From comforter-in-chief to persona non grata: Cuomo's stunning fall
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[August 04, 2021]
By Joseph Ax
(Reuters) -For much of last year, New York
Governor Andrew Cuomo was perhaps the most trusted politician in
America; his daily televised coronavirus briefings, accompanied by a
PowerPoint slide deck, made him a widely admired source of comfort in
his home state and beyond.
On Tuesday, however, the state attorney general released a scathing
report that found Cuomo had sexually harassed multiple women, retaliated
against at least one victim for making her complaint public and created
a toxic workplace culture of fear and intimidation.
The five-month investigation launched by Attorney General Letitia James,
a fellow Democrat, deepened a stunning fall from grace for Cuomo, who
has gone from a national party leader to a political pariah in the span
of a few months.
State lawmakers in Albany, where Democrats hold a legislative majority,
have opened their own probe into Cuomo's behavior as part of a potential
impeachment inquiry. Carl Heastie, the Democratic speaker of the state
assembly, said on Tuesday that the report's description of Cuomo's
behavior reflected someone "not fit for office."
The scandal erupted in February, when two former aides accused the
governor of sexually harassing them. Several other women came forward
soon after that with their own accounts of misconduct.
In televised remarks on Tuesday, Cuomo, 63, again denied all of the
sexual harassment accusations and made it clear he has no intention of
resigning.
Accusations that he inappropriately touched and kissed women were simply
misunderstandings, he said.
"I've been making the same gesture in public all my life," Cuomo said,
as photos of him hugging and kissing men and women appeared on the
screen. "It is meant to convey warmth, nothing more. ... I do kiss
people on the cheek. I do kiss people on the hand. I do embrace people."
"I am the same person in public as I am in private," Cuomo said, adding
that he may sometimes have made remarks that unintentionally left people
uncomfortable.
Prominent members of his own party previously called on him to step
down, including Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, New York's senior
U.S. senator, and almost the entire state congressional delegation.
Cuomo has continued to raise money for a possible 2022 re-election bid,
though he has not yet formally announced whether he will seek a fourth
term.
MUST-WATCH TV
His coronavirus briefings last year, often carried live by nearly every
television network, became appointment television at a time when
President Donald Trump was struggling to reassure the public and
Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden was confined to his Delaware
home.
Still, Cuomo faced some criticism for not closing down the state sooner,
as well as scrutiny over whether his administration sought to conceal
the extent of nursing home deaths. Cuomo has defended his response to
the pandemic and denied any wrongdoing with respect to death statistics.
The New York City-born Cuomo began his political career as a top
campaign adviser to his father, Mario Cuomo, who served three terms as
New York governor from 1983 to 1994.
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New York Governor Andrew Cuomo gives a press conference in the
Manhattan borough of New York City, New York, U.S., June 2, 2021.
REUTERS/Carlo Allegri/File Photo
After a stint as a prosecutor and lawyer, Andrew
Cuomo joined President Bill Clinton's administration and eventually
became U.S. secretary of housing and urban development. He also
married into a political dynasty when he wed Kerry Kennedy in 1990,
though they would divorce in 2005. Cuomo's brother, Chris, is a
high-profile anchor for CNN.
Andrew Cuomo's first foray into statewide politics went poorly, when
he lost the Democratic gubernatorial nomination in 2002 despite
strong fundraising. In 2006, he successfully ran for attorney
general, leading some Democratic politicians to label him the
state's "comeback kid."
He was largely viewed as a ideological centrist - in 2018, he beat
back a liberal challenge from "Sex and the City" actor Cynthia Nixon
- though he has moved left in recent years with the rest of the
Democratic Party.
As his power grew, Cuomo built a reputation as an ambitious,
ruthless politician who was willing to retaliate against perceived
enemies and whose abrasive style in private often alienated others.
Earlier this year, Cuomo called a state assemblyman, Ron Kim, who
had criticized the governor over the nursing home crisis, and
threatened to attack him publicly, according to Kim. Cuomo would do
just that a week later at a news briefing.
His years-long feud with liberal New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio
gave the city's tabloids plenty of fodder, from the serious to the
ridiculous. In 2016, the pair fought over the fate of a wayward deer
that had found its way into Manhattan; when the deer died, each
administration blamed the other.
At times their animosity caused confusion during the pandemic. In
the spring of 2020, de Blasio announced city schools would close for
the rest of the year, only to be corrected by Cuomo, who said only
the governor had the authority to do so.
"Cut the crap," a frustrated Eric Adams, the Brooklyn borough
president, implored both men in a Twitter post. Adams, now the
Democratic mayoral nominee, is widely expected to win a November
election and succeed the term-limited de Blasio.
Cuomo had weathered other potential scandals. In 2014, he disbanded
an anti-corruption panel only nine months after he convened it,
triggering a U.S. Justice Department inquiry. The U.S. Attorney's
Office in Manhattan eventually concluded there was insufficient
evidence to show any crimes occurred.
(Reporting by Joseph Ax; Editing by Daniel Wallis and Howard Goller)
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