Emily Gallagher
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Emily Gallagher (Democratic Party) is a member of the New York State Assembly, representing District 50. She assumed office on January 1, 2021. Her current term ends on January 1, 2025.
Gallagher (Working Families Party, Democratic Party) ran for re-election to the New York State Assembly to represent District 50. She won in the general election on November 5, 2024. She advanced from the Democratic primary on June 25, 2024.
Biography
Emily Gallagher was born in Fairfax, Virginia. Gallagher earned an undergraduate degree from Ithaca College in 2006. Her career experience includes working as the national community affairs assistant director for HI USA; in nonprofit education with the Tenement Museum, EF Smithsonian, and Hostelling International; and as a researcher and oral historian. Gallagher has been associated with Neighbors Allied for Good Growth, the Greenpoint Star, and the Greenpoint Task Force.[1]
Committee assignments
2023-2024
Gallagher was assigned to the following committees:
- Alcoholism and Drug Abuse Committee
- Consumer Affairs and Protection Committee
- Election Law Committee
- Small Business Committee
- Transportation Committee
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2021-2022
Gallagher was assigned to the following committees:
- Alcoholism and Drug Abuse Committee
- Consumer Affairs and Protection Committee
- Election Law Committee
- Small Business Committee
- Transportation Committee
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Sponsored legislation
The following table lists bills this person sponsored as a legislator, according to BillTrack50 and sorted by action history. Bills are sorted by the date of their last action. The following list may not be comprehensive. To see all bills this legislator sponsored, click on the legislator's name in the title of the table.
Elections
2024
See also: New York State Assembly elections, 2024
General election
General election for New York State Assembly District 50
Incumbent Emily Gallagher won election in the general election for New York State Assembly District 50 on November 5, 2024.
Candidate | % | Votes | ||
✔ | Emily Gallagher (Working Families Party / D) | 97.9 | 33,506 | |
Other/Write-in votes | 2.1 | 704 |
Total votes: 34,210 | ||||
= candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey. | ||||
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Democratic primary election
Democratic primary for New York State Assembly District 50
Incumbent Emily Gallagher defeated Anathea Simpkins and Andrew Bodiford in the Democratic primary for New York State Assembly District 50 on June 25, 2024.
Candidate | % | Votes | ||
✔ | Emily Gallagher | 75.0 | 4,652 | |
Anathea Simpkins | 20.9 | 1,295 | ||
Andrew Bodiford | 3.7 | 228 | ||
Other/Write-in votes | 0.5 | 28 |
Total votes: 6,203 | ||||
= candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey. | ||||
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Working Families Party primary election
The Working Families Party primary election was canceled. Incumbent Emily Gallagher advanced from the Working Families Party primary for New York State Assembly District 50.
Campaign finance
Endorsements
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Ballotpedia did not identify endorsements for Gallagher in this election.
2022
See also: New York State Assembly elections, 2022
General election
General election for New York State Assembly District 50
Incumbent Emily Gallagher won election in the general election for New York State Assembly District 50 on November 8, 2022.
Candidate | % | Votes | ||
✔ | Emily Gallagher (D / Working Families Party) | 97.7 | 27,045 | |
Other/Write-in votes | 2.3 | 636 |
Total votes: 27,681 | ||||
= candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey. | ||||
If you are a candidate and would like to tell readers and voters more about why they should vote for you, complete the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection Survey. | ||||
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Democratic primary election
Democratic primary for New York State Assembly District 50
Incumbent Emily Gallagher defeated Paddy O'Sullivan in the Democratic primary for New York State Assembly District 50 on June 28, 2022.
Candidate | % | Votes | ||
✔ | Emily Gallagher | 79.5 | 6,634 | |
Paddy O'Sullivan | 20.0 | 1,672 | ||
Other/Write-in votes | 0.4 | 37 |
Total votes: 8,343 | ||||
= candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey. | ||||
If you are a candidate and would like to tell readers and voters more about why they should vote for you, complete the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection Survey. | ||||
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Working Families Party primary election
The Working Families Party primary election was canceled. Incumbent Emily Gallagher advanced from the Working Families Party primary for New York State Assembly District 50.
2020
See also: New York State Assembly elections, 2020
General election
General election for New York State Assembly District 50
Emily Gallagher won election in the general election for New York State Assembly District 50 on November 3, 2020.
Candidate | % | Votes | ||
✔ | Emily Gallagher (D) | 97.0 | 38,278 | |
Other/Write-in votes | 3.0 | 1,175 |
Total votes: 39,453 | ||||
= candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey. | ||||
If you are a candidate and would like to tell readers and voters more about why they should vote for you, complete the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection Survey. | ||||
Do you want a spreadsheet of this type of data? Contact our sales team. |
Democratic primary election
Democratic primary for New York State Assembly District 50
Emily Gallagher defeated incumbent Joseph Lentol in the Democratic primary for New York State Assembly District 50 on June 23, 2020.
Candidate | % | Votes | ||
✔ | Emily Gallagher | 52.7 | 10,386 | |
Joseph Lentol | 46.9 | 9,235 | ||
Other/Write-in votes | 0.4 | 87 |
Total votes: 19,708 | ||||
= candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey. | ||||
If you are a candidate and would like to tell readers and voters more about why they should vote for you, complete the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection Survey. | ||||
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Withdrawn or disqualified candidates
- Brady Aarons (D)
Working Families Party primary election
Withdrawn or disqualified candidates
- Joseph Lentol (Working Families Party)
Endorsements
To view Gallagher's endorsements in the 2020 election, please click here.
Campaign themes
2024
Ballotpedia survey responses
See also: Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection
Emily Gallagher did not complete Ballotpedia's 2024 Candidate Connection survey.
2022
Emily Gallagher did not complete Ballotpedia's 2022 Candidate Connection survey.
2020
Video for Ballotpedia
Video submitted to Ballotpedia Released September 30, 2019 |
Emily Gallagher completed Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey in 2020. The survey questions appear in bold and are followed by Gallagher's responses. Candidates are asked three required questions for this survey, but they may answer additional optional questions as well.
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|Emily Gallagher is a longtime community activist in North Brooklyn who has been organizing with her Greenpoint neighbors for more than a decade. A member of Community Board 1 and a former co-chair of Neighbors Allied for Good Growth (now North Brooklyn Neighbors), Emily has worked for tenant protections, safe and reliable transportation, and environmental justice. A survivor of sexual violence, she cofounded Greenpoint Sexual Assault Task Force which organized for a trauma-centered approach to reforming the NYPD's handling of rape and assault. She's also a former representative to the Mobilization Against Displacement. Emily has worked in museum education and as a Community Affairs Director for a major nonprofit.
- North Brooklyn deserves a healthy, stable, truly affordable housing. We need to pass universal rent control, bring massive new state investments in NYCHA, and stop incentivizing luxury development.
- The science is clear: we have a decade to transform our energy system or face catastrophe. We must expand and enforce the Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act, fully fund the Department of Environmental Conversation, stop building new pipelines and dumping sewage in Newtown Creek, and bring a real Green New Deal to New York.
- Transportation is a basic right. But years of neglect, financial mismanagement, poor oversight, and distorted priorities have created a slow-building disaster. We need green, safe and reliable transit options for every neighborhood and we must end the dominance of cars on our streets.
North Brooklyn deserves a healthy, stable, truly affordable housing. Last year we made enormous strides in protecting and expanding tenants rights in Albany. But it's not being enforced. And nearly half of New Yorkers are rent burned, many severely so. We need a leader who'll fight for housing justice for all.
North Brooklyn deserves a healthy environment. From contaminated development sites to the fumes off the BQE, we still struggle with the toxic legacy of industry. Polluters aren't being made to pay for what they've done--and when they do, the money is insufficient and gobbled up by the general fund. I was an early leader in the fight for more greenspace and parks in our community after the 2005 rezoning. I know there's so much more to do. Meanwhile, the threat of catastrophic climate change draws ever closer. We may have just passed an ambitious climate change law but we need representatives who will chase it, clarify it, and make sure the goals are being met.
And North Brooklyn deserves work that works for us. Millions are out of work. The jobs we do hold don't look like the jobs in the past. Many of us work multiple jobs and are enlisted as contractors or part-time workers without benefits. We are harassed, exploited and sometimes even killed on the job with little power to seek justice. We need a representative who will stand up for a real living wage and the right to organize.
I look up to Angelina Emily Grimke (1805- 1874). She and her sister Sarah were among the very few white southern women to become open abolitionists. They fought for women's rights to participate in political discourse and used their privilege to fight for social change. They were bold and outspoken advocates for both abolition and women's rights. They are a great example of the belief that none of us are free until all of us are free.
Common Sense and a Little Fire by Annaliese Orleck
Standing up for the vulnerable and marginalized, organizing to challenge undemocratic concentrations of wealth and influence, believing in the power of ordinary people to improve their lives and their communities through collective action-this is what it means to be a progressive. And I've been one my whole life. From blowing the whistle on an abusive teacher in high school to protesting the War in Iraq and holding space with Occupy Wall Street to organizing tenants and small businesses owners to protect their homes and livelihoods to helping progressives get elected across the city, it's not just about what you believe-it's about what you do.
Communications and relationship-building expertise with experience strategically representing programs to diverse constituencies. Team-oriented, collaborative, and comfortable working across cultures. Passion for social justice and human rights. Resourceful, with good problem-solving skills: work well under pressure and with tight deadlines. Also, I have experienced the struggles of my constituents throughout my adult life-- I've lost friends to traffic violence, opioid addiction, and suicide. I'm a survivor of sexual assault and harassment. I've had insecure housing and insecure income. I can relate, and I can see the systemic causes of so much despair that could be fixed.
I want to make my Assembly office a hub for local organizing and civic participation. We'll plan frequent, dynamic and relevant public town halls on key issues facing our community. Create a rotating youth advisory council of high school and college-age residents and a community advisory council open to all to discuss, craft and lobby for important legislation.
Empowering communities that have historically been ignored or underrepresented, moving our country towards a Green New Deal and repairing the harms done to environmental justice communities, making civic engagement clearer, easier and more functional. Creating a government based on equity and multiple perspectives, rather than power brokering for elites.
I remember the Oklahoma City Bombing being broadcast on a breaking news special report on TV when I was home sick from school at the age of 11. It was terrifying.
My first full time "position" was volunteering the summer I was 15 in Rochester, New York at the Southeast Ecumenical Food Pantry. When I was 16, I got a paid job at the Gap in Eastview Mall and I worked there for a year and a half. I have a lot of stories about it!
The "double bind" of being a professional, politically active woman.
Economic inequality, mass incarceration and the climate crisis are the three biggest issues of our time, across the country and right here in New York State. All been created or exacerbated by decades of state policies we're only just starting to unravel. Gov. Cuomo's austerity budget, his refusal to increase taxes billionaires and corporations, and the rollbacks of bail reform threaten to reverse what progress we've started to make. Meanwhile, Albany has not been nearly aggressive enough in enforcing its climate change legislation, which needs to be radically expanded to include economic justice measures. We outline proposals for each of these areas at emilyforassembly.com.
Despite its progressive reputation, New York State has been mired in corruption, scandal, backroom deals, machine politics and dismal voter participation for decades. An entrenched party establishment, especially at the state level, has sent an unmistakable signal to voters: leave politics to the professionals, we'll make the decisions. Governor Cuomo has been the main culprit in this attitude.
We're starting to wake up. Longtime incumbents are finally being challenged. Turnout in the 2018 elections nearly doubled from the 2014 midterms (though it was still among the lowest in the country). And we're starting to see new experiments in electoral reform, from early voting to a robust public matching system in New York City races.
But our electoral process is still terribly antiquated. Big money donors still exert too much influence. It's still way too hard for working class New Yorkers to run for office. And sometimes it seems like our Governor thinks he's a King. I intend to change that.
Absolutely! It's the only way anything gets done. But it's equally important to build relationships with residents and organizers-outside pressure is as important as inside dealmaking.
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Campaign finance summary
Note: The finance data shown here comes from the disclosures required of candidates and parties. Depending on the election or state, this may represent only a portion of all the funds spent on their behalf. Satellite spending groups may or may not have expended funds related to the candidate or politician on whose page you are reading this disclaimer. Campaign finance data from elections may be incomplete. For elections to federal offices, complete data can be found at the FEC website. Click here for more on federal campaign finance law and here for more on state campaign finance law.
Scorecards
A scorecard evaluates a legislator’s voting record. Its purpose is to inform voters about the legislator’s political positions. Because scorecards have varying purposes and methodologies, each report should be considered on its own merits. For example, an advocacy group’s scorecard may assess a legislator’s voting record on one issue while a state newspaper’s scorecard may evaluate the voting record in its entirety.
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Click here for an overview of legislative scorecards in all 50 states. To contribute to the list of New York scorecards, email suggestions to [email protected].
2023
To view all the scorecards we found for this legislator in 2023, click [show]. |
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In 2023, the New York State Legislature was in session from January 4 to June 21.
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2022
To view all the scorecards we found for this legislator in 2022, click [show]. |
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In 2022, the New York State Legislature was in session from January 5 to June 4.
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2021
To view all the scorecards we found for this legislator in 2021, click [show]. |
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In 2021, the New York State Legislature was in session from January 6 to June 10.
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See also
2024 Elections
External links
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Candidate New York State Assembly District 50 |
Officeholder New York State Assembly District 50 |
Personal |
Footnotes
- ↑ Information submitted to Ballotpedia through the Candidate Connection survey on May 6, 2020
Political offices | ||
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Preceded by Joseph Lentol (D) |
New York State Assembly District 50 2021-Present |
Succeeded by - |