April 25, 2024
Brooklyn GOP taps ex-NY Senate candidate who declared ‘hate’ for borough to run in NYC Council race, infuriating community leaders

Brooklyn GOP taps ex-NY Senate candidate who declared ‘hate’ for borough to run in NYC Council race, infuriating community leaders

A former state Senate candidate who made waves during the pandemic by declaring that he despises “f—ing Brooklyn” has been handpicked by the borough’s Republican Party to run as its candidate in a high-stakes City Council race this year, according to paperwork reviewed by the Daily News.

The Brooklyn GOP’s decision to tap Vito LaBella, a former NYPD officer, as its candidate for the 43rd Council district infuriated local Asian community leaders, who sent a letter Wednesday to the party’s chairman, Ted Ghorra, urging him to backtrack.

The 12 community leaders, some of whom are registered Republicans, noted that the 43rd district was redrawn as part of this year’s redistricting process in such a way that it would represent as many Asian-American constituencies in Brooklyn as possible.

“This newly created district offers our community a chance for real representation, a chance to elect someone who understands and is able to meet our unique needs,” wrote the leaders, among whom were YK Cheung, CEO of South Brooklyn Community Coalition, and Don Lee, chairman of Homecrest Community Services, a Bensonhurst senior center.

“The decision by the Brooklyn GOP to select Vito LaBella, a MAGA Republican, in a backroom deal to run a campaign based on fear and demagoguery is egregious,” they continued. “This decision appears selfish and wholly opportunistic, and it should be seen as an insult to the Asian Americans who form the majority in this district, for whom this district was created.”

Gorra and LeBella did not immediately return requests for comment Wednesday afternoon.

Jack Ho, a community liaison for GOP State Assemblyman Lester Chang, was initially supposed to run as the Brooklyn Republican Party’s candidate in the battle for the new 43rd, which spans parts of Sunset Park, Dyker Heights and Bensonhurst.

But an affidavit submitted Tuesday by Ghorra, Chang and other Brooklyn Republican Party leaders with the city Board of Elections states that Ho has opted to decline the nomination. The affidavit, which was obtained by The News, states that the party has as a result designated LaBella to run in his place.

There is no GOP primary planned in the 43rd, and LaBella will if all goes according to plan face off in November’s general election against Wai Yee Chan, Susan Zhuang or Stanley Ng, who are competing for the Democratic Party nomination. The 43rd is among a handful of races that are seen as especially competitive in this Council election cycle due to a growing conservative sentiment in southern Brooklyn.

Front page for Sept. 19, 2022: State Senate hopeful slams boro, wishes he could stay on Cape Cod. Brooklyn state Senate candidate Vito LaBella said in video last year from his cozy Cape Cod summer house: "I hate f-----g Brooklyn. I wish I never had to go back."

LaBella mounted a failed Republican campaign for a state Senate district in southern Brooklyn in last year’s elections.

During that campaign, The News unearthed an 18-minute video LaBella shot from his Massachusetts summer home in 2021, in which he offered some choice words for his native Brooklyn.

“I like it so much better here,” the ex-cop said in the clip after showing off the front yard of his pad in West Harwich, Mass. “I hate f—ing Brooklyn, I wish I never had to go back.”

In their Wednesday letter, Cheung, Lee and the other local advocates said Brooklyn’s Asian American community “deserves a seat at the table and a voice in the City Council.”

“If Vito LaBella cares at all about our community, he’ll drop out,” they added.

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