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Asm. Nily Rozic

District 25 Democrat First elected 2013

Nily Rozic has represented AD-25 since 2013 in a district carrying a D+37 partisan lean, yet her 2024 general election against Kenneth Paek produced a 6.2-point margin — the narrowest of her tenure and flagged as competitive — a notable result in a district where Democrats hold 52.1% of registrations against 15.4% Republican and 30.2% independent; the district is majority Asian at 55.5%, with a median household income of $84,098 and a homeownership rate of 54.8%. Despite the 2024 result, scenario modeling places AD-25 as Safe D across all 2026 electoral environments, with a base lean of D+24. Rozic sponsored 70 bills in the 2025 session, with her heaviest concentration in General Business (17 bills), followed by Labor (8 bills) and Education (6 bills), reflecting a legislative focus on consumer, workforce, and institutional policy. Her top sponsorship area aligns with General Business, the same sector commonly active among corporate and technology lobbying interests, a relationship worth noting given the volume of her business-law legislation.AI

Topic Focus AI

Algorithmic Transparency & Consumer Protection Campus Anti-Semitism & Title VI Enforcement Child Mental Health & Social Media Regulation Discrimination & Harassment Statute of Limitations Eating Disorder Prevention & Diet Pill Restrictions Hospital Transparency & Healthcare Access Non-Disparagement Clause Restrictions Telecommunications Carrier Regulation Utility Shutoff Protections for Vulnerable Populations Workers' Compensation Language Access

Topics extracted by AI from joint Senate-Assembly committee hearing transcripts and floor debate. Tag size reflects number of supporting citations.

Key Issues AI

Civil Service 2 for A4850
Social Services 1 for A8509
General Business 1 for A6065
General Business 17 bills
Labor 8 bills
Education 6 bills
Public Health 5 bills
Election 4 bills
Executive 4 bills
Public Service 4 bills
Constitution, Concurrent Resolutions to Amend 2 bills

Key issue areas derived from floor debate speeches and sponsored bill law sections.

Legislative Activity (2025–2026)

Bills sponsored 70
Floor debate appearances 50
Years in office 13

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

General Business 17 bills
Labor 8 bills
Education 6 bills
Public Health 5 bills
Election 4 bills
Executive 4 bills
Public Service 4 bills
Constitution, Concurrent Resolutions to Amend 2 bills

Grouped by law section from sponsored Assembly bills. Source: NYS Open Legislation API.

Floor Speeches: In Support (50) AI

A07796 An act to amend the Public Officers Law, in relation to accessing records under the Freedom of Information Law 2026-03-23 PASSED
A04850 New York State Teleworking Expansion Act 2026-03-18 PASSED

The bill requires each state agency to establish a teleworking policy allowing employees to work remotely to the maximum extent possible without diminished performance. Supporters cited workforce retention benefits and federal precedent, noting the City of New York's successful 2023 pilot program. Opponents expressed concerns about the phrase "maximum extent possible" as potentially favoring remote work over agency culture preferences, questioned how performance would be measured, and raised concerns about equipment costs and impacts on Albany's economy as the state capital.

A09446 An act to amend the General Business Law, in relation to warning labels on addictive feature platforms 2026-01-21 PASSED

Assemblyman Norber spoke in strong support, arguing the bill is a commonsense measure to protect New Yorkers, especially children, from deliberately addictive digital platform features. He emphasized the bill does not ban technology or silence speech, but rather inserts transparency and informed choice through warning labels similar to those on cigarettes and alcohol. Norber noted that infinite scrolling, auto-play, algorithmic manipulation and constant notifications are engineered to keep users hooked, and that mental health professionals are sounding alarms about rising anxiety, depression and attention deficit disorders linked to excessive platform use.

A05346 An act to amend the General Business Law and the Mental Hygiene Law, in relation to requiring warning labels on addictive social media platforms 2025-06-16
A03862 An act to amend the Public Health Law and the Insurance Law, in relation to providing information to patients and the public on hospital rule-based exclusions 2025-06-11 PASSED

Sponsor explained the bill creates transparency around hospital-based exclusions so consumers can make informed decisions about which hospitals provide needed services. The bill applies only to general hospitals and facility-level policies, not individual providers, and exempts restrictions based on lack of equipment, bed space, or insurance denial.

Floor Speeches: In Opposition AI

No recorded floor speeches in opposition found in our transcript archive for this member.

Electoral History

General Elections

Year Winner Runner-up Margin
2024 Nily D. Rozic 53.1% (16,712) Kenneth Paek 46.9% (14,741) 6.2pts
2022 Nily D. Rozic 57.1% (11,752) Seth Breland 42.9% (8,839) 14.2pts
2020 Nily D. Rozic 100.0% (28,155) Uncontested
2018 Nily D. Rozic 100.0% (18,311) Uncontested
2016 Nily D. Rozic 76.4% (22,143) Usman Ali Chohan 23.6% (6,856) 52.8pts
2014 Nily D. Rozic 100.0% (9,111) Uncontested
2012 Nily D. Rozic 66.8% (16,479) Abraham M. Fuchs 24.7% (6,098) 42.1pts
2010 Rory I. Lancman 100.0% (11,688) Uncontested
2008 Rory I. Lancman 100.0% (17,273) Uncontested
2006 Rory I. Lancman 79.6% (10,395) Morshed Alam 20.4% (2,656) 59.2pts
2004 Brian M. McLaughlin 100.0% (19,886) Uncontested
2002 Brian M. McLaughlin 100.0% (10,177) Uncontested
2000 Brian M. McLaughlin 100.0% (15,711) Uncontested
1998 Brian M. Mc Laughlin 100.0% (10,409) Uncontested
1996 Brian M. Mc Laughlin 73.7% (16,273) Steven C. Chen 26.3% (5,805) 47.4pts

Primary Elections

Year Winner Runner-up Margin
2018 (Reform) Tony Avella 31.2% (5) Nily Rozic 12.5% (2) 18.7pts

Source: NYS Board of Elections certified results. ⚡ = margin under 10 pts. District history reflects 2022 redistricted boundaries.

Vulnerability Index

Base lean: D+24

Favorable D
Safe D
Neutral
Safe D
Favorable R
Safe D

Scenario model: ±5pt national environment shift applied to district base lean (D+24). 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 25 Profile

Population 118,412
Median income $84,098
Median rent $2,015
Homeownership 54.8%
Education (BA+) 40.6%
Poverty rate 12.9%
Uninsured rate 6.1%
Unemployment rate 6.0%

Source: U.S. Census Bureau, American Community Survey 5-Year Estimates (2024).

Voter Registration

52%
15%
33%
Dem 52.1% Rep 15.4% Ind/Other 32.5%

Demographics

White 23.6%
Black 4.9%
Hispanic 14.9%
Asian 55.5%
Median age 43.6
Foreign born 53.1%
Limited English households 29.0%
Veterans 2.3%
Disability rate 9.5%

Commute Mode

Drive alone 39.8%
Public transit 29.0%

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.