Stanley Steingut
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Stanley Steingut (May 20, 1920 Crown Heights, Brooklyn, New York City - December 8, 1989 New York City) was an American lawyer and politician.
[edit] Life
He was the son of Speaker Irwin Steingut. He attended the Peddie School and Union College. He served in the U.S. Navy during World War II, went on to graduate from St. John's University School of Law and was admitted to the bar in 1950.
He was a Democratic member from Kings County of the New York State Assembly from 1952 to 1978, and was minority leader from 1969 to 1974, and Speaker from 1975 to 1978. In 1978, as the sitting Speaker, he was defeated when running for re-election to the Assembly. His defeat was ascribed by many political observers to inadequate attention to his home district. It was said that he had become too caught up in Albany and state affairs. He was defeated in the 1978 Democratic primary by Murray Weinstein, a political unknown, who went on to beat him narrowly in the general election, in which Steingut ran as a Liberal.
After losing his Assembly seat, he served more than a year as Chairman of the New York State Sports Authority. He also resumed the practice of law, initially as counsel to the firm of Baskin & Sears and later as the senior partner in the Manhattan law firm of Berger & Steingut.
He had been suffering from lung cancer and died of pneumonia at the Tisch Hospital.
He was a founder and a trustee of Touro College. He received honorary degrees from Union College and Polytechnic University.
He married Madeline Fellerman, and they had three children: Robert Steingut, an investment banker and former City Council member at large from Brooklyn; Theodore Steingut; and Ilene Steingut Vallifuoco.
[edit] Sources
- [1] Obit in NYT on December 9, 1989
Preceded by Irwin Steingut |
New York State Assembly, Kings County 18th District 1953–1965 |
Succeeded by DISTRICT ELIMINATED |
Preceded by NEW DISTRICT |
New York State Assembly, 44th District 1966 |
Succeeded by ? |
Preceded by ? |
New York State Assembly, 41st District 1967–1978 |
Succeeded by Murray Weinstein |
Preceded by Perry B. Duryea, Jr. |
Minority Leader of the New York State Assembly 1969–1974 |
Succeeded by Perry B. Duryea, Jr. |
Preceded by Perry B. Duryea, Jr. |
Speaker of the New York State Assembly 1975 - 1978 |
Succeeded by Stanley Fink |