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WPCNR BACKROOM BULLETIN. By John F. Bailey April 30, 2003: The Republican Party is planning to nominate three articulate, active players in city and state politics: Two attorneys, Tim Sheehan and Jeffrey Binder, and a possible third candidate, an Hispanic woman to give Mayor Joseph Delfino company on the all-Democrat White Plains City Council.
The City Democratic Committee Nominating Committee is staying with their incumbent warhorses, Robert Greer, seeking his fourth term on the council, and City Council President, Benjamin Boykin, seeking his second term as a Councilman. For the third seat, The Nominating Committee has chosen Assemblyman Adam Bradley’s campaign manager, Arnold Bernstein, a portfolio manager, for the Council nomination to replace incumbent councilman William King who chose not to run for reelection.
The Democrat Nominating Committee will present its slate to the City’s Democratic leaders on May 8. These suggested slates, however have proved controversial and can run into opposition.
Another Revolt?
In May of 2001, the Nominating Committee was overridden by District Leaders who supported Robert Greer’s angry challenge to the Nominating Committee’s nomination of William Ryan for Mayor. At that time, the Nominating Committee bowed to state Civil Service Employees Association management pressure to support William Ryan for Mayor based on a CSEA survey showing Ryan’s higher poll numbers against Mayor Joseph Delfino.
The Nominating Committee using those numbers, handed the nomination to Ryan, only to have Robert Greer mount a challenge among district leaders and outpoint Ryan, wresting the nomination in an embarrassing floor fight. Greer called in his markers in more heavily “weighted” election districts, drawing on his substantial prestige among District Leaders and seized the nomination. Greer, his momentum possibly compromised by the internal party primary, ran second to Mayor Delfino in the general election.
Hispanic Community is Dismissed.
Now, it appears that the Nominating Committee may have another challenge on their hands from a shocked Hispanic community as they learn of Mr. Bernstein’s candidacy. Mr. Bernstein has long yearned to run for the Common Council. However, the selection of Mr. Bernstein, no matter how much he deserves it and is qualified for it, delays the long promised and awaited Democratic overture to the Hispanic community.
The Nominating Committee of Adam Bradley, Howard Glassman, Jim Payne, Barbara Schwartz, and Bob Wall has apparently made the judgment that they do not need Hispanic support to win that William King council seat.
An overture rejected.
About a week ago, members of that Nominating Committee, District Leaders, and members of the Democrat Party Executive Committee approached Ms. Eridania Camacho-Quinn to run for Council, saying they would support her. Over the past weekend she agreed to interview.
Eridania Camacho Quinn, a mother in her 30s, said she was willing to give up her job to be a fulltime Councilperson, and was interviewed by the Nominating Committee for the Council seat they chose to give to Mr. Bernstein. Camacho Quinn is currently fundraising executive with the Young Women’s Christian Association, and currently organizer of the YWCA Salute to Women and Racial Justice Dinner in June.
By way of background, it should be noted that Ms. Camacho Quinn was one of the leaders of a cadre of Hispanic activists and labor leaders who worked relentlessly for Adam Bradley’s upset election primary win over Naomi Matusow. Camacho-Quinn was interviewed by the Nominating Committee and was rejected in favor of Mr. Bernstein, due to “her lack of political savvy.”
What Hispanics?
The proposed Democrat slate of Boykin, Greer and Bernstein leaves the party without a bridge to White Plains’ dominant minority, the Hispanic community. The Republican Party is moving quickly to exploit this gaffe. The Republicans were the first to run an Hispanic candidate, Larry Delgado, (who immigrated to the U.S. from Cuba in 1960). The city Republicans are now exploring Hispanic candidates.
The Republicans are also tapping a high profile, charismatically Cappelli-esque White Plains Republican, to mount a challenge to three-term County Legislator William Ryan “to begin the Republican take back of the County Legislature” in our source’s words.
A Dilemma for the Nominating Committee.
Had Mr. Greer chosen not to run for his council seat again, this would have left the way clear for nominations of Boykin, Bernstein, and a Hispanic candidate, making the choice easier.
Mr. Bernstein could have chosen to step aside in favor of a Hispanic candidate in the best interest of the party, (which it is reported by our source that he did not offer to do so), to balance the minority appeal of the ticket. Though there is no reason to expect Mr. Bernstein to step aside. Such a gesture by Mr. Greer or Mr. Bernstein would have enabled the Nominating Committee to present a slate more representative of the city’s makeup, had they wished to do so.
A Replay of the Green-Ferrer Miscalculation?
The Nominating Committee choice is eerily similar to what happened in New York City. A very powerful Jewish candidate Mark Green battled Fernando Ferrer, a Hispanic candidate for the Mayoral nomination. Green ran an anti-minority campaign in Williamsburg Brooklyn that alienated many Hispanics, traditionally Democratic, and that backfired on him in his contest with Mr. Bloomberg. The Hispanic community virtually on mass voted for Bloomberg instead of Green. Solidly Hispanic districts, traditional Democrats voted for Bloomberg.
Presently only the Board of Education in White Plains has a racial makeup representative of the city’s population, with an African-American, an Italian, three Caucasians, and an Hispanic. Candidates for the school board can run at large without having to be selected for suitability by party organizations.
Delgado Awaits in Exile.
Larry Delgado, former councilman who was deposed by a voting machine which jammed in the Republican stronghold District 18 costing him the 2001 Council election to Glen Hockley, is not running. Mr. Delgado fully expects to be restored to the Council through the quo warranto action brought by the New York State Attorney General on his behalf, according to sources.







