Secession in New York

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There are or have been several movements regarding secession from the U.S. state of New York. Only one of them – the state of Vermont – succeeded. The most prominent amongst the unsuccessful ones was for the proposed state of Long Island, consisting of everything on the island outside New York City; a state called Niagara, the western counties of New York state; the northern counties of New York state called Upstate New York; making the city of New York a state; a proposal for a new Peconic County on eastern Long Island; and for the boroughs of Staten Island and Brooklyn to secede from New York City.

Article 4, Section 3 of the Constitution of the United States includes a provision that "no new State shall be formed or erected within the Jurisdiction of any other State; nor any State be formed by the Junction of two or more States, or Parts of States, without the Consent of the Legislatures of the States concerned as well as of the Congress." At the time of Vermont's secession in 1777, the Constitution of the United States did not yet exist. By the time Congress recognized Vermont and admitted it to the Union in 1791, the Constitution was in effect and the legislature of New York had consented. All later secession proposals would require similar consent.

History

Proposed map of an independent New York City.

Vermont, 1777

The only successful secession from the state of New York was that of Vermont in 1777. King George III had ruled on 20 July 1764 that the disputed territory claimed by New York and New Hampshire belonged to New York. The disputed territory later became the state of Vermont. The government of New York refused to recognize the property rights of homesteaders who had settled there under the laws of New Hampshire from 1749 to 1764. Armed militias formed by settlers in the region prevented the government of New York from enforcing its laws there, and sovereignty continued to be asserted by New Hampshire until 1782.

After the United States Declaration of Independence, the people of the New Hampshire Grants (as the region was then called) could no longer hope for redress from the courts of England. Consequently, they issued the Vermont Declaration of Independence in January 1777, including a long list of grievances against the government of New York. For some years after that, Vermont functioned as a de facto independent country. The question of recognizing it and admitting it to the Union was occasionally discussed in the Continental Congress, but New York's representatives successfully opposed it. On 6 March 1790, the legislature of New York grudgingly expressed its consent to the admission to the Union of the secessionist entity, contingent on the settlement of a large number of real-estate disputes in negotiations between commissioners appointed by the states of New York and Vermont. On 7 October 1790, the commissioners proclaimed the negotiations concluded. In January 1791, a convention called by the state of Vermont ratified the Constitution of the United States, declaring that it would be part of the law of Vermont as soon as Congress admitted that state. On 18 February 1791, Congress decided to admit Vermont to the Union two weeks later on 4 March.

Post-Revolution era

In the battle over the ratification of the United States Constitution in 1787–1788, Governor George Clinton in Albany, wishing to preserve his independent power, led the local Anti-Federalists in opposition, with support for the Constitution coming from Alexander Hamilton and the Federalists, largely urbanites who saw opportunity in a stronger national union, and famously published as their manifesto The Federalist Papers in several New York City newspapers, including The Independent Journal. There was a real divide, and with the recent independence of Vermont, a real threat of secession of New York City and the southern counties to join the new Federal government. The leaders of Richmond County, which always had a somewhat ambiguous position, threatened to join New Jersey. With secession threatening to marginalize Governor Clinton and a lightly developed upstate, ratification was finally agreed and the divisional crisis passed.

At the time, much of what is now upstate New York was disputed territory, with Pennsylvania, Massachusetts and Connecticut all claiming portions of the mostly undeveloped land. It would not be until the Phelps and Gorham Purchase and the Holland Purchase that the land would become New York territory.

Civil War era

In the period of national crisis immediately preceding the American Civil War, Democratic Mayor Fernando Wood proposed the secession of the city as a sovereign city-state to be called the Free City of Tri-Insula (Tri-Insula meaning "three islands" in Latin), and incorporating Manhattan, Long Island and Staten Island. In an address to the city's Common Council on January 6, 1861, Mayor Wood expressed a Copperhead sympathy with the seceding states and a desire to maintain profitable cotton shipping, confidence that the city state would prosper on the import tariffs that then supplied 2/3 of the Federal revenues, and especially dissatisfaction with the state government at Albany. But the idea of leaving the United States proved too radical even in the turmoil of 1861 and was poorly received, especially after the Southern bombardment of Fort Sumter starting on April 12. The war, and especially conscription, was nevertheless often unpopular in the city, sparking the deadly New York Draft Riots. The neighboring City of Brooklyn, in contrast, was staunchly Unionist.

Coincidentally, the upstate locale of Town Line, New York did vote to secede from the Union, contributing five soldiers to the Confederate troops. Though the secession vote had no legal effect, and the Confederacy never recognized it,[1] Town Line ceremonially "rejoined" the Union in 1946; its residents paid taxes during its time "out of the union," which amounted to 85 years.[2]

1969

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In 1969, writer Norman Mailer and columnist Jimmy Breslin ran together on an independent ticket seeking the mayoralty and City Council Presidency, challenging Mayor John Lindsay with an agenda to make New York City the 51st state. When questioned as to the name of the new state, Breslin said the city deserved to keep "New York" and that upstate should be renamed "Buffalo", after its largest city.

2000s

A 51-star flag.

On February 26, 2003, a bill was introduced by Astoria, Queens Council Member Peter Vallone, Jr., and sponsored by 20 of 51 City Council members, reviving the idea of referendum for secession from New York State in the context of the red state vs. blue state divide and opposition to the policies of Governor George Pataki. A committee report was written but otherwise little action was taken, and the bill was reintroduced with one additional sponsor on the same date in 2004. Like Mayor Wood, Council Member Vallone has emphasized the fiscal benefits of secession, with revenue now derived not from tariffs, but from Wall Street. Council Member Vallone has reintroduced the bill in 2006.

In January 2008, City Council member Vallone again offered a bill for the secession of New York City from New York state. After Mayor Michael Bloomberg testified to New York state legislators that New York City gives the state $11 billion more than it gets back, Vallone stated: "If not secession, somebody please tell me what other options we have if the state is going to continue to take billions from us and give us back pennies. Should we raise taxes some more? Should we cut services some more? Or should we consider seriously going out on our own?" The New York City council planned to hold a meeting on the topic.[3]

2010s

In 2015, fifteen towns in Sullivan, Delaware, Broome, and Tioga counties were reported to be looking into seceding from the State of New York and joining the state of Pennsylvania. One reason given for the movement was Governor Andrew Cuomo's move to ban in New York hydraulic fracturing, which is legal in Pennsylvania.[4] Concurrently, groups of state legislators from Long Island and upstate New York introduced legislation to gauge support for partitioning the state; the bills were introduced shortly after Sheldon Silver, who for two decades had served as speaker of the New York State Assembly and who is an ardent opponent of such a partition, was deposed from his post as part of a federal investigation.[5]

Long Island secession

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Meanwhile, on Long Island, there have been calls for Nassau and Suffolk Counties to separate from New York State as well. Suffolk County comptroller and former state assemblyman Joseph Sawicki (a Republican) has called for a separation of Long Island from the rest of the state, saying that the region, one of the wealthiest in the state, receives only $5.2 billion in state payments and pays $8.1 billion in taxes to the state.[6] Nassau County executive Ed Mangano came out in support of such a proposal in April 2010 and will be commissioning a study on it.[7] Long Island also has a movement pushing for secession of the entire geographic island (Kings, Queens, Nassau, and Suffolk counties) from the state of New York.[8]

Upstate secession

Areas in Western New York and the Southern Tier, such as those in this map in the contiguous red area (the red areas illustrate the counties that voted for Carl Paladino in the New York gubernatorial election, 2010), have seen the most support for an independent upstate.

A parallel Upstate New York statehood movement seeks separation due to taxation and economic concerns.[9][10] Such proposals often include excising Albany (and presumably the Hudson River Valley) along with New York City, due to a perception that Albany is primarily controlled by politicians from the New York City area. A separate but related movement only includes Western New York (and sometimes portions of Central New York and the Southern Tier) in the secession efforts as an independent state or commonwealth entitled "Niagara."[11][12]

Much of upstate New York (unsettled by Europeans until the 19th century and inhabited only by the Haudenosaunee) was not part of New York State during colonial times. Due to an oversight or perhaps to foster competition, two Kings of England (Charles I and Charles II) awarded the same upstate New York territory as part of sea-to-sea grants to both Massachusetts Bay Colony and New York Colony respectively; Pennsylvania Colony also separately laid claim to much of the territory now in the Southern Tier up until 1774. It was not until 1786, with the Treaty of Hartford, that the dispute was settled; New York got territorial rights, but Massachusetts got to sell the land to developers. In 1792, a portion encompassing modern-day Erie, Pennsylvania (given to New York in the treaty) was sold to Pennsylvania. The Niagara Frontier, which had been explored by and part of French Canada, served as the western front of the Revolutionary War and (as British territory) the War of 1812, and did not fall securely into American sovereignty until the end of that war.

An upper portion of the Province of New York seceded: the northeastern corner of the province became self-governing in 1777 during the American Revolution, and it was granted statehood in its own right as Vermont in 1791. It was the first state in the union which had not bern a separate British colony.

Support for a separation from within upstate surged in the second half of the 20th century, possibly due in part to several U.S. Supreme Court rulings (see Baker v. Carr and Reynolds v. Sims) that established a mandate of one man, one vote in all state legislatures. The rulings gave New York City significant legislative advantages over upstate, which coincidentally entered a prolonged economic and population decline at around the same time. Former State Senator and U.S. Congressman Randy Kuhl, from rural upstate Hammondsport, advocated splitting the state into "New York" and "West New York" and introduced several bills to that effect during his time in the state senate.[9] State senators Joseph Robach, Dale Volker, and Michael Ranzenhofer, Republicans from Western New York, proposed a nonbinding referendum to gauge support for dividing the state in November 2009.[13] Republican Assemblyman Stephen Hawley introduced a bill in February 2013 that would give each county an opportunity to give feedback on potential partition of the state; Hawley, who has introduced such bills in the past, supports the idea on the grounds of the vastly different financial and logistic situations in each region of the state.[14]

The Public Policy Institute of New York State said in May 2004 of a potential secession: "Secession would be impossible, and the last thing New York needs is some kind of destructive Upstate-Downstate showdown. But given the prolonged lag in Upstate’s economy, it is time to think seriously about whether there is a way of restructuring the relationship to give Upstate the opportunity—indeed, the freedom—to reduce some of the disadvantages that are smothering its economy."[10] The Empire Center, a fiscally conservative think tank, has advocated using the 2017 constitutional convention to grant more home rule powers to local municipalities to address the upstate/downstate conflicts.[15]

Intrastate secession proposals

Peconic County secession from Suffolk County

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The proposed Peconic County flag showed the two forks at the east end of Long Island separated by Peconic Bay. Each star represents a town.
A map showing the proposed location of Peconic County.

Peconic County is a proposed new county in New York that would secede the five easternmost towns of Suffolk County: East Hampton, Riverhead, Shelter Island, Southampton and Southold, plus the Shinnecock Indian Reservation.

71 percent of the east end voters in 1997 approved a nonbinding resolution to secede. However the New York State Assembly has never approved the enabling legislation. East End newspapers speculate the Assembly is afraid it would encourage a tidal wave of secessions in the state including Staten Island seceding from New York City[16] and perhaps even causing the division of upstate and downstate New York.

This move to secede fell dormant in 1998.

Staten Island secession from New York City

The "Greater City" exists as a result of actions of the New York State Legislature, and, as such, could be reduced in size by the same mechanism. A non-binding referendum in the borough of Staten Island was held in 1993 to consider whether that borough should be allowed to secede from the City. The New York City government and then-Mayor David Dinkins opposed the vote, contending that the referendum should not be permitted by the state unless the city issued a home rule message supporting it, which the city would not. Then-Governor Mario Cuomo disagreed, and the vote went forward. The vote was in favor of secession through the approval of a new city charter making Staten Island an independent city.

The Staten Island secession movement was defused, or at least deferred, by the election on the same ballot of Rudy Giuliani as New York City mayor, who had campaigned on the promise that Staten Island's grievances would be addressed. Giuliani's plurality in his narrow victory over Dinkins was aided by overwhelming support from Staten Island. Two of the borough's biggest demands were closing the Fresh Kills Landfill and making the Staten Island Ferry free, both of which have since been fulfilled.

See also

Notes

  1. Federal Writers' Project, New York: A Guide to the Empire State (1940) p 436
  2. Tucker, John (2011-01-18). New York town that belonged to the Confederate States of America.. WGRZ. Retrieved 2011-04-01.
  3. Benjamin Sarlin, A Secession Plan Is Floated for New York City, New York Sun, January 30, 2008.
  4. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  5. McCarthy, Jimmy (February 20, 2015). Another bill aims to divide state. The Post-Journal (online version paywalled), page A-1. Retrieved February 21, 2015.
  6. Longing for a Long Island State NY Times
  7. Casesse, Sid and William Murphy (2010-05-01). Nassau executive Magnano supports Long Island as 51st state. Newsday. Retrieved 2010-05-01.
  8. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  9. 9.0 9.1 "The Big City; The Moochers From Upstate? Cut 'Em Loose", John Tierney, The New York Times, May 24, 1999
  10. 10.0 10.1 "Could New York Let Upstate Be Upstate?", The Public Policy Institute of New York State, May 200HawleyHawleyHawleyHawley
  11. Thompson, Rus (2009-05). T-shirts for 51st WNY state. Albany's Insanity. Retrieved 2010-09-22.
  12. Marshall, Lloyd (2011-01-09). It's time for the Commonwealth of Niagara to rise. Steuben Courier. Retrieved 2011-01-09.
  13. Terreri, Jill (2009-11-28). Split New York state? Robach wants to know what counties think. Rochester Democrat and Chronicle. Retrieved 2009-11-30.
  14. Rivers, Tom (February 26, 2013). HawleyHawleyHawleyHawley will push ‘2 New Yorks’ bill. Batavia Daily News. Retrieved February 26, 2013.
  15. Reisman, Nick (September 2, 2015). Will Secession Push Lead To Local Control?. Time Warner Cable News. Retrieved September 2, 2015.
  16. Voters Vs. Politicians On Peconic County - East Hampton Star - March 5, 1998

External links and references