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Republican Smullen cracks the door for potential NY-21 run

Republican Smullen cracks the door for potential NY-21 run

Yahoo13 hours ago
Jul. 6—Assemblyman Robert J. Smullen, R-Meco, is not running for Congress in New York's 21st Congressional district.
At least not yet, but he's openly signaling that if the Republican nomination comes open, he wants a shot at it.
In an interview with the Watertown Daily Times on Wednesday, Smullen said he's not launching a campaign — but he's starting the process if the job does become free.
"What I'm here to say is that I am not running for the New York 21 Congressional district, I want to make sure that's very clear," he said. "But I am interested, if there's a possibility of an opening, of what the potential could be for that seat for someone like me."
Smullen said he believes his professional history, the fact that he's a native of the region and his legislative experience make him a prime candidate to represent NY-21 in Washington D.C.
He quietly put his name in the running when it appeared that current Congresswoman Elise M. Stefanik would resign the seat for a job with the Trump administration and trigger a special election this spring — but that never came.
"I thought then, as I thought now, that I would be a very strong, substantive candidate for the position, based on my experience," Smullen said.
Smullen is a retired 24-year Marine colonel, former executive director of the Hudson River-Black River Regulating District and has represented the 118th Assembly District covering the Mohawk Valley and Adirondacks since 2019. He has a masters of science from the National Defense University in resource management, and an extended national security background because of his military service.
Smullen isn't declaring a campaign yet because the job isn't open — Stefanik has not declared a campaign for Governor and has filed the necessary documents to run for NY-21 again. Declaring a campaign now, when it's not assured that Stefanik won't be seeking the seat for a seventh term, would mean he's running against the Congresswoman, which he does not want to do.
But if Stefanik does decide to run for governor, she'd no longer be able to run for Congress — and that would open up a possible primary for the Republican nomination.
Smullen said, if he were to run, his platform would revolve around job creation and economic development — and he would closely match the Republican party line.
"From my perspective as a current Assemblyman, and what I've worked on, it's all about jobs," he said. "It's about having good economic conditions for New York. It's about making sure that we do indeed close the border."
He said fentanyl and human trafficking across the northern border between New York and Canada is a major issue — something that President Donald J. Trump has blasted the country over and enforced high tariffs in an attempt to stop. CBP data shows that less than 1% of all fentanyl smuggled into the country is brought from Canada, which has its own raging fentanyl crisis, and recent immigration data shows that border officers are encountering hundreds fewer migrants attempting to cross into the U.S. from Canada since Trump took office.
In Congress, Smullen said he would be a conservative Republican, and said he would tack close to Trump.
"I'm proud to be a conservative Republican, that aligns with the people in the upstate area I represent, putting upstate first, and if I were in Washington D.C. I would be very close with the policies that President Trump has out there today," he said.
Loyalty to Trump is a must for the GOP candidate in NY-21; party officials look for it, Republican voters do as well and potential primary opponents use any perceived disagreement with the President as an attack line.
Smullen has worked with the Trump White House — he was appointed to the Presidents Commission on White House Fellows in Trump's first term. The White House Fellows program operates similar to internships, placing top applicants in year-long assignments with White House senior staff. Smullen himself was a White House fellow in the Bush administration.
On issues related to rural healthcare, Smullen said he would work to craft a program that sends more funding into rural hospitals — he said he's been working for years on a rural equity initiative at the state level that could be implemented nationally.
On Medicaid, which the Trump policy bill passed on Thursday aims to make massive cuts to, Smullen said he believes policy should be cognizant of how many rural Americans rely on Medicaid.
"About a third of New Yorkers are on Medicaid, so any consideration needs to absolutely take into account what the rural population looks like and how they're served by these programs," he said.
Smullen has served on the state Assembly Social Services Committee, giving him firsthand knowledge of how the state and federal governments support welfare programs. He said he specifically sees an issue with "benefits cliffs," that discourage people from seeking higher income because they'd lose access to more things like SNAP or Medicaid that are more valuable than the extra money.
"I've specifically advocated to change how benefits are calculated so there's not a benefits cliff where you all of the sudden fall off completely because your income is above a certain level," he said.
He said he would prefer to see fewer people rely on public benefits, and orient the programs more to pushing people up and out of poverty than supporting them through extended poverty.
Smullen has been signaling his potential run for a few weeks, speaking with media around upstate about the possibility. He said he's been speaking with voters and party officials, and will continue to do so.
"My goal is to converse with everybody about this, and my indicating interest is a way to facilitate that among people that are already elected officials, that vote in elections in the north country, and everyone in general so they can get to know me before the time comes," he said.
The candidate field for 2026 is somewhat hazy as of now — Blake Gendebien, who was picked by the Democratic party leadership to be their nominee in the special election that never came, has pledged to stick in the race but has not been very actively campaigning with over a year between now and the general election. Other potential Democratic candidates, including Paula Collins who ran against Stefanik in 2024 and Dylan Hewitt, who sought the nomination for the special election, have filed with the FEC and could potentially pursue the seat again.
On the Republican side, Amsterdam businessman Anthony Constantino once signaled he would run for the seat in 2026 if he wasn't the pick for the special election, and has kept up a public profile that could lead to a run in the primary next year, although he would likely not run against Stefanik if she remains in the seat. The the special, support coalesced around other candidates including state Senator Daniel G. Stec, R-Queensbury, Assemblyman Chris Tague, R-Schoharie and former GOP candidate in NY-21, Elizabeth "Liz" Joy.
Stefanik has signaled she would announce her bid for Governor shortly — if it does come, it's likely to spur a wave of announcements and interest in being her replacement.
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Tips And Overtime Deductions In Big Beautiful Bill Create Odd Marriage Incentives

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What they're saying Mayor Bass made her position clear in a statement to FOX 11: "They need to leave — and they need to leave right now. This is unacceptable." She also shared her reaction on social media, tweeting: "This is footage from today in MacArthur Park. Minutes before, there were more than 20 kids playing — then, the MILITARY comes through. The SECOND I heard about this, I went to the park to speak to the person in charge to tell them it needed to end NOW. Absolutely outrageous." When FOX 11 reached out to federal officials, a senior DHS official said: "We don't comment on ongoing enforcement operations." Local perspective While en route to a press conference with Gov. Gavin Newsom to mark six months since the Palisades and Eaton fires, Bass said she was alerted to what appeared to be a large-scale federal operation underway at MacArthur Park. "I turned around, we went to the park," Bass said. "I could see a helicopter in the air — I think it was a Black Hawk helicopter. And I saw military tanks. It was the Customs and Border Patrol, and it might have been military on the periphery." Bass said the scene resembled a military intervention, calling it "another example of the administration ratcheting up chaos by deploying what looked like a military operation in an American city." She described the deployment as "outrageous and un-American," particularly pointing to the presence of "federal armed vehicles in our parks when nothing is going on," the "seizure" of California's National Guard, and "U.S. Marines who are trained to kill foreign soldiers overseas" being "deployed in our American city." "There is no plan other than fear, chaos, and politics," she said, calling the incident part of a broader pattern of intimidation: "Home Depot one day, a car wash the next, armed vehicles and what looked like mounted military units in a park the next day." Bass emphasized that there was no threat at the park — only children attending summer camp. "What happened to the criminals, the drug dealers, the violent individuals?" she asked. "Who were in the park today were children. It was their summer day camp. Those kids now have no activities. They were ushered inside so that they didn't get exposed to the troops that were walking in formation across their playground area." She recounted speaking with an eight-year-old boy who, without being told what was happening, expressed fear of ICE. "Did this eight-year-old tell me that he was afraid of ICE taking his parents, and he didn't think it was good to take people away? So understand that that eight-year-old knows enough of what's going on that he's already traumatized in anticipation." "What I saw in the park today looked like a city under siege, under armed occupation," Bass said. "Spending many years traveling into conflict areas — you know, it's the way a city looks before a coup." Calling it a "military assault on our city," she accused Customs and Border Protection of "randomly driving through the streets, snatching people," often without identification. "There were no protests. There was no disorder that required that," Bass said. "I just think it's important that we continue to tell the truth to the American people." Marqueece Harris-Dawson, President of the Los Angeles City Council, criticized the federal operation, saying, "This morning looked like a staging for a TikTok video. And what we say to Border Patrol is: if you want to film in L.A., you should apply for a film permit like everybody else — and stop trying to scare the bejesus out of everybody who lives in this great city." Councilmember Eunisses Hernandez condemned the federal operation at MacArthur Park as "the latest escalation in the Trump administration's depraved campaign against our city." She described how "the National Guard descended onto MacArthur Park, bringing troops, military weapons and equipment, and armored vehicles to a community park, a community hub, a place where families gather." Hernandez emphasized that the operation took place "while summer camp was in session," forcing "young children... to be ushered into the lower part of one of our buildings" amid "terror taking place in our community." She called MacArthur Park "the Ellis Island of the West Coast," saying it was "chosen as this administration's latest target precisely because of who lives there and what it represents: resilience, diversity, and the American dream." Hernandez warned, "When we invade and surveil our own neighborhoods, when we scapegoat and demonize immigrants, when we disregard due process, we are no longer living under the rule of democracy. We are living under occupation and authoritarianism." Hernandez criticized the federal tactics: "Sending United States soldiers to intimidate children at camp and seeing others at the bus stop is not making anyone safer. Raiding Home Depots is not stopping crime. Tearing families away from children is not upholding family values." She called the cruelty "the point," and vowed that Los Angeles "will continue to resist... demand the immediate withdrawal of federal troops and ICE in our city." She issued a warning beyond Los Angeles: "We are the canary in the coal mine. What you see happening in MacArthur Park is coming to you. A $140 billion new budget for ICE — what do you think that's going to do? That's going to transport what's happening here in our neighborhoods to your front doorstep." She concluded with a call to action saying, "Please support Los Angeles, please support California, but also we need to work together to make sure that authoritarianism doesn't take over our country." During outreach at MacArthur Park, federal agents pointed guns at the team and shouted profanities, forcing them to leave, Maria Soria of the Saint John's Community Health Street Medicine team said. "They pointed a gun at us. They surrounded our van... I thought they were going to actually target us." She added that the situation has made it unsafe to provide medical care to the homeless and immigrant communities. More than 2,300 Angelenos have been "disappeared and uprooted from their homes and communities" since the federal government began its operation nearly a month ago, according to Jeanette Zani Patton, director of policy and advocacy at True LA. The other side According to Fox News, the CBP official Bass spoke with on the phone was Chief Gregory Bovino of the agency's El Centro Sector. Bovino told Fox News, "I don't work for Karen Bass. Better get used to us now, cause this is going to be normal very soon. We will go anywhere, anytime we want in Los Angeles." What we don't know At this time, there was no official explanation as to why such a large presence was deployed if no arrests were made. Federal authorities have not released further details on the nature or scope of the operation. Why you should care The operation brought heavily armed federal agents into a public park with no prior public notice — and ended with no reported enforcement. It drew attention not only because of its scale, but because of where it happened: a dense, residential area with families and children present. The mayor's immediate response raised questions about communication between local and federal agencies, and what protocols are followed in situations like this. It also underscored the scrutiny that large-scale federal operations now face when carried out in public spaces. Big picture view Federal officials have not clarified the purpose or outcome of the MacArthur Park operation. Without arrests, the reasoning behind the show of force remains unclear. The incident has led city leaders and residents to question how immigration enforcement is conducted in Los Angeles, what oversight is in place, and whether community safety protocols are being followed. As federal activity continues in urban areas, moments like this are drawing increased attention — and calls for transparency. Mayor Bass's rapid response underscored the growing tensions between federal immigration authorities and city leaders who have pushed for transparency and community safety over displays of force. What's next FOX 11 is continuing to seek clarity from federal officials on the nature of the operation and whether similar deployments are planned. Mayor Bass has called for further review of the event and its impact on the surrounding community. The Source Information for this story was gathered through direct observation by SkyFOX and includes on-the-record statements from Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass, as well as an unnamed senior DHS official.

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