Asm. Samuel Pirozzolo
Samuel Pirozzolo is a Republican representing AD-63, a D+18 district on Staten Island where Democrats hold a 44.0% to 26.2% registration advantage over Republicans, with 25.9% enrolled as Independents; despite that structural disadvantage, Pirozzolo won his 2024 general election by 15.2 points over Matthew Mobilia and his 2022 race by 9.4 points, and his 2026 outlook models as a Toss-up in a neutral environment, ranging from Lean D to Lean R depending on conditions. The district is majority-white at 55.2%, with Hispanic (19.3%), Asian (16.6%), and Black (9.8%) populations, a 67.0% homeownership rate, and a median household income of $96,070, reflecting a predominantly homeowning, mixed-ethnicity, outer-borough constituency. In the 2025 session Pirozzolo sponsored 17 bills, with sponsorship activity spanning Cannabis (2 bills), Vehicle and Traffic (2 bills), and single bills in Banking, Energy, Environmental Conservation, Elder, and Emergency Tenant Protection, among others. The brief does not identify a committee chairmanship for Pirozzolo, and no lobbying sector data was included in this brief.AI
Topic Focus AI
Topics extracted by AI from joint Senate-Assembly committee hearing transcripts and floor debate. Tag size reflects number of supporting citations.
Key Issues AI
Key issue areas derived from floor debate speeches and sponsored bill law sections.
Legislative Activity (2025–2026)
Bill sponsorship from NYS Open Legislation API. Hearing appearances from joint Senate-Assembly committee transcripts. Floor debate from official Assembly session transcripts (Granicus, 2023–present).
Bill Focus Areas 2025–2026
Grouped by law section from sponsored Assembly bills. Source: NYS Open Legislation API.
Floor Speeches: In Support (6) AI
Argued the $6,000 tax deduction would help veterans afford necessities and reinvest in the New York economy, and that New York should match neighboring states' veteran benefits to prevent veterans from leaving the state.
Argued the $6,000 tax deduction would help veterans afford necessities and reinvest in the New York economy, and that New York should be competitive with neighboring states in supporting veterans.
Expressed support for the legislation while raising concerns that the eighth-grade standard reflects systemic education failures and offered to partner on improving educational outcomes rather than lowering literacy standards.
Dyslexia may be a root cause of incarceration, and recognizing it in any population is valuable.
Stated support for the bill's intent but questioned the practical benefit of notifying riders 24 hours after a vehicle is removed from service, suggesting the notification is more for awareness of past exposure.
Floor Speeches: In Opposition (26) AI
Contended personalized access already exists through safe storage lockboxes and questioned why additional technology is needed. Raised concerns about technology failures (dead batteries, sweaty palms, dirty fingerprints) and argued the study wastes money on a minute percentage problem when the state faces larger issues like homelessness and drug use.
Objected that the bill requires private insurers to clean up problems created by state policy, arguing the state has an addiction to gambling revenue and is immoral in promoting addictive activities while forcing others to pay for treatment.
Questioned why distance requirements exist at all and whether the bill's definitions adequately protect children and houses of worship. Argued that if the goal is to protect children, the bill should include preschools and daycare facilities, not just schools recognized by OCM.
Challenged the bill's claim to reduce carbon footprint, arguing that electricity generation still relies on fossil fuels and that EVs' increased weight causes greater tire wear and road damage. Questioned whether the bill's environmental benefits are genuine.
Expressed concerns that the bill creates rules to subvert other states' laws and may put pharmacists in difficult positions with existing pharmacy systems and DEA compliance. Questioned whether the bill adequately prevents use of P.O. boxes as practice addresses on labels shipped to other states.
Electoral History AD-63
General Elections
| Year | Winner | Runner-up | Margin |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2024 | Sam T. Pirozzolo 57.6% (29,156) | Matthew Mobilia 42.4% (21,481) | 15.2pts |
| 2022 | Sam T. Pirozzolo 54.7% (19,589) | Vincent C. Argenziano 45.3% (16,254) | ⚡ 9.4pts |
| 2020 | Michael J. Cusick 52.8% (28,776) | Anthony M. DeGuerre 47.2% (25,740) | ⚡ 5.6pts |
| 2018 | Michael J. Cusick 95.6% (27,337) | John Dennie 4.4% (1,244) | 91.2pts |
| 2016 | Michael J. Cusick 100.0% (34,559) | Uncontested | — |
| 2014 | Michael J. Cusick 58.6% (12,039) | Joseph L. Tirone, Jr. 41.4% (8,506) | 17.2pts |
| 2012 | Michael J. Cusick 66.1% (25,294) | Samuel T. Pirozzolo 33.9% (12,977) | 32.2pts |
| 2010 | Michael J. Cusick 91.4% (18,424) | Danny Panzella 8.6% (1,732) | 82.8pts |
| 2008 | Michael J. Cusick 65.3% (23,568) | David Anthony Pascarella 34.7% (12,539) | 30.6pts |
| 2006 | Michael J. Cusick 69.4% (13,086) | Victor A. Grossman 30.6% (5,775) | 38.8pts |
| 2004 | Michael J. Cusick 63.9% (21,751) | Victor A. Grossman 36.1% (12,262) | 27.8pts |
| 2002 | Michael J. Cusick 55.1% (11,115) | Frank J. Peters 44.2% (8,911) | 10.9pts |
| 2000 | Steven Sanders 84.6% (34,805) | Frank J. Scala 15.4% (6,336) | 69.2pts |
| 1998 | Steven Sanders 86.8% (25,165) | Harold R. Eskenazi 13.2% (3,840) | 73.6pts |
| 1996 | Steven Sanders 81.2% (29,212) | Deborah A. Mayer 17.7% (6,373) | 63.5pts |
Primary Elections
| Year | Winner | Runner-up | Margin |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2020 (Conservative) | Anthony M. DeGuerre 66.5% (131) | Abraham Monheit 33.5% (66) | 33.0pts |
| 2018 (Reform) | Michael J. Cusick 91.5% (268) | Unattributable Write-In 2.0% (6) | 89.5pts |
| 2014 (Conservative) | Joseph Tirone, Jr. 58.2% (96) | Michael J. Cusick 35.8% (59) | 22.4pts |
Source: NYS Board of Elections certified results. ⚡ = margin under 10 pts. District history reflects 2022 redistricted boundaries.
Vulnerability Index AD-63
Base lean: D+1
Scenario model: ±5pt national environment shift applied to district base lean (D+1). Base lean blends voter registration (40%) with recent contested general election margins (60%), using up to the last 4 general elections with margins under 40 points. Ratings: Safe D/R = 15+ pts, Likely = 8–14 pts, Lean = 3–7 pts, Toss-up = within 2 pts (Assembly districts are smaller and more homogeneous than Senate districts, so tighter thresholds are used). Generic ballot from Silver Bulletin (Nate Silver), as of 5/21/2026. Not a prediction — reflects structural competitiveness under different cycle environments.
District 63 Profile
Source: U.S. Census Bureau, American Community Survey 5-Year Estimates (2024).
Voter Registration
Demographics
Commute Mode
Source: U.S. Census Bureau, ACS 5-Year Estimates (2024). Race and ethnicity figures may not sum to 100% — Hispanic/Latino is an ethnicity category that overlaps with racial groups.
Lobbying Activity
No lobbying disclosures on record for this member in the available dataset.
Source: NY Commission on Ethics and Lobbying in Government via data.ny.gov.