Linda Rosenthal was born in 1957 to parents who fled the Nazis in the 1930s.[4] Rosenthal earned a
B.A. degree in history from the
University of Rochester[2] in 1980.[1]
Political career
In 1993, Rosenthal began working for US Congressman (for
New York's 10th congressional district)
Jerry Nadler and served as Manhattan District Director and Director of Special Projects. Prior to this, she worked in publishing.[3][5]
In May 2015, fellow Manhattan Democrat
Richard N. Gottfried tried to curb a bill introduced by Rosenthal that would allow customers to bring their dogs to outdoor restaurants, because Gottfried was afraid larger breeds would be able to grab food from tabletops.[10][11] Gottfried said: "Some dogs are tall enough that all they would have to do is turn their heads and they would be eating off people's plates."[10] A similar bill that passed in California has not resulted in any problems, and the practice is also legal in Israel and some European countries, and common in Europe and in Los Angeles.[10][11][12] The bill passed the Senate in May 2015 by a 60-0 vote.[10][11][13] In March 2016, follows the State Legislature's passage of her bill, the
New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene issued an advisory allowing dogs to accompany human diners at restaurants that have outdoor seating, joining
service dogs which were already allowed in virtually all situations.[12][13][14]
In March 2019, she introduced a bill, A5040,[15] that will ban a sale of fur in New York, by 2021. New York would follow California, which is in the process of legislating the ban.[16][17]
Also in 2019, New York passed Rosenthal's bill A1303B,[18] the first statewide law to ban cat declawing in the United States. She worked closely with the nonprofit animal advocacy organization,
The Paw Project, to pass the bill.[19]
In 2022, Rosenthal was the Assembly sponsor of the
Adult Survivors Act (the Senate sponsor was
Brad Hoylman).[20] The bill established a one-year "lookback period" that allowed adult victims of sex abuse to bring civil suits that were previously barred due to the
statute of limitations. It unanimously passed the Senate in April 2022, passed the Assembly on a 140–3 vote in May 2022,[21] and was signed into law by Governor
Kathy Hochul.[22]
In the Assembly, Rosenthal is the chair of the Housing Committee, and sits on the Codes, Health, and Agriculture committees.[23] In 2023, she said of
New York City housing shortage, "I’m really not worried about the supply of market-rate housing."[24]