins quickly developed a tight working relationship with the Assembly Speaker, Carl Heastie . The two even referred to themselves as “the wonder twins”.

Republicans, who are in the minority party , and whose ranks have been greatly diminished, are dismayed by many of the measures.

Senator Jim Tedisco, a Republican from the Schenectady area known for his outspokenness, summed up how he views the legislative session, in a speech on the Senate floor just a few days before the session ended. Tedisco posted the speech on You Tube that he entitled “Six Months of Hell for Taxpayers in Albany”.

“Social experimentation,” Tedisco said. “Either tax something, or legalize it.”

Tedisco predicts the new policies will only intensify the pace of New Yorker’s outmigration to other states. The state’s Business Council is also not a fan of the recently concluded session. In a statement the group says the measures “drastically impact New Yorkers in many negative ways”.