Elections In 1982, Assemblyman Clark Wemple retired from the State Assembly, leaving an opening in the district. Tedisco won a four-way race in Republican primary, and then won the general election. the 110th District from 2003 to 2012, and most recently represented the 112th District since from 2012 to 2017. The 112th District consists of portions of
Schenectady County and
Saratoga County, including the towns of Greenfield, Providence, Milton, Galway, Ballston, Charlton, Clifton Park, Halfmoon, and Glenville. Tedisco ran uncontested in the 2008 general election and won the 2010 general election with 64 percent of the vote.
Tenure Tedisco introduced "Charlotte's Law" to permanently terminate driver's license privileges for drunk and dangerous drivers. While Tedisco's bill was not passed, the DMV enacted regulations similar to what was proposed in the bill. In 1999, Tedisco worked to pass Buster's Law, which protected pets by making animal cruelty a felony, and in 2011 advocated for New York State Animal Advocacy Day. In 2014, Tedisco sponsored a successful constitutional amendment, Proposition 2, that would replace bill printouts with digital copies of bills.
Assembly Minority Leader Tedisco served as Assembly Minority Leader from November 2005 to April 2009. According to
The New York Times, Tedisco "clashed loudly and publicly" with Democratic Governor
Eliot Spitzer. In January 2007, Spitzer reportedly told Tedisco, "'I am a fucking steamroller and I’ll roll over you or anybody else'". Tedisco was noted for his opposition to Spitzer's September 2007 executive order directing that state offices allow undocumented immigrants to be issued
driver's licenses. Tedisco threatened a lawsuit if the plan was implemented. On November 14, 2007, Spitzer announced he would withdraw the driver license plan, acknowledging that it would never be implemented. Tedisco later accused Spitzer of cutting $300,000 of state funding for health care and education grants in the
Schenectady area as retaliation for Tedisco's opposition to the Spitzer driver license plan. Tedisco accused the Governor of "dirty tricks" and "bullying". Following reports of Spitzer's involvement in a prostitution scandal, Tedisco called for his resignation and announced that he would initiate
impeachment proceedings in the
State Assembly if Spitzer did not resign. Spitzer resigned his post effective March 17, 2008. Tedisco stepped down as Minority Leader in April 2009 amid reports that other Republican Members of the Assembly were concerned about his congressional campaign distracting him from his leadership role. ==2009 special congressional election==