Kearney out; Moriarty in as Nassau GOP Elections commissioner
There was a shake-up in leadership at the Nassau Board of Elections on Friday, which surprised some longtime political observers.
Nassau Republican Chairman Joseph Cairo submitted his recommendation for James Moriarty to replace Joseph Kearney as the GOP commissioner at the Nassau Board of Elections.
According to state law, the political party leader chooses his party's elections commissioner; County legislators have no choice but to accept the selection.
That means Moriarty, the Long Beach Republican leader, a former spokesman for the Republican controlled Oyster Bay Town and member of the Nassau Off-Track Betting board, is the party's commissioner, at least through the end of the year.
Cairo's certificate notes that former GOP Commissioner Kearney has resigned, though he doesn't say when.
Kearney has been a Nassau Republican stalwart for years, serving on the Hempstead Town board, then as a deputy county executive for former Republican County Executive Ed Mangano, and as chairman of the Nassau Industrial Development Agency. He was appointed elections commission in Jan. 2019. He also is known to be close to Cairo.
But Kearney also is in his 80's and it's probably time to step away from the more than $180,000-a-year job just as campaign battles beginin earnest for the November elections.
James Scheuerman remains as Nassau's Democrat elections commissioner.
See Cairo's Friday submission to the county legislature:
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