Disgraced Former NY Gov. Cuomo Launches Political Comeback With a Run for NYC Mayor

FILE - Former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo testifies before the House Oversight Select Subcommittee's hearing on the Coronavirus Pandemic, on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, Sept. 10, 2024. (AP Photo/Cliff Owen, File)

Former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced Saturday that he is running for mayor of New York City, relaunching his political career following a yearslong exile over a barrage of harassment accusations.

In a 17-minute video announcing his campaign, Cuomo pitched himself as an accomplished moderate who could save a city that felt threatening and “out of control,” and is capable of navigating the delicate balance between working with Republican President Donald Trump and fighting him, when necessary.

“I am not saying this is going to be easy. It won’t be easy, but I know we can turn the city around and I believe I can help and that is why I announce my candidacy today for mayor of New York City today,” he said.

The Democrat is expected to mount a formidable campaign, despite entering the race deeply wounded by the scandal that forced his resignation from the governor’s office in 2021.

He takes on a large field of primary opponents with low name recognition plus an incumbent, Mayor Eric Adams, who — for now — remains under indictment on federal corruption charges, and under scrutiny from critics who question his independence from Trump.

Cuomo enters the race with fundraising prowess, a record of accomplishments over his three terms as governor and potential support among many of the same moderate voters who helped propel Adams to office.

Yet it is unclear whether voters are willing to give Cuomo another chance following his remarkable downfall 3 1/2 years ago, when he went from being hailed for his leadership during the onslaught of COVID-19 to being castigated for his behavior with women and questioned about his response to the pandemic.

In his campaign video, Cuomo acknowledged past “mistakes” but didn’t directly mention the harassment allegations.

“Did I always do everything right in my years of government service? Of course not,” he said. “Would I do some things differently knowing what I know now — certainly. Did I make mistakes, some painfully? Definitely, and I believe I learned from them and that I am a better person for it and I hope to show that every day.”

Adams, caught on a city street by a Politico reporter after Cuomo’s announcement, welcomed the former governor to the race.

“Come one, come all. Everybody should put their position forward. I have a great record to run on. We look forward to the campaign,” he said.

The mayor’s race already has several candidates vying to beat Adams in the June Democratic primary.

Among them are city Comptroller Brad Lander, state Sen. Zellnor Myrie, state Sen. Jessica Ramos, state Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani and former city Comptroller Scott Stringer, who was a frontrunner in the mayor’s race four years ago until a woman accused him of groping and kissing her without her consent 20 years earlier.

Ramos in a statement called Cuomo a “corrupt bully” who “brings nothing to this race but baggage.”

Myrie said New York shouldn’t be forced to relive “the Andrew Cuomo show.”

“We deserve better than selfish leaders who spent decades in office putting their desire for power above New Yorkers’ needs.”

Adams is also seeking reelection but is facing a tempest over the criminal case against him, and the U.S. Justice Department’s extraordinary effort to end the case over the objection of the prosecutors who brought the charges.

An indictment said Adams accepted luxury travel perks and illegal campaign contributions from people who wanted to buy his influence, including a Turkish official and other foreign nationals. After Trump took office, a top Justice Department official ordered prosecutors to dismiss the charges so Adams could focus on assisting the president’s immigration agenda, while leaving open the possibly that the case could reemerge after the mayoral election.

That dynamic led critics to claim that Adams had struck a deal to help with Trump’s immigration crackdown in exchange for legal salvation.

Adams has strongly denied such an arrangement was made, while facing intense pressure to step down and a potential removal from office by Gov. Kathy Hochul, a Democrat. Some of the mayor’s top deputies announced plans to step down in protest.

Cuomo started in politics working for his father, former New York Gov. Mario Cuomo, and later rose to become U.S. housing secretary under President Bill Clinton and New York attorney general before being elected governor in 2010.

His national star power was highest during the coronavirus pandemic, when his televised daily briefings, full of clear-eyed rhetoric on the virus, attracted admirers nationwide who saw him as a steady hand of leadership at a chaotic time. The briefings won an international Emmy award and led to him getting a book deal for more than $5 million to write “American Crisis: Leadership Lessons From the Covid-19 Pandemic.”

Women, though, began coming forward in late 2020 and early 2021, accusing Cuomo of misconduct. He faced a potential impeachment before he stepped down. A state ethics panel tried unsuccessfully to get Cuomo to give up the proceeds of his book deal after it determined he used taxpayer resources to prepare, edit and publish the book.

Cuomo was further damaged by allegations that a directive from his administration had unintentionally contributed to a wave of COVID-19 deaths in nursing homes by initially barring them from refusing to readmit virus patients discharged from hospitals.

The governor insisted the allegations was baseless, but his administration was subsequently found to have substantially undercounted the number of nursing home deaths as it sought to deflect the criticism.

Cuomo still has a significant campaign war chest that could technically be used in his bid for mayor. But the process of transferring his state donations to a city committee would be complicated and require each donor to sign off on the switch, a potentially burdensome effort.

(AP)



6 Responses

  1. I am so happy that he’s running and I really hope he wins!! I think he really has common sense and I’m so grateful for the fact that he took the Magaifah seriously and enforced the restrictions..

  2. AP is sleazy and gross.

    There is, of course, no mention of Antiochus setting “red zones” which targeted religious Jewish neighborhoods, whose Covid numbers were better/lower than the nearby gentile neighborhoods which were not targeted.

  3. Cuomos’ independence from TRUMP allowed him to ignore a hospital ship and a retrofitted javits center that were equipped to save tens of thousands of covid patients. He exercised his independence by ignoring that and stuffing those covid stricken patients back into nursing homes which wiped out ten of thousands of people! He should be tried for mass murder not run for mayor!!

  4. His policy during the Covid crises of forcing Nursing Homes to take in Covid patients from hospitals led to the death on my Mother HY”D.

    He did this because he didn’t want to use the Hospital ship sent by Trump.

    He should be hung for murdering my Mother among 15,000 other Seniors.

    He is an arrogant S.O. B.

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