The Legislature met at the Old State Capitol in
Albany on January 5, 1819, and adjourned on April 13. On January 4, a Democratic-Republican Assembly caucus met to nominate a candidate for
Speaker. 75 members attended, including almost all Bucktails elected, but 10 to 15 Clintonians had not arrived yet.
William Thompson (Bucktail) received 42 votes,
Obadiah German (Clintonian) 33. The Clintonians refused to "make the nomination unanimous", and refused to support Thompson in the Assembly on the next day. On January 5, the Assembly met and took four ballots for Speaker without anybody receiving a majority, and adjourned. On January 6, the vote on the fifth ballot stood: German 55, Thompson 38,
William A. Duer (Fed.) 20. Then
Erastus Root offered a resolution that Thompson be appointed Speaker which was lost with a vote of 41 to 73. Then a resolution was offered that Duer be appointed Speaker which was lost too, with a vote of 31 to 84. Then a resolution was offered that German be appointed Speaker which was adopted with a vote of 67 to 48. The refusal of the Clintonians to support the caucus nominee for Speaker led to the permanent split of the New York Democratic-Republicans into Clintonians and Bucktails. The last time both factions caucused together was when a candidate for U.S. Senator was to be nominated, and the meeting broke up after much mutual verbal abuse without having had any ballot. At the same time, the Federalists were split into a Pro-Clinton majority (led by
Thomas J. Oakley) and an Anti-Clinton minority (led by
William A. Duer). On February 7,
the Legislature failed to elect a successor for U.S. Senator
Rufus King (Fed.) and the seat became vacant on March 4. The vote stood: in the Senate, State Senator
Samuel Young (Buckt.) 13, Congressman
John C. Spencer (Clint.) 10 and the incumbent King 4; in the Assembly, Spencer 51, Young 43 and King 28. On February 8,
Erastus Root (Buckt.) offered a resolution for the call of a State "Convention with unlimited powers to revise, alter or modify the Constitution." After much debate, this resolution was rejected, like a similar one during the previous session, but the issue was pursued further by the Bucktails, and led to the
New York State Constitutional Convention of 1821, and a new Constitution. On March 24, the Legislature rejected the recess appointment of
Ephraim Hart (Clint.) as
Erie Canal Commissioner, and elected State Senator
Henry Seymour (Buckt.) to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of
Joseph Ellicott. Seymour was chosen by joint ballot of the Legislature with a majority of a single vote. This gave the Bucktails a majority of 3 to 2 in the commission, and instead of opposing the Canal project itself, the Bucktails now—the construction being well under way—supported it, for both political and financial reasons. ==State Senate==