
New York's Kathy Hochul faces a crime conundrum ahead of reelection
This year, she won alterations to the state's discovery law that district attorneys wanted in order to reduce the number of dismissals in criminal cases.
Hochul would also rather talk about an all-time low in New York City shootings and drop in felony crimes on subways — statistics she can tout as evidence her public safety approach is working.
'The Legislature has made three necessary fixes to bail since 2019, many crimes are at a historic low and Elise Stefanik is disconnected from reality,' said Democratic state Sen. James Skoufis, who also pointed to a recent New York Post frontpage trumpeting the sharp drop in shootings. (A Stefanik spokesperson called him 'clueless.')
But New York Democrats are also warily watching the president's takeover of the Washington police department and move to deploy the National Guard to the streets of the nation's capital. Hochul this week also condemned the possibility that Trump, a Stefanik ally, would deploy the National Guard to New York City.
'If he crosses that bright line and decides that the 32,000 dedicated members of the NYPD are not doing their jobs — he's going to stand there and insult our law enforcement officers — I think people would be in outrage of that alone,' she said.
The governor approved her own limited deployment of the New York National Guard to the city's subway system. The troops do not have arrest powers, but the move was meant to reinforce the perception of safety on mass transit.
'I've used them as a deterrent effect to stand there and just be a presence,' Hochul said.
Democrats, though, are in something of a political cul-de-sac on crime, despite the steep drops in violent offenses.
'It's an issue that Democrats have failed to take any serious action on,' Erie County GOP Chair Michael Kracker said. 'The Republican Party has pledged to make the nation and the state safer. If Democrats fail to take action, Republicans will.'
Citing crime statistics won't be enough for New Yorkers who don't feel safe in their own neighborhoods, he added.
'Ask your average New Yorker if they feel safer than they have over the last few years,' Kracker said. 'The answer is going to be a resounding no.'
A version of this story first appeared in New York Playbook.
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