Explainer: How an impeachment of New York Governor Cuomo would proceed
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[August 05, 2021]
NEW YORK (Reuters) - With New York
Governor Andrew Cuomo resisting widespread calls for his resignation
after a state investigation concluded he had sexually harassed at least
11 women, attention is focused on the ongoing impeachment investigation
by the state Assembly.
Under the New York Constitution, the Assembly has the sole power to
impeach the governor and bring him to trial before the Senate, who would
then weigh whether to convict and remove him from office. An impeachment
resolution would require at least 76 votes from the 150-member Assembly
to pass.
If impeached, Cuomo would then face trial in the New York State
Senate, overseen by state appellate judges. At least two thirds of the
63 senators, who act as jurors, would need to vote in favor of
convicting and removing Cuomo from office.
An impeachment of Cuomo, a Democrat who has been governor since 2011,
looks increasingly likely. It is less clear whether the Senate would
convict the three-term Democrat and remove him from office.
Carl Heastie, the speaker of the Democrat-controlled Assembly, held a
conference with his fellow members to discuss the report released by the
Attorney General Letitia James on Tuesday.
He released a statement saying "the Governor has lost the confidence of
the Assembly Democratic majority and that he can no longer remain in
office."
The Assembly's Judiciary Committee first opened an impeachment
investigation in March after two former Cuomo came forward with
complaints of sexual harassment by the governor.
Lawmakers said their investigation would include, but not be limited to,
the sexual harassment allegations against Cuomo and complaints by
lawmakers that Cuomo and his staff withheld data showing the true
COVID-19 death toll in the state's nursing homes.
Cuomo, who has denied wrongdoing, will have the right to present a
defense at any Senate trial.
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The New York State Assembly door is seen after an independent
inquiry found that Governor Andrew Cuomo sexually harassed multiple
women and violated federal and state laws, at the New York State
Capitol in Albany, New York, U.S., August 4, 2021. REUTERS/Patrick
Dodson
Heastie had said the Assembly was waiting to see the
findings of the attorney general's investigation, which was led by
two independent lawyers.
With a damning 168-report now in hand concluding that the Cuomo
broke federal and state sexual harassment laws, Heastie called the
findings "gut-wrenching" and vowed on Tuesday to complete the
impeachment investigation as "quickly as possible."
That could conclude within a month, and a trial in the Senate could
begin by late September of early October, the New York Times
reported, citing unnamed people who knew about the proceedings.
Heastie's office did not respond to questions about a timeline.
If Cuomo is impeached, Lieutenant Governor Kathy Hochul would become
acting governor while he faces trial.
Andrea Stewart-Cousins, the majority leader of the
Democrat-controlled Senate, said on Tuesday that the complaints
against Cuomo were disturbing and repeated her earlier calls on him
to resign.
The Assembly has impeached and the Senate has convicted a New York
governor only once. In 1913, William Sulzer, a Democrat, was removed
from office after he was convicted of misusing political campaign
contributions.
(Reporting by Jonathan Allen; Editing by Alistair Bell)
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