I reported here in May that New York Conservative Party chairman
Mike Long had warned against Matt Doheny’s campaign for the GOP
congressional nomination in the upstate District 23.
Doheny rebuffed the Conservative Party in the 2009 special
election and instead donated the
maximum $2,400 to Dede Scozzafava on Oct. 10. Three weeks later
— the weekend before Election Day —
Scozzafava dropped out of the NY-23 race and endorsed Democrat
Bill Owens, who edged Conservative candidate Doug Hoffman by
fewer than 3,600 votes out of more than 150,000 ballots
cast.
Which brings us to the situation for 2010,
as I explained in May:
To grasp the problem now facing the GOP in
NY-23 requires an understanding of New York’s multi-party
system. In addition to the Democratic and Republican parties,
several other minor parties have ballot lines, and for a
major-party candidate to pick up the endorsement of a minor
party can be crucial in a close election. Last year in NY-23, for
example, there were
five parties on the ballot: Owens was on two lines (Democrat
and Working Families parties), Scozzafava was on two
lines (Republican and Independence) and Hoffman was on the
Conservative line. If Hoffman wins the GOP nomination, he’ll be on
at least two lines, and could win the Independence
Party endorsement, as well.
Mike Long has made the argument that no Republican can win NY-23
without the Conservative Party’s endorsement, and he is
adamant that the endorsement will go to Doug
Hoffman this fall. So the question now is: Does the
New York GOP wish to repeat last year’s disastrous
attempt to prove Mike Long wrong?
The answer, apparently, is “yes.”
Doheny spent $1 million of his own money to get the GOP
nomination, prevailing over Hoffman by about
700 votes in the Sept. 14 primary. Doheny will thus likely
achieve the same result as he did by supporting Scozzafava
last year — namely, the election of Democrat Bill Owens.