NEW YORK STATE POLITICS

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Political Science 227 Professor Sarah F. Liebschutz Fall 2004 Harkness 101 (Office) Meliora 219 385-1854 (Home) Tuesday 2:00-4:40 275-5184 (Office) sliebsch@rochester.rr.com Office hrs: by appointment NEW YORK STATE POLITICS Overview After living a dozen years in New York, I don t pretend to comprehend their politics, observed Oliver Wolcott, an early governor of Connecticut, in the 18 th century. It is a labyrinth of wheels within wheels. At the dawn of the 21 st century, New York s politics are still labyrinthine. Our challenge in this course is to sort out and explain those politics, and, in so doing, to extend our understanding not only of the institutions, political processes, policies and political culture of a single state, but also of the American states more generally. The current New York State constitution (now more than 100 years old) establishes the state governmental institutions and stipulates their formal powers. What are the prerogatives of the New York governor, legislature, and courts? How important are these formal powers in explaining contemporary relationships between the governor and the legislature? New York is characterized by the existence of both strong parties and strong interest groups who, separately and together, are key factors in the state s dynamic political processes. What roles do parties and interest groups play in the election of statelevel public officials? What roles do they play in the formulation, adoption, and implementation of public policies? Finally, New York s political culture is both compassionate and competitive. How useful is New York s political culture for understanding public policy outputs? These questions help to frame our study of New York State politics during this fall semester when New Yorkers, on November 2, elect 150 members of the State Assembly, 62 members of the State Senate, 29 members of the House of Representatives, a U.S. Senator, and the President of the United States. Course Objectives The objective of the course, in brief, is to familiarize you with the institutions, political processes, (selected) public policies, and the political culture of the Empire State. I have designed the course to achieve this objective through common, assigned readings, guest speakers, field research, written assignments, and campaign observation opportunities.

Texts to be purchased Required: 1. Gray, Virginia and Russell Hanson. Politics in the American States: A Comparative Analysis. Washington, DC: Congressional Quarterly Press, 2004. 2. Liebschutz, Sarah F. New York Politics and Government: Competition and Compassion. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press, 1998. 3 Palazzolo, Daniel J. and James W. Ceaser, Election Reform: Politics and Policy (Lanham, MD: Lexington, 2004). Recommended: 1. Hacker, Diana, A Writer s Reference, Bedford, latest edition 2. A second book in the University of Nebraska series on the politics and governments of the American states. [Select from Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas (2 nd edition), Colorado, Hawai i, Illinois, Kentucky, Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Nevada, New Jersey, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Rhode Island, South Carolina, and West Virginia. [Note: Except for Arizona and Arkansas (2 nd edition) all of these books are in the Library s collection; all can be purchased through Amazon.com and will be shipped within 2-3 days.] Course Requirements 1. All assigned readings 2. Two Papers. Paper #1 is due on October 26. Paper #2 is due on December 10. See details below. 3. Two (individual and/or 2-person) oral presentations. The presentations will be expositions of Paper #1 and Paper #2. The oral presentations should be 15 minutes long, with a 10 minute question period following. A 1-page outline is to be distributed to the class at the outset of the presentation. Visual aids are highly recommended. Oral presentations are scheduled on November 9, and December 7. 4. Participation in class discussions. See General Class Policies. 5. Participation in field trip, if offered, to observe campaigning for state or national offices. Date and time to be arranged. The course requirements will be weighted as follows: Paper #1... 35 percent Paper #2... 35 percent Oral presentations... 20 percent Class participation.. 10 percent 2

Class Schedule Topic and Assignment Date I. INTRODUCTION TO NEW YORK AND THE COURSE SEPTEMBER 7 II. POLITICAL CULTURE AND DEMOGRAPHY SEPTEMBER 14 Liebschutz, Chapters 1 and 2 Gray and Hanson, Chapter 1 Nebraska Series book, Political Culture chapter *Elazar, The American Mosaic, Chapter 8. [optional] **Wirt, Soft Concepts and Hard Data, Publius 21(Fall 1991): 1-13. [optional] III. THE STATE CONSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK SEPTEMBER 21 Liebschutz, Chapter 3 New York State Constitution Download at: www.dos.state.ny.us Nebraska Series book, Constitution chapter * Galie, Ordered Liberty, Chapter 16. OR * Benjamin and Dullea, Decision 1997, pages 3-43. IV. NEW YORK IN THE FEDERAL CONTEXT SEPTEMBER 28 Liebschutz, Chapter 4. Gray and Hanson, Chapter 2. Nebraska Series book, Federal System chapter Palazzolo and Ceaser, Chapter 2. *Liebschutz, Bargaining Under Federalism, Introduction and Chapter 1. Websites for state and national candidates, *Hamilton, Madison, and Jay, The Federalist Papers, Introduction and Numbers 10, 17, 39, 45. [optional] Note: *=Library Reserve Desk **=Electronic Reserve 3

V. THE STATE LEGISLATURE OCTOBER 5 Evaluation Liebschutz, Chapter 6 Gray and Hanson, Chapter 5 Nebraska Series book, State Legislature chapter Website for National Conference of State Legislatures (with links to individual legislatures): www.ncsl.org Brennan Center, The New York State Legislative Process: An and Blueprint for Reform, Executive Summary. www.brennancenter.org NOTE: MELIORA WEEKEND HAS SEVERAL EVENTS RELATED TO THE WORLD OF POLITICS. THE FOLLOWING ARE REALLY SPECIAL AND I HIGHLY RECOMMEND YOU ATTEND SOME OR ALL OF THEM. Friday, October 8: 1:00-2:30 Ms. President?: Trusting Women to Call the Shots 3:00-5:00 PSC Department Open House; Professor Niemi on different voting systems Saturday, October 9: 11:00-12:00 James Carville and Mary Matalin (reserved seating for political science students) 12:15-1:30 Diversity luncheon with Manning Marable, political science professor, Columbia U. 1:45-2:45 Roundtable on the future of African-American politics 3:15-4:15 Larry Kudlow of CNBC nightly broadcast Kudlow and Cramer VI. PARTIES AND ELECTIONS OCTOBER 12 Liebschutz, Chapter 5 Gray and Hanson, Chapter 3 Nebraska Series book, Parties and Elections chapter Palazzolo and Ceaser, Chapters 1, 13 and one chapter on a state of your choice. 4

VII. THE GOVERNOR AND THE EXECUTIVE BRANCH OCTOBER 19 Liebschutz, Chapters 7 and 8 Gray and Hanson, Chapters 7 and 9 Nebraska Series book, Governor/Executive Branch chapter VIII. THE 2004 CAMPAIGNS IN NEW YORK: PRESIDENT, OCTOBER 26 CONGRESS, AND THE STATE LEGISLATURE FIRST PAPER DUE **Gelman and King, Enhancing Democracy Through Legislative Redistricting, American Political Science Review 88 (September 1994): 541-559. <ncsl.org> (National Conference of State Legislatures), passim. New York Times, passim Democrat and Chronicle, passim. IX. STATE-LOCAL RELATIONS: NOVEMBER 2 FOCUS ON WELFARE REFORM Liebschutz, Chapters 10 and 12 Grey and Jacob, Chapter 2 (pp. 49-56) and Chapter 10 Nebraska Series Book, State-local, Local governance chapter *Liebschutz, Managing Welfare Reform in Five States, Chapter 4. X. THE ELECTION RESULTS: ORAL PRESENTATIONS NOVEMBER 9 Note: *=Library Reserve Desk **=Electronic Reserve 5

XI. COURTS AND CRIMES NOVEMBER 16 Liebschutz, Chapter 9 Gray and Hanson, Chapter 8 Nebraska Series book, Judicial Branch chapter XII. THE CITY OF NEW YORK NOVEMBER 23 Reading: Liebschutz, Chapter 11 XIII. EDUCATION EQUITY: POLICY AND POLITICS NOVEMBER 30 Gray and Hanson, Chapter 12 Nebraska Series book, Public Policy chapter Campaign for Fiscal Equity, inc. v. State of New York Download summary of the decision at: www.cfequity.org XIV. LAST CLASS: ORAL PRESENTATIONS DECEMBER 7 SECOND PAPER DUE DECEMBER 10 THE WRITTEN ASSIGNMENTS In General: The first paper, as described below, is a collaborative, 2-person team, effort. I expect you to submit and justify for my prior approval no later than September 21 your state legislative campaign selection. I will schedule an individual conference with each team, or more than one if needed, to discuss your research strategy. I am also more than willing to hold individual conferences on your second paper, which is, as described below, either an individual or team effort PAPER #1: DUE OCTOBER 26 Length: 9-11 double-spaced pages plus appendixes and references Select a New York State Senate or Assembly legislative district for examination of the 2004 election campaign for Senate or Assembly. You have two goals in this paper. The first is to describe, discuss, and analyze: the district s economic, social, and political characteristics the district s past election patterns [NOTE: Use the incumbent s prior district for this description, if possible] the positions and strategies and pertinent background of the candidates. 6

The second goal is to predict the election outcome and to justify your prediction. You should use both primary and secondary sources. Primary (original) sources include: A. Government documents ( state government publications such as the Comptroller s Reports, Governor s State of the State Messages, Assembly, Senate documents, in the Library collection, as well as from the Internet (e.g., New York State home page; home page of candidates; home page of the New York State Legislative Task Force on Demographic Research and Reapportionment <latfor.state.ny.us>; <wxxi.org>; and <nycitizens.org). B. Interviews with candidates and/or campaign staff. Secondary sources include: Books; Local and national newspapers (e.g., New York Times, Rochester Democrat and Chronicle, Albany Times Union NOT USA Today); Journals (e.g., Legislative Studies Quarterly, Empire State Report, Governing Magazine, State and Local Government Review NOT Time or Newsweek; PAPER #2: DUE DECEMBER 10 Length: 10-12 double-spaced pages plus references and appendix materials. Place supporting tables and other materials in the appendix. Your assignment in this paper is to analyze a single New York State public policy. You have a wide arena from which to choose, ranging from the environment, to social welfare, to criminal justice, to education, to transportation to taxes. Your analysis is to be framed within two contexts. The first context is the political culture, institutions, and political processes of New York. The second context is interstate and comparative. Your state for comparison is the one in the University of Nebraska series you have been using all semester in class discussions. As in your first paper, you will draw on both primary and secondary data sources. I don t expect you to conduct more interviews for this paper, but rather to make use of those (obviously, only those pertinent to this topic) you carried out for your first paper. Paper #2 should contain the following sections: 7

1. Introduction 2. Background the pertinent demographic, cultural, economic, social, and institutional dimensions that frame the specific policy issue in New York and in your comparison state 3. The nature of the policy problem 4. The policy alternatives for consideration by the governor and legislature of New York and your comparison state 5. The policy solution adopted in New York and your comparison state 6. Implementation issues, if ascertainable 7. Summary and Conclusions. Here you should ponder the broader contexts of your analysis. Do state characteristics matter in the choices made by state governments? To whom? Why? GENERAL CLASS POLICIES 1. Very important: Your class participation is a key component of this course. You have the potential to make creative and original contributions. However, unless you 7are in class, those contributions will not be realized. Accordingly, more than one absence without a signed medical excuse will result in a drop of one letter grade from the final grade. 2. It is my policy to discourage both late assignments and incomplete grades. Work handed in after the date when due will be penalized one letter grade. Students who take an incomplete at the end of the semester will be assessed an initial incomplete penalty of 10 percent plus a further penalty of 10 percent 30 days after the end of the semester. 3. All assignments and other materials will be distributed only once. If a student finds it necessary to miss a class, he/she should make arrangements with other class members to get the materials. 4. I would appreciate hearing from anyone in this class who has a special need that may be the result of a disability. I am reasonably sure we can work out whatever arrangement is necessary, be it special seating or other accommodation. See me after class, or in my office, as soon as possible. 8

Writing Hints Communications skills are essential for success. Unfortunately, not all legislators or public policy analysts or public administrators or, sad to say, political scientists, practice good skills; there are numerous examples of "officialiese" writing that obfuscates rather than illuminates. Keep the following points in mind as you develop writing skills in this course: 1. KISS (keep it simple and straightforward) should be your general guiding rule. Avoid long, convoluted sentences. Exercise correct word usage. Don't try to change nouns into verbs. Don't select words on the basis of their presumed impressiveness. For an excellent source on the KISS principle, consult William Strunk, Jr. and E. B. White, The Elements of Style (New York: MacMillan, latest edition). 2. Pay attention to format. Consult a commonly accepted source and be sure your paper is consistent with that format. I strongly recommend Diana Hacker, A Writer s Reference (Boston: Bedford, latest edition) or Kate Turabian, A Manual for Writers of Terms Papers, Theses, and Dissertations (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, latest edition). 3. Remember that you are responsible for the final product, so proofread carefully. Spelling and grammatical errors, sloppiness, and problems in organization will all result in grade penalties. 4. A picture is worth a thousand words. Keep this in mind as you pursue prudence in writing. Much communication in public, private, and non-profit sectors is designed to convey a message in a brief space or period of time. Diagrams, tables, and other illustrations can greatly aid this process. 9