Former Corning, New York Mayor Tom Reed started running against
the now-disgraced Eric Massa last July. The District has had no
representative since Massa tickled his way out of office and
resigned on March 8. Governor Paterson has yet to call a special
election.
Even without the Massa “hiccups,” the 29th District was likely to
favor a Republican candidate this fall. Historically it has
leaned a little to the right, and John McCain carried in 2008.
“We are truly a conservative district, there’s no doubt about
that,” Reed told TAS. Massa won by 1.8 percentage points
in 2008. In the Obama midterm elections, it was likely that
such a district would fall to the GOP even without
allegations that the incumbent Democrat had sexually harassed a
male staffer.
Reed also boasts the endorsement of local Conservative Party
chairs, and describes himself as socially and fiscally
conservative. Reed criticized Massa for supporting the Obama
budget and stimulus package. Reed is running with the goal of
repealing the healthcare bill, and questions the constitutional
authority of the individual mandate. Massa voted against the
healthcare bill in November, but because he is a single-payer
advocate. Reed has also pledged not to raise taxes while in
office, and supports continuing the Afghanistan war.
It has been reported that 29-year-old army veteran Matthew Zeller
will be representing the Democratic ticket. Local news outlets
report Zeller is
new to politics and currently works in Virginia, but is a
Rochester native. Reed confirmed with TAS that he
would be running in November if there is no special election
held.
Paterson has cited costs and the possible difficulties in
counting votes from soldiers overseas as reasons for not holding
the election. Critics have speculated that the governor is
stalling because of the Democrats’ poor chances to win.