April petitions bring June primaries

It is nicer to think of the expression “April showers bring May flowers,” but like it or not there are a bunch of primaries sprouting up all over Erie County.

In the midst of serious and protracted budget negotiations among Governor Kathy Hochul, the Assembly, and the Senate those parties found time to add an extra four days to the deadline for filing party designating petitions for offices on the ballot in 2023.  Anecdotally, there have been stories about certain candidates struggling to get sufficient signatures to qualify for the ballot.  Petitioning in March is always going to present a variety of problems.  How exactly adding four days to the filing deadline helped anyone is unknown.  In any case, the new deadline was April 10.

While some petitions might come in through the mail if postmarked by April 10, the bulk of the petitions necessary for offices up for election this year arrived with the Erie County Board of Elections by that date.  The Board still must review the petitions to determine if they meet legal requirements concerning the form of a petition and the number of signatures before they can be certified as valid.  It is common for opposing candidates to independently review filed petitions and submit objections to their validity. 

The petitions received through April 10 by the BOE indicate a number of primary elections are in the offing.  The Democrats, Republicans, and Conservatives will have primaries.

Here is a summary of potential primaries as indicated through petitions filed by the morning of April 10:

  • First, a note about some races for which there is no apparent primary challenge:
    • Erie County Executive. Mark Poloncarz is the Democratic and Working Families nominee; Chrissy Casilio-Bluhm is the Republican. Harold “Budd” Schroeder was expected to decline the Conservative designation, which will lead the Conservatives by April 18 to substitute Casilio-Bluhm. That development confirms the party’s loyalty to the Reps, despite Chairman Ralph Lorigo declaration of war following the failure of the Reps to nominate his daughter-in-law for a County Legislature seat.
    • Erie County Family Court Judge (three to be elected). Judges Mary Carney and Deanne Tripi along with first-time candidate Shannon Filbert have been nominated by the Democrats, Republicans, Conservatives, and Working Families parties. Gerald Paradise has also filed Conservative petitions.

    • Buffalo Comptroller Barbara Miller-Williams is the Democratic candidate with no opposition.
    • Buffalo City Court Judge candidate Tiffany Perry has no opposition.
    • Mayor Patrick Mang and two Democratic candidates for the Kenmore Village Board have no identified opposition for election in November.
    • Democrats have not filed petitions for Erie County Legislature in the 8th and 11th Districts. The incumbent Republican legislators in those seats are Frank Todaro and John Mills.
    • Republicans have not filed petitions for Erie County Legislature in the 1st and 2nd Districts.  The incumbent Democratic legislators representing those districts are Howard Johnson and April McCants-Baskin.
  • There are several Democratic primary races for members of the Buffalo Common Council including:
    • Ellicott District.  Candidates filing petitions include Matthew Dearing, Leah Halton-Pope, Emin Eddie Egriu, and Cedric Holloway.
    • Fillmore District.  Incumbent Mitchell Nowakowski is being challenged by Sam Herbert.
    • Masten District.  Candidates filing petitions include Murray Holman, India Walton and Zeneta Everhart
    • North District.  Incumbent Councilmember Joe Golombek is being challenged by Eve Shippens and Lisa Thagard.
    • University District.  Incumbent Councilmember Rasheed Wyatt is opposed by Kathryn Franco.
    • Lovejoy District. Incumbent Bryan Bollman is challenged by Mohammed Uddin.
  • There will be a primary in the 10th District of the County Legislature for both the Republican and Conservative nominations.  Appointed incumbent Jim Malczewski is being challenged by Lindsey Bratek-Lorigo.
  • There is a Democratic primary for Cheektowaga Town Supervisor. Two current members of the Town Board, Brian Nowak and Christine Adamczyk, are
  • Two candidates have filed for the Democratic nomination for Cheektowaga Highway Superintendent. They are Richard Rusiniak and Darryl Stachura.
  • Two candidates have filed Democratic petitions for President of the City of Tonawanda Council, Mary Ann Cancilla and incumbent Jenna Koch.
  • There are two Republican candidates for Alden Supervisor, Alecia Barrett and current Councilmember Colleen Pautler.
  • There are four Republican candidates for three Town Council seats in Alden.  One of the seats is for two years.
  • Two Republicans have filed petitions for Supervisor of Grand Island, current Councilmember Michael Madigan and Peter Marston.
  • There will be a Conservative primary for Town Council in Tonawanda.  Incumbent Carl Szarek will face former Republican Town Chairman Matthew Braun, who resigned his chairmanship and reaffiliated as a Conservative to enter the primary.  Approximately 40 other Tonawanda voters also reaffiliated as Conservatives to assist in the scheme.
  • Two Republicans have filed for Supervisor of Marilla, Jennifer Achman and incumbent Earl Gingerich.
  • There are two candidates who have filed for the Democratic Town Justice nomination in the Town of Newstead.
  • The parties have filed petitions for candidates for Judicial Delegates and Alternates in the various Assembly Districts even though there are not at the moment any State Supreme Court positions up for election in 2023.

After the Board of Elections reviews the petitions, and pending any challenges by opponents, we will have the final primary election lineup.  Expect some candidates to be knocked off the ballot.  If a candidate declined their party designation by April 10 the candidate’s Committee on Vacancies can substitute a different candidate, a process that can play out until April 24 this year.

There are 148 offices on the ballot throughout Erie County in 2023, so even with the possible primaries noted above the majority of the offices have their November election lineups already set.

Stay tuned.

Twitter @kenkruly

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House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) tried to back up former President Donald Trump's claims that non-citizens were voting in presidential elections during a Wednesday news conference — but his claim was accidentally revealing in a way that is bad for the former president, wrote Aaron Blake for The Washington Post.

This comes as Johnson has also suggested that if he were in a position to block election certification in 2024, under the same "circumstances" as 2020, he would do so.

“'We all know intuitively that a lot of illegals are voting in federal elections, but it’s not been something that is easily provable,' Johnson said. 'We don’t have that number."

This comment is "at least somewhat transparent," Blake said — but it "undercuts the leader of the Republican Party, former president Donald Trump, who has ridiculously pegged the number of illegal votes by undocumented immigrants in the 2016 election at 3 million to 5 million (just enough, as it happens, to explain away his 2.9 million-vote loss in the popular vote).

"After the 2020 election, Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani also ridiculously pegged the number of such illegal votes in Arizona alone at between 40,000 and 250,000 — as many as 1 out of every 14 votes cast.

"Johnson, at the very least, is implicitly acknowledging that Trump’s and Giuliani’s numbers are pulled out of thin air. It’s part of a broader and long-standing effort in the GOP to water down Trump’s false voter-fraud claims and repackage them," Blake continued.

"But, given that — and given the continued GOP focus on this issue — it’s worth noting how much Republicans have found or come to admit that actual evidence of widespread voter fraud simply isn’t there."

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This includes Trump ally Rudy Giuliani admitting that there are "lots of theories" but they "don't have the evidence," far-right groups like True the Vote confessing that there's no proof of ballot stuffing when their claims went up in court, and a 2022 report from longtime Republican officials concluding that “there is absolutely no evidence of fraud in the 2020 Presidential Election on the magnitude necessary to shift the result in any state, let alone the nation as a whole."

Ultimately, concluded Blake, "Despite the lack of evidence and the abject failure of Trump’s post-2020 voter-fraud lawsuits, some lawmakers apparently feel compelled to construct a boogeyman to toe Trump’s line on combating voter fraud — even as they freely acknowledge they can’t say what the boogeyman is made of."