Seed of Chucky? Schumer alumni thrive on and off LI

The national spotlight may be swinging back to Sen. Hillary Clinton, but inside the state, alumni of Charles Schumer’s Senate and Congressional offices have come to occupy a slew of political and public posts.
Now, 10 years after Democrat Schumer ousted Republican Sen. Alfonse D’Amato, the political Seed of Chucky may be growing.
On a short list for U.S. Attorney in Manhattan is Preet Bharara, chief counsel to Schumer on the Senate Judiciary Committee and visible player in the probe last year of U.S. Attorney General Alberto Gonzales’ office.
This fall Schumer backed a primary by the co-author of his book “Positively American,” Daniel Squadron, who ousted veteran Sen. Martin Connor in Brooklyn. One Democratic source mentions ex-aide Chris Hahn, head of United Way on Long Island, for a run for Brookhaven supervisor, though at least one other candidate seems right now to have stronger chances.
Schumer’s three-year man on Long Island, Matt Cohen, now directs government relations for LIPA.
One-time Schumer aides, now elected, include: Rep. Anthony Weiner (D-Queens), Assemb. Michael Cusick (D-Staten Island), Assemb. Alan Maisel (D-Brooklyn), and Brooklyn City Council members Michael Nelson and David Yassky.
Among the well-connected private consultants formerly in Schumer’s employ: Michael Tobman of the New York City firm Hudson TG. There’s also Josh Isay, of the Knickerbocker division of Squier Knapp Dunn Communications — which even carries on its Web site a friendly plug from Schumer: “If you need television advertising, direct mail or communications advice, I can think of no better place to go.”



For those watching the horse race in the Northeast, a lot of the attention focuses on the prospect that John McCain can peel off Democrats to win key states, most likely from those who preferred Hillary Clinton in the primary. But in the Midwest today, Jim Leach, a former Republican Congressman from Iowa, endorsed Barack Obama -- and specifically cited foreign policy, calling for "a new approach to our interaction with the world." That could play among centrist Democrats, but it's more damaging to McCain if members of the GOP out in America defect or stay home on Election Day. In
Back in 1992, when Hillary Cllinton and Tipper Gore were up on that stage dancing mildly with spouses Bill and Al at the Democratic convention in New York, the sound system pumped out Fleetwood Mac's "Don't Stop," the theme of that first campaign. 






