
Lester Chang addresses Brooklyn residency questions during rally

SUNSET PARK — Assemblymember-elect Lester Chang and supporters gathered at Sunset Park on Saturday, Dec. 10 to reaffirm that he is a Brooklyn resident and share outrage that the state Assembly is seeking to challenge his seat due to their residency concerns.
In November, Chang defeated longtime Democratic Assemblymember Peter Abbate in the 49th A.D. Abbate had held the seat since 1987. The district includes Bath Beach, Bensonhurst, Borough Park and Dyker Heights.
However, Democratic Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie called for the Assembly Judiciary Committee to review Chang’s eligibility. According to the Associated Press, they’ll likely examine records such as utility bills and mortgage statements.
Under state elections rules, Chang was required to have been a resident of Brooklyn for 12 months prior to Election Day in order to be eligible to run for the Assembly. The Assembly Majority claim he spent some time living in Manhattan.
Abbate told the Brooklyn Reporter that he was contending during the election that Chang didn’t live in the district.

“Then subsequently in September, October, we found out he didn’t fulfill his requirement of living in the county for one year prior to the election,” he said. “You want to be an elected official, you should be able to abide by the law. All he has to do is produce evidence that he’s lived in Brooklyn for a year and to this point, I don’t think he’s done that yet. It’s up to the assembly itself and now the judiciary committee is looking into the matter.”
He also claims the reason he didn’t challenge in the petitions process is that Chang never filed petitions.
“They had someone else running against me,” Abbate said. “That person dropped out conveniently and they substituted him in. They keep saying, ‘why didn’t you challenge him during the petition process?’ They’re just extending another lie because he didn’t file petitions.”
During the rally, Chang, a military veteran, stated that he grew up in a Brooklyn house that he currently lives in today.

“My family bought the house in 1972,” he said. “When another serviceman asked me where I was from, I said from Brooklyn, New York of course. That’s where I came from and that’s the God’s honest truth. I am shocked and disappointed in anyone that would accuse me of anything else.”
He stated that he lived in a Manhattan apartment with his wife until she died in 2019, but he
still had residence in Brooklyn.
After her death, Chang said he spent more time in his Brooklyn home to take care of his 95-year-old mother.
“By November 7 of 2022, it is of no question that Brooklyn was my primary residence,” he said. “Remember, I never left.”
He told the crowd he also spent time in Manhattan because he was in the New York Naval Militia and was called to active duties to help combat COVID- 19 crisis. He was stationed by the Navy at the Javits Center and quartered in Manhattan.
“During this time, I continually returned to my home in Brooklyn when my military service did not require me to be at the Javits Center,” he said. “I am personally offended that anyone would challenge my honor and integrity. I will always live by my Navy core values of honor, courage and commitment.
Chang added that the Assembly Judiciary Committee questioning his Brooklyn residence mailed their letters to his home address in Brooklyn.

Brooklyn’s Republican Party chairman Ted Ghorra stated that the Brooklyn Democratic Party reviewed and ran specs on hundreds of candidate petition submissions this past spring, and had more than ample opportunity to challenge Chang’s petitions and residency in court, but they chose not to.
“Assemblyman-elect Chang is the first Asian-American from Brooklyn ever elected to state office,” Ghorra said. “One would have hoped that his accomplishment would have been celebrated by Republicans and Democrats alike, especially in a district that is majority Asian-American; however, raw partisan politics sadly intervened, and that’s unfortunate. Assemblyman-elect Chang won fair and square on Election Day, and he deserves to be seated in January as much as any other state Assembly member. What’s happening is wrong by every measure, plain and simple, it has incensed many communities as they watch this charade.”
Chang’s attorney John Ciampoli said during the rally that they don’t know what evidence the complainants possess or the facts that the complaint is based on.
“You don’t challenge the man after he won the election,” he said. “This is, ‘we don’t like the results of the election. We don’t like what the people did. We are the New York State Assembly Majority and we’re going to reverse it.’ Well, we are going to stand up, fight it and win. The people in this district will have their voices heard. They will have their elected assemblyman seated by the right legislature, by the legislature he was elected to, by you the people in Brooklyn.”
An Assembly Judiciary Committee hearing will be held on Monday, Dec. 19 to review Chang’s eligibility to hold the seat.
Gov. Kathy Hochul would call for a special election if Chang doesn’t get the seat.
If there is such an election, Abbate said he hasn’t made a decision on if he would run as of yet, but would consider it.
“Whatever happens, happens and I would give some thought to that or helping someone else,” he said. “This is just sad. I’ve done this for 36 years. My constituents are like family to me. To do this to them is really unfair.”
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