Metro

NY state Senate Democrats to consider Gov. Hochul nominees for top court next week

ALBANY — State Senate Democrats announced that they will hold a confirmation hearing on Monday to consider the nomination of liber🍷al Cour𒐪t of Appeals Associate Judge Rowan Wilson to become chief judge of New York’s highest court.

“This may be the most important nomination of the Governor’s term,” state Senate Judiciary Committee Chair Brad Hoylman-Sigal (D-Manhattan) said Monday when Gov. Kathy Hochul announced her pick.

“Judge Wilson has a distinguished record in both the public and private sectors and I look forward to working with my colleagues in reviewing his record closely.”

Hochul announced her previous pick to lead the state’s top court, centrist appellate judge Hector LaSalle, on Dec. 22 but he had to wait until Jan. 19 for ♌a hearing by the State Senate Judiciary Committee, which ultimately voted against his nomination.

Progressives and organized labor groups opposed LaSalle largely based on a handful of rulings they said showed he was too right-leaning to lead the se🐼ven-member court previously dominated by a conservative bloc under ex-Chief Judge Janet DiFiore, who resigned amid scandal last summer.

State Senate Democrats ultimately sank LaSalle’s nomination in a Feb. 15 floor vote following a nearly one-month stand-off against Hochul over whether the Judiciary Committee had the authority to b♎lock a judicial nomination 🌄by itself.

The state Senate Judiciary Committee on Monday will consider the nomination of Rowan Wilson to lead New York’s highest court. AP

Wilson by comparison appears to have a much smoother path to getting confirmed, including a relatively fast timeline for getting a hearing, with key prog💧ressives like state Senate Deputy Maj꧅ority Leader Michael Gianaris (D-Queens) praising the pick.

♓Some of the delay for LaSalle in getting a hearing had to do with the political calendar.

Hochul nominated him in December before a newly-elected Legislature would first convene on Jan. 4 —though Albany lawmakers somehow did return to the Capitol at the end of the year to give themselves a $32,000 pay bump, effective in 2023, that made them the highest-paid state lawmakers in the country.

The Judiciary Committee had its fไirst 2023 meeting in the second week of the legislative session, with a hearing happening the following week.

Senate Majority Leader, Andrea Stewart-Cousins, D-Yonkers, gives her remarks after New York Chief Judge nominee Hector Lasalle’s nomination was rejected in the Senate Chamber. Hans Pennink

Hoylman-Sigal said Thursday that moving on Wilson’s nomination a week after Hochul unveiled his nomination also makes sense given impending issues before the Court of Appeals, which could hear a case challenging state congressional lines that could determine control of the US House in the 2024 cycle.

“There’s a greater sense of urgency given the vacancy of the Chief Judge position for many months, important decisions coming to New York’s highest court, and the backlog of cases across the system.

The courts have been starved of leadership for too long,” Hoylman-Sigal said Thursday.

State senators also plan on holding a 💃hearing on Tuesday for liberal attorney Caitlin Halligan, who Hochul named to replace Wilson if he gets confirmed.

Centrist Judge Hector LaSalle was ultimately voted down by the state Senate floor vote nearly two months after Hochul announced his nomination AP

That could spark another legal battle that might end up before t♚he Court of Appeals dow𝓡n the line.

A state Court on Judicial Nomination is tasked with screening candidates for the court, with Rowan and Halligan inclu🌼ded on a seven-nam🐎e list sent to Hochul weeks ago.

Albany Democrats eventually passed a bill that allows Hochul to select Halligan as꧙ a replacement without waiting for the commission to make a new♋ list, a process that takes weeks.

State Senate Republicans hജave yet to say whether they will challenge the new law in court, .