Just as dispiriting, party regulars chose as the convicted Norman's successor Assemblyman Vito Lopez, an old-time ward heeler from Bushwick who has never shown a zeal for reform until, gee whiz, now. He vows the party will consult a panel of learned men and women, such as Brooklyn Law School's dean, about picking quality judges.
We've seen this movie before, and the ending stinks. Two years ago, Norman and party district leaders, Lopez included, pledged they would never support a candidate for a judgeship who had not been approved by an independent screening commission. This year, for the first time, the panel reviewed Civil Court candidates.
And guess what? The party shoehorned two lawyers onto the bench without any screening. Kenny Sherman, son of district leader Roberta Sherman, will get a 10-year Civil Court term without so much as a primary. And Canarsie Assemblyman Frank Seddio was awarded an uncontested ballot line for Surrogate's Court. So much for quality control. So much for keeping your word.
Nadler Breaths a Sigh of Relief
Thank you for your coverage of Adam Sullivan's campaign.
This effort was undertaken by impeachment advocates, all volunteers, without fundraisers, campaign managers, or field coordinators. In spite of this, Sullivan reached audiences in the street and in the Democratic clubs, and garnered close to 2,000 petition signatures. This challenge to Jerrold Nadler was staged solely to get Nadler's attention and persuade him to hold impeachment hearings, not to win an election.
Sullivan's campaign may yet prove more effective than Henry's or Newell's.