Victorious Cuomo confronts changing
Democratic landscape
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[September 14, 2018]
By Jonathan Allen and David Gaffen
(Reuters) - Andrew Cuomo heads into
November the heavy favorite to win a third term as New York's governor,
en route to what some believe are presidential aspirations come 2020.
But on his way there, the ground has shifted under his feet.
The incumbent Democrat spent $18 million to hold off an aggressive
challenge from actress and political novice Cynthia Nixon in a bitter
nominating contest. Along the way, he shifted notably to the left,
agreeing to restore voting rights for parolees and moving closer to
marijuana legalization.
However, he may have more work to do as the Democratic Party nationwide
increasingly aligns itself with priorities like increased ballot access
and embracing single-payer healthcare, and as some remain skeptical of
Cuomo's recent shift.
"If he wants to have a chance in a Democratic primary, as Democratic
voters really turn to the left, he’s going to have to lay out some
progressive credentials," said Patrick Egan, a politics professor at New
York University. Cuomo has denied he will run for president in 2020.
While Cuomo won easily against the inexperienced Nixon, the active
challenge to his left nearly cost him his lieutenant governor, Kathy
Hochul, who ran several points behind Nixon on Thursday.
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It also resulted in losses for several Democrats in the state Senate who
for years had caucused with Republicans, handing that party control of
the state's upper chamber - an arrangement that made many skeptical of
Cuomo, a wariness not necessarily assuaged by his recent efforts on
policy.
"Everything 'left' that he's done is basically because Cynthia pushed
him to do it," said Mindy Rosier, a 43-year-old public school special
education teacher from Manhattan and a Nixon supporter.
The election of President Donald Trump has proved a call to action for
voters on the party's left flank. Voters nominated more liberal
candidates to represent Democrats for governor's races in Florida and
Georgia, but action has been seen in more conservative states as well.
Teachers went on strike in Oklahoma and West Virginia in efforts to
secure higher pay - and voters later defeated some lawmakers who voted
against those efforts in Oklahoma's state contests.
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New York Governor Andrew Cuomo stands with his girlfriend Sandra Lee
as he speaks to the media after voting in the New York Democratic
primary election at the Presbyterian Church in Mt. Cisco, New York,
U.S., September 13, 2018. REUTERS/Mike Segar
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"One of the things I’ve been most struck by is how the reaction to
Trump has so deeply affected state-level contests, even at the
district level," said Grant Reeder, professor of political science
at Syracuse University’s Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public
Affairs.
In New York, progressive anger was centered in the challenges to
Democratic state senators who had handed the state's senate majority
to Republicans. It was part of an effort by Democrats to regain
power at the state level after suffering dramatic losses in states
during the Obama Administration.
"Senate Republicans have held New York back for too long, and the
oncoming blue wave will elect a functional Democratic majority in
November," said Andrea Stewart-Cousins, the senate minority leader,
who supported the Democratic challengers.
Having a more liberal senate may help Cuomo, experts said. The
governor said that "nobody has stood up to Donald Trump like I have"
at a debate last month, and New York was not immune to the surge in
voter turnout among Democrats seen across special elections and
nominating contests in the last year.
"He was able to effectively run against Washington and the Trump
administration, messaging that may have helped draw energy from
Democrats eager to participate in elections this year to check the
President," said Daniel Lewis, associate professor at Siena College.
(Reporting by Jonathan Allen and David Gaffen; Editing by
Christopher Cushing)
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