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A Primer on Local Bushwick Politics


State Assemblyman Vito Lopez, left, and Congresswoman Nydia Velázquez

Aaron Short, usually of the Bushwick Courier, a print-only local tabloid, has been so kind as to impart us with knowledge of our local political establishment. If you’d like to see more local politics (from someone who knows about such things), let us know! –Jeremy

With a new political club meeting in Bushwick meeting for the first time this week and several candidates beginning to weigh runs for city council in 2009, now is as good a time as any to go over the political landscape in our neighborhood and how it will be changing over the next year.

Bushwick resides in New York State’s 12th Congressional District represented by Nydia Velázquez and the 10th Congressional District represented by Edolphus Towns. At the state and local levels, Bushwick resides in the 53rd Assembly District represented by Vito Lopez, the 54th Assembly District represented by Daryl Towns, and the 17th Senate District represented by Martin Malave Dilan, as well as the city’s 34th and 37th Council Districts, represented by Diana Reyna and Erik Martin Dilan, respectively. Brooklyn Community Board Four serves most of the neighborhood, below Flushing; Brooklyn CB1 serves the "Morgantown" area that shares political institutions with Williamsburg. (Queens CB5 is in charge of the Ridgewood part of the neighborhood past Cypress and Wyckoff.)

State Assemblyman Vito Lopez and Congresswoman Nydia Velázquez are two of the most powerful political leaders not only in Northeast Brooklyn but in the entire city. Both endorsed Senator Clinton for President and enjoy close relationships with her; Lopez and other county leaders hosted Senator Clinton at Cono’s in Williamsburg in October last year and Velázquez has appeared at several Clinton campaign fundraising events, including one at Hunter College in Manhattan in February. Congresswoman Velázquez is the chair of the House Small Business Committee, overseeing $200 billion in annual federal programs and contracts, and sits on the House Financial Services Committee, including the Subcommittee on Housing and Community Opportunity. Assemblyman Lopez is the Chair of the Committee on Housing and a member on the Economic Development, Job Creation, Commerce and Industry Committee. Lopez is also, not insignificantly, the Chair of the Brooklyn Democratic Party. It is his responsibility to field and recruit candidates for a variety of political offices ranging from circuit court judges to city council. With so many similar committee assignments, you would think they would be working together on housing and economic development issues for North Brooklyn, but the two have been feuding for years, ever since Lopez refused to back Velázquez for her congressional run in 1992 and again in 1998.

Lopez and both Dilans have enjoyed a close relationship for decades. Erik Dilan succeeded his father into City Council office in 2001 after his father was term-limited and then won a State Senate seat in 2002. Councilman Dilan’s appointment to Chair of the influential Housing Committee raised eyebrows around Brooklyn, and he often works with Lopez’s office regarding housing legislation in both legislatures. Congresswoman Velázquez got her political start interning with Ed Towns, and is closer with Towns and other African-American political leaders in central Brooklyn. Councilmember Diana Reyna got her start in politics as Assemblyman Lopez’s Chief of Staff though she has often tried to carve her own path during her two terms in office. It remains unclear what office she will run for when her term ends in 2009.

New York political observers often break down the Bushwick political scene into the Lopez and Velázquez camps, but the reality is more complicated. A number of newer organizations have been appearing on the political landscape seeking to mobilize and pressure older political constituencies. Groups like Make the Road New York are contemplating backing candidates for office while Bushwick Impact is organizing parents and child care professionals and Arts in Bushwick is trying to work with seniors and children in local public schools. The New Kings Democratic Club, remnants of Obama campaign volunteers in North Brooklyn, met for the first time this past Thursday to discuss how to field candidates for county offices. Whether these organizations can lay the groundwork for a new political base in Bushwick will be dependent on how well they can connect with immigrants, artists, and young professionals settling in the neighborhood.

8 Responses to “A Primer on Local Bushwick Politics”

  1. Jeremy Says:

    Everyone is connected to everyone by blood or patronage. Dilan and Dilan! Towns and Towns! What a scam democracy is. Hasn’t anyone ever been elected that wasn’t part of a machine?

  2. Hrag Says:

    Thanks for the useful primer. Though wasn’t there rumors of housing developers and kickbacks to the candidates a few years back? What ever happened to those?

  3. j Says:

    i was pretty excited about the possibility of running until i got to this part:

    “THE LAST DAY TO CHANGE ENROLLMENT IN ORDER TO BE ELIGIBLE TO VOTE IN THE SEPTEMBER 2008 PRIMARY ELECTION WAS OCTOBER 12, 2007. So in other words, if you did not “convert” your registration from another Party by last October, you cannot run or vote in the Primary Election!”

    fuck, i bet i’m not the only recently converted obama-crat facing this same problem. still, i’m glad to hear nkd is at least starting to confront the rampant corruption in our local politics, even if it’s just baby steps for the time being– you gotta start somewhere.

  4. drr Says:

    Erik Dilan definitely helped me (I’m a “young” professional who recently moved to the neighborhood). I posted about it here before–I wrote him as part of an effort to do something about a rogue car alarm on my block.
    I got a nice informative non-form letter back, along with a cc: of a letter from him to the DOE containing the specifics of my complaint, and within a week inspectors came, ticketed the car (its alarm went off maybe a hundred times a day, all day), and the problem hasn’t reoccurred.
    Maybe it’s just a little thing to you but it was like a miracle to me.
    So, maybe there’s a machine keeping better qualified people out of the seat, I don’t know, but I’m *really* thankful for what he did, and from what little I know this guy is doing the job well. If there are specifics about “rampant corruption” in relation to this councilman of course I’d like to hear them, but as far as I’m concerned he seems to really care about the quality of life in Bushwick.
    I do commend these interest groups for taking an interest, and if they can find someone better, great.

  5. drr Says:

    Hmm. I did find this.

  6. Ando Says:

    Yes please more local politics! Especially given Vito Lopez’s significant sway in Brooklyn and Erik Dilan’s generosity with city funds.

  7. threehegemons Says:

    More local politics please. You might want to look into the Bushwick-Ridgewood Senior Citizens Council, which apparently is an important element of Vito Lopez’ base.

  8. drr Says:

    Yeah, see if you can find out what’s up with the senior citizens…I hear some of them get their meals for free! Delivered right to their homes! Seems pretty shady…

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