Lopez was a member of the
New York State Assembly (53rd D.) from 1985 to 2013, sitting in the
186th,
187th,
188th,
189th,
190th,
191st,
192nd,
193rd,
194th,
195th,
196th,
197th,
198th,
199th and
200th New York State Legislatures. His district comprised the Brooklyn neighborhoods of
Bushwick and
Williamsburg. From 2006 to 2012, Lopez served as the chairman of the
Kings County Democratic Party, having replaced former chairman
Clarence Norman Jr. On August 28, 2012, Lopez announced that he would not seek re-election as Brooklyn Democratic leader due to allegations that he sexual harassed two of his staffers. Lopez was forced to step down after it was revealed that he settled a lawsuit by two of his female staffers who alleged that he had
sexually harassed them. On May 17, 2013, Lopez also resigned from then his assembly seat effective at the end of the legislative session June 20, 2013. Several days later Lopez moved up his resignation date to May 20, 2013.
Political stances Lopez was among the sponsors of a bill to expand the original 1982 Loft Law,
"...which gave rights to illegal tenants and made their lofts subject to rent stabilization." The 2009 Loft Law Amendment, which went into effect June 2010, expanded these protections to lofts in manufacturing areas of Bushwick,
Williamsburg,
Greenpoint, and
Long Island City. While Lopez previously sponsored similar legislation, he did not support a 2009 bill, the Child Victims Act, sponsored by Assemblywoman
Margaret Markey. This bill would have opened a one-year window to allow older victims of prior
childhood sexual abuse the ability to file civil actions against their abusers. He has sponsored a competing bill that provides no window, but would change current law to allow lawsuits against public institutions without requiring a 90-day notice of claim. The
New York Times reported on June 9, 2009, that in an effort to reach a compromise with Lopez's bill, Markey amended her bill to specifically include all public institutions through the waiver of the current 90-day notice of claim requirement, and also limited the window to victims aged 53 or younger. During an October 13, 2006, meeting with the Lambda Independent Democrats, a political club of gay Democrats in New York City, Lopez publicly declared his support for extending the right of civil marriage to same-sex couples for the first time in his political career. He also intimated that he would help to enact legislation that would recognize same-sex marriages, which the highest court in New York State had refused to recognize earlier that year.
Pork Barrel Politics In 2018
Dan Doctoroff said that Lopez refused to support the Bloomberg administrator's rezoning of the Brooklyn waterfront unless the administration allocated a million dollars for a daycare center that Doctoroff thought Lopez's girlfriend was connected to. By Doctoroff's account, this happened the day before the city council vote; time was limited, and after midnight Doctoroff called the head of the agency that oversaw daycare centers, woke him up, and secured the million dollars for the center to meet Lopez's demand and pass the rezoning. ==Investigations==