Abinanti moved to Westchester in 1975 and lived in Greenburgh until 2011 when he moved to Pleasantville. He was legislative counsel to a Congressman and staff counsel to the Speaker of the New York State Assembly and various Assembly committees. He served as a prosecuting attorney for the villages of Ardsley and Dobbs Ferry. Abinanti has taught continuing legal education courses for PaceLaw School and courses in state and local government as an adjunct professor at Mercy College.[3]
Abinanti served as Greenburgh Town Councilman twice (1980–1984 and 1990–1991).[2] Abinanti was elected as Westchester County Legislator ten times. For almost twenty years (1992–2010), he represented the 12th District on the Westchester County Board of Legislators, which included the villages of Irvington, Dobbs Ferry, Hastings, Ardsley, and much of unincorporated Greenburgh, including East Irvington, Central Greenburgh, Hartsdale and Edgemont. On the County Board, he served as Majority Leader for three terms after the Democrats first assumed the majority on the Board for the first time in the history of the Westchester Legislature.
He is a practicing attorney with an office in Pleasantville.
State Assembly
Abinanti was first elected as a member of the New York State Assembly in 2010 and has served six terms.
He represented the 92nd District of the State Assembly which included the Towns of Greenburgh and Mount Pleasant, including the Villages of Ardsley, Elmsford, Dobbs Ferry, Hastings-on-Hudson, Irvington, Tarrytown, Pleasantville, and Sleepy Hollow, as well as parts of the Village of Briarcliff.
He served as chair of the Assembly Committee on Libraries, the Assembly Committee on Investigations, the Assembly Committee on Banks and the Assembly Committee on People with Disabilities
Three voters filed objections to the petition of Abinanti's opponent, Jennifer A. Williams. Out of many objections, the Westchester Board of Elections deemed one valid—that Williams used the term "New York State Assembly, District 92," to describe the office she was running for. The Board of Elections struck Williams from the ballot because of the objection.[5]
Williams then brought the case to court claiming the description was sufficient to describe the office she was seeking. Judge Gretchen Walsh ruled in Williams' favor. Williams and Abinanti both appeared on the ballot in the June 2020 primary.[6][7]
Abinanti won the Primary and then won the General Election.
Personal life
Abinanti is married to Janet Longo-Abinanti. They have two children. Abinanti is an attorney and advocate for people with disabilities [8]