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Governor Andrew Cuomo has exhibited the most adequate leadership in this pandemic

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Anybody feel like Gov Cuomo of New York has been the most authoritative and present of all world leaders? I feel like he's the best example of how to lead in a crisis. Granted he tried to cut medicaid but other than that he's been on point on this corona counter-offensive.
 
What leadership? The Covid-19 management by NY state leaves a lot to be desired. They haven't peaked yet and it will most likely surpass Italy in the number of deaths.
 
Cuomo is very impressive and kinda funny. He's definitely running in 2024.
I've been watching both Trump's and Cuomo's daily press conferences for the last 2 weeks now and it's nice to see them get grilled by reporters on every little issue regarding CoVid. These regular media interactions is something other democracies should be emulating.
 
Cuomo is very impressive and kinda funny. He's definitely running in 2024.
I've been watching both Trump's and Cuomo's daily press conferences for the last 2 weeks now and it's nice to see them get grilled by reporters on every little issue regarding CoVid. These regular media interactions is something other democracies should be emulating.

Can't run in 2024, Biden's VP Gretchen Whitmer is gonna run that year.
 
What leadership? The Covid-19 management by NY state leaves a lot to be desired. They haven't peaked yet and it will most likely surpass Italy in the number of deaths.

There's not much you can do to predict and control a viral pandemic that came out of nowhere, that said Cuomo has been present, interacting with the media and his constituents regularly, which evokes the people's confidence and calms the public. He's been aggressively importing PPE and ventilators, he's really doing the most right now.
 
There's not much you can do to predict and control a viral pandemic that came out of nowhere, that said Cuomo has been present, interacting with the media and his constituents regularly, which evokes the people's confidence and calms the public. He's been aggressively importing PPE and ventilators, he's really doing the most right now.

Sorry the 'calming' press conferences are good TV but doesn't give much confidence to the loved ones who died and the frontline workers facing severe shortages of PPE in medical facilities. Lack of poor planning and neglect in medical services for years by NY state has brought us to this sad state of affairs.
 
There are lots of other leaders in different parts of the world who is working with much lesser resources with less educated population.

As usual, whoever does decent job in US is the best in the world.
 
If I remember correctly, New York on its own has more cases of Coronavirus than many other nations. Dems love projecting themselves as the competent ones but they really aren’t and it’s all PR.
 
If I remember correctly, New York on its own has more cases of Coronavirus than many other nations. Dems love projecting themselves as the competent ones but they really aren’t and it’s all PR.
Right, at the end of the day thier funding comes from coked up pseudo liberal wall street bros

Just like republicans are loyal to their Idiotic lobbyists
 
In the USA perhaps but surely not in the whole world.
 
From my observations young Austrian chancellor should great leadership skills and acted early and was able to win the trust of the population while making some tough decisions.

Only after the pandemic can we really say who did how well.
 
Wait till you realise Cuomo’s position on Israel-Palestine issue. I wouldn’t be too surprised if he turns out to be a full blown colonial shill.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">BREAKING: A heartbreaking 757 people died from the coronavirus YESTERDAY in New York City alone. <br><br>The single worst day for any city in the world during this pandemic. As conservatives claim it's a hoax and that our hospitals are empty, it is ravaging all five boroughs here.</p>— Shaun King (@shaunking) <a href="https://twitter.com/shaunking/status/1246797304918614019?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">April 5, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Is NY locked down or not?

Its shelter-in-place - everything closed except for the essentials, but public transport is running for getting essential workers into the city. Restaurants open only for delivery & take-out. Its virtually a ghost town these days, never seen anything like it - not even post 9/11.
 
Cuomo had done a good job so far, but have also been greatly impressed by the governor of Ohio- DeWise. Has been extremely proactive unlike his Republican peers in tackling the crisis.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">This is Gov Cuomos take on what COVID has revealed about our healthcare system:<br><br>It doesnt “show anything other than the number of people who are now infected in this pandemic exceeds the capacity of the health care system not the design of the health care system or the funding”</p>— Ayman Mohyeldin (@AymanM) <a href="https://twitter.com/AymanM/status/1249664385796243459?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">April 13, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Donald Trump is not a “king” and does not have “total authority” to reopen the US economy from its coronavirus shutdown, New York’s governor, Andrew Cuomo, said on Tuesday.

At a chaotic, angry and rambling White House briefing on Monday night, the president, champing at the bit to reopen the US as early as 1 May, made a startling claim.

“When somebody is the president of the United States, the authority is total,” he said, referring to public health and police powers in the states and territories.

Constitutional scholars and state governors alike were quick to reject the idea with Cuomo leading the charge in a spat over tackling the pandemic that is pitting the White House versus state leaders.

“I don’t know what the president is talking about, frankly,” Cuomo told NBC. “We have a constitution … we don’t have a king … the president doesn’t have total authority.”

Joe Biden, the presumptive Democratic nominee for president, also chimed in.

“I am not running for office to be King of America,” he said in a tweet. “I respect the constitution. I’ve read the constitution. I’ve sworn an oath to it many times. I respect the great job so many of this country’s governors – Democratic and Republican – are doing under these horrific circumstances.”

According to researchers at Johns Hopkins University, by Tuesday the US had confirmed more than 582,000 Covid-19 cases and more than 23,000 people had died. New York is the hardest-hit state with just short of 800 deaths every day and nearly 11,000 deaths in all: nearly four times its death toll on 9/11.

On Tuesday, the International Monetary Fund said the pandemic would lead to the worst economic downturn since the Great Depression of the 1930s.

The once booming US economy, hitherto the president’s trump card in a re-election year, is in meltdown, with unemployment spiraling and stocks sliding. Facing polling deficits against Biden in battleground states, Trump has said he will listen to his public health experts – who have counseled against reopening too soon – but has also said he alone will decide when social distancing and other measures should be dropped.

On Monday, the names of a “council to reopen America” were reported. All were Trump officials, including the president’s daughter, Ivanka Trump, and her husband, Jared Kushner. There were no public health advisers among them.

Meanwhile, Cuomo and governors of six other north-eastern states announced plans to co-ordinate on when to relax social-distancing guidelines and reopen to business. Similar moves have happened on the west coast.

On Tuesday, Cuomo said any decision to reopen would have “to be phased. It has to be balanced. It’s a public health strategy and an economic reactivation strategy.

“The key to me is testing. People have to know that they are safe and the testing actually works to make people feel safe, and we don’t have that capacity now … We have to develop that widespread testing capacity.”

Trump’s performance at the White House podium prompted widespread alarm, his repeated claim of “total authority” reminding some observers of Richard Nixon’s infamous claim after the Watergate scandal that “when the president does it, that means that it’s not illegal”

Steve Vladeck, a law professor at the University of Texas, tweeted: “Nope. That would be the literal definition of a totalitarian government – which our traditions, our constitution, and our values all rightly and decisively reject.”

There was also dissent among Trump allies in Congress, many of whom spent years accusing Barack Obama of executive overreach, including the Florida senator Marco Rubio.

As TV networks and news websites continued to debate whether Trump’s briefings – which Cuomo called “a comedy show” – should be broadcast live at all, some observers reached for colorful language to describe the president’s misleading claims, attacks on journalists and showing of a propaganda film largely culled from Fox News.

In a column for the Daily Beast, the former Republican consultant turned anti-Trump author and organizer Rick Wilson called the briefing “a manic, gibbering, squint-eyed ragefest by America’s Worst President, a petty display by a failed man who long ago passed the limits of his competence and knowledge”.

Trump did not clear muddied waters later on Tuesday, when he tweeted, obscurely: “Tell the Democrat governors that ‘Mutiny On The Bounty’ was one of my all-time favorite movies. A good old-fashioned mutiny every now and then is an exciting and invigorating thing to watch, especially when the mutineers need so much from the captain. Too easy!”

Speaking to reporters in Albany, Cuomo insisted he did not want to get into a fight with the president – to play Fletcher Christian to his Captain Bligh, perhaps – even though Trump was, he said, “wrong on the law”.

But Cuomo chose to follow the president into the alleyways of 18th-century history.

The governor showed a PowerPoint slide in which Alexander Hamilton discoursed on the “inherent advantages” of state governments, which in the founder’s view in 1788 “give them an influence and ascendancy over the national government”.

Cuomo stressed “ascendancy”. It was, he said with something of a Trumpian flourish, “a beautiful word”.

The White House scheduled its next briefing for 5pm.

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/apr/14/trump-coronavirus-reopen-us-cuomo
 
Donald Trump is not a “king” and does not have “total authority” to reopen the US economy from its coronavirus shutdown, New York’s governor, Andrew Cuomo, said on Tuesday.

At a chaotic, angry and rambling White House briefing on Monday night, the president, champing at the bit to reopen the US as early as 1 May, made a startling claim.

“When somebody is the president of the United States, the authority is total,” he said, referring to public health and police powers in the states and territories.

Constitutional scholars and state governors alike were quick to reject the idea with Cuomo leading the charge in a spat over tackling the pandemic that is pitting the White House versus state leaders.

“I don’t know what the president is talking about, frankly,” Cuomo told NBC. “We have a constitution … we don’t have a king … the president doesn’t have total authority.”

Joe Biden, the presumptive Democratic nominee for president, also chimed in.

“I am not running for office to be King of America,” he said in a tweet. “I respect the constitution. I’ve read the constitution. I’ve sworn an oath to it many times. I respect the great job so many of this country’s governors – Democratic and Republican – are doing under these horrific circumstances.”

According to researchers at Johns Hopkins University, by Tuesday the US had confirmed more than 582,000 Covid-19 cases and more than 23,000 people had died. New York is the hardest-hit state with just short of 800 deaths every day and nearly 11,000 deaths in all: nearly four times its death toll on 9/11.

On Tuesday, the International Monetary Fund said the pandemic would lead to the worst economic downturn since the Great Depression of the 1930s.

The once booming US economy, hitherto the president’s trump card in a re-election year, is in meltdown, with unemployment spiraling and stocks sliding. Facing polling deficits against Biden in battleground states, Trump has said he will listen to his public health experts – who have counseled against reopening too soon – but has also said he alone will decide when social distancing and other measures should be dropped.

On Monday, the names of a “council to reopen America” were reported. All were Trump officials, including the president’s daughter, Ivanka Trump, and her husband, Jared Kushner. There were no public health advisers among them.

Meanwhile, Cuomo and governors of six other north-eastern states announced plans to co-ordinate on when to relax social-distancing guidelines and reopen to business. Similar moves have happened on the west coast.

On Tuesday, Cuomo said any decision to reopen would have “to be phased. It has to be balanced. It’s a public health strategy and an economic reactivation strategy.

“The key to me is testing. People have to know that they are safe and the testing actually works to make people feel safe, and we don’t have that capacity now … We have to develop that widespread testing capacity.”

Trump’s performance at the White House podium prompted widespread alarm, his repeated claim of “total authority” reminding some observers of Richard Nixon’s infamous claim after the Watergate scandal that “when the president does it, that means that it’s not illegal”

Steve Vladeck, a law professor at the University of Texas, tweeted: “Nope. That would be the literal definition of a totalitarian government – which our traditions, our constitution, and our values all rightly and decisively reject.”

There was also dissent among Trump allies in Congress, many of whom spent years accusing Barack Obama of executive overreach, including the Florida senator Marco Rubio.

As TV networks and news websites continued to debate whether Trump’s briefings – which Cuomo called “a comedy show” – should be broadcast live at all, some observers reached for colorful language to describe the president’s misleading claims, attacks on journalists and showing of a propaganda film largely culled from Fox News.

In a column for the Daily Beast, the former Republican consultant turned anti-Trump author and organizer Rick Wilson called the briefing “a manic, gibbering, squint-eyed ragefest by America’s Worst President, a petty display by a failed man who long ago passed the limits of his competence and knowledge”.

Trump did not clear muddied waters later on Tuesday, when he tweeted, obscurely: “Tell the Democrat governors that ‘Mutiny On The Bounty’ was one of my all-time favorite movies. A good old-fashioned mutiny every now and then is an exciting and invigorating thing to watch, especially when the mutineers need so much from the captain. Too easy!”

Speaking to reporters in Albany, Cuomo insisted he did not want to get into a fight with the president – to play Fletcher Christian to his Captain Bligh, perhaps – even though Trump was, he said, “wrong on the law”.

But Cuomo chose to follow the president into the alleyways of 18th-century history.

The governor showed a PowerPoint slide in which Alexander Hamilton discoursed on the “inherent advantages” of state governments, which in the founder’s view in 1788 “give them an influence and ascendancy over the national government”.

Cuomo stressed “ascendancy”. It was, he said with something of a Trumpian flourish, “a beautiful word”.

The White House scheduled its next briefing for 5pm.

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/apr/14/trump-coronavirus-reopen-us-cuomo

Actually this article for me goes to prove that Cuomo is directly responsible for NY state, for all the fault that Trump has Cuomo has powers but he let NY burn in Feb and March, he was waiting for Trump instructions instead of using his powers and his mind, sounds to me like Uddhav Thackeray where he was letting local train run till 20th of March with so many cases.
 
Actually this article for me goes to prove that Cuomo is directly responsible for NY state, for all the fault that Trump has Cuomo has powers but he let NY burn in Feb and March, he was waiting for Trump instructions instead of using his powers and his mind, sounds to me like Uddhav Thackeray where he was letting local train run till 20th of March with so many cases.

Its a master stroke from Trump; he will convince his voters that it was the governors fault that there was a delay. And also that he was ready to re-open the economy so there is little financial loss but the governors stopped him to do so.
 
Its a master stroke from Trump; he will convince his voters that it was the governors fault that there was a delay. And also that he was ready to re-open the economy so there is little financial loss but the governors stopped him to do so.

For me it was Trump fault that he didn't took virus seriously but why are state government or governors are selected if they can't understand basic health thing.
In country like USA, Pak and India state government CM or governors has to be more vigilant as central government can't look all over countries.
Citizens returning from China was celebrating Chinese new year's and was organizing support Wuhan rally and NY mayor was supporting them. Everything was open even when case started pouring in.
Shouldn't governor of NY state have take situation more seriously ?
Look at Pakistani Punjab administration and Indian Punjab administration, Pak Punjab may have more cases but he reacted more swiftly and he is doing good while Indian Punjab CM was hiding head in the sand and is relying on centre to do everything
 
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For me it was Trump fault that he didn't took virus seriously but why are state government or governors are selected if they can't understand basic health thing.
In country like USA, Pak and India state government CM or governors has to be more vigilant as central government can't look all over countries.
Citizens returning from China was celebrating Chinese new year's and was organizing support Wuhan rally and NY mayor was supporting them. Everything was open even when case started pouring in.
Shouldn't governor of NY state have take situation more seriously ?
Look at Pakistani Punjab administration and Indian Punjab administration, Pak Punjab may have more cases but he reacted more swiftly and he is doing good while Indian Punjab CM was hiding head in the sand and is relying on centre to do everything

That’s because a lot of agencies that will help you in this crises are federal agencies (fema/ cdc, etc) and they fall under the federal government.

But I don’t deny that Cuomo’s effforts are being overblown here. He has done well in a bad situation but I think any efficient governor would have achieved similar results.

Where he is standing out though is his laser focus attention, unlike Trump who uses any such opportunity to turn them into campaign rallies.. little substance more “Dems bad” “we did great” blah blah..

Cuomo is a refreshing break from that.
 
[MENTION=17315]Stewie[/MENTION] friend I am not talking about big decision but NY didnt even gone for soft lockdown before it was hit very bad, for example take UP case, a underdeveloped state decided to close malls, all gatherings, closed school before NY and at that time New York was hit very bad, half of Lucknow was locked down after 17th March, with no public transportation.
Are you telling that Governors in USA don't even have powers to close mall, school or shutdown a city? The thing is if NY has gone for soft lockdown from 1st week of March to hard lockdown from 2nd week, they might have saved many lives, they didn't even shutdown construction business till 27 march (I read somewhere) , I heard they only banned gathering over 500, public transport was running daily in March. You don't need centre authority for these type.
Trump and Cuomo both are bad, just because one manage to appear great in front of media doesn't make him great.
 
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He's good in this crisis, but at the end of the day he's your typical corporate establishment politician, not that different from Biden or Hillary. A lot more charismatic though.
 
If this guy was to run against Trump right now he would take him to the cleaners. It's hard to find a Democrat with strong character and so much charisma, not to mention the no ** attitude.
 
[MENTION=17315]Stewie[/MENTION] friend I am not talking about big decision but NY didnt even gone for soft lockdown before it was hit very bad, for example take UP case, a underdeveloped state decided to close malls, all gatherings, closed school before NY and at that time New York was hit very bad, half of Lucknow was locked down after 17th March, with no public transportation.
Are you telling that Governors in USA don't even have powers to close mall, school or shutdown a city? The thing is if NY has gone for soft lockdown from 1st week of March to hard lockdown from 2nd week, they might have saved many lives, they didn't even shutdown construction business till 27 march (I read somewhere) , I heard they only banned gathering over 500, public transport was running daily in March. You don't need centre authority for these type.
Trump and Cuomo both are bad, just because one manage to appear great in front of media doesn't make him great.

i see what you are saying and yes, if given the chance, they would do things differently, wouldnt they.

but here is what most non americans dont understand about americans. the idea of civil liberties and small government are very very strong and ingrained in the american psyche. that and of course the idea of lockdown adversely affecting the economy had a big part to play. US unlike other civilised states is 100% capitalist and very very few welfare benefits afforded to its citizens. if you dont go out and work, you are in trouble.
the US economy is a consumer and spending economy.

so yes in the rearview mirror, it looks quite clear what should be done and how it should have been handled but you cannot fault either of them for their actions (or lack thereof)

that being said, yes it does matter what appears in front of media. how you carry yourself and speak and your words matter a lot. body and language positivity matters. cuomo focuses on what needsto be done. trump focuses on a lot of negative aspects. everything is a campaign rally for him. he gets defensive quite a lot and flat out denies making certain statements that are on record.

its all about perception. thats how politics works. Trumps perception works with certain people but not the educated masses.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">In extended fiery remarks, Gov. Andrew Cuomo responds to attack from Donald Trump: "First of all, If he's sitting home watching TV, maybe he should get up and go to work, right?"<br><br>Watch his full remarks: <a href="https://t.co/imu5k1sE1D">https://t.co/imu5k1sE1D</a> <a href="https://t.co/wG0OBN3ikb">pic.twitter.com/wG0OBN3ikb</a></p>— ABC News (@ABC) <a href="https://twitter.com/ABC/status/1251190517142114304?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">April 17, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
NY governor to 'tell the truth' in Trump meeting

Andrew Cuomo, New York state governor, said he planned to "tell the truth" in his Tuesday meeting with US President Donald Trump about the coronavirus crisis and would ask for the federal government for help in ramping up testing.

Cuomo also stressed during a daily briefing that he planned to take a regional approach to reopening businesses and schools in his state, the US epicentre of the pandemic.

"We will make reopening decisions in New York State on a regional basis. We recognize not all regions are impacted with COVID-19 in the same way," Cuomo wrote on Twitter.
 
Now taking on the Republicans!

==

Cuomo to McConnell: ‘I dare you’ to let states to go bankrupt

During his daily press briefing on the state’s coronavirus response, New York governor Andrew Cuomo dared Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell to pass legislation that would allow states to go bankrupt amid the outbreak.

“Pass the law. I dare you,” the governor said. “You want to send a signal to the markets that this nation is in real trouble? I dare you to do that”.

Cuomo then expanded on earlier comments on how the state of New York contributes more to federal budgets than McConnell’s home state of Kentucky:

“New York has bailed you out every year, every year. Mitch McConnell is a taker, not a giver. New Yorker is a state of givers.”

The dare then extended to Donald Trump:

“OK, senator, pass the bill that authorizes states to declare bankruptcy. Sign the bill Mr. President. Good, pass the bill, and let’s watch how the stock market takes off. I got great news about our economic resilience.
 
New York’s governor, Andrew Cuomo, has said he wishes he had “blown the bugle” about Covid-19 earlier. According to figures from Johns Hopkins University, New York state has confirmed more than 290,000 coronavirus cases and approaching 23,000 deaths. Countries such as France, Italy and Spain have recorded more deaths but not by much, and New York City alone has the fifth-highest death total in the world, with the UK in fourth.

Speaking to Axios on HBO, Cuomo discussed US reactions to the first news of the outbreak, from China in December.

“When we heard in December that China had a virus problem,” he said, “and China said basically, ‘It was under control, don’t worry,’ we should’ve worried.

“I wish someone stood up and blew the bugle. And if no one was going to blow the bugle, I would feel much better if I was a bugle blower last December and January … I would feel better sitting here today saying, ‘I blew the bugle about Wuhan province in January.’ I can’t say that.”
 
Funny what difference a year or so makes. Something to be said about life, tears and all that.

New York senators urge Cuomo to resign after governor refuses to quit

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/mar/12/andrew-cuomo-resign-new-york-democrats-aoc-nadler

New York’s two US senators, Chuck Schumer, who is also the Senate majority leader, and Kirsten Gillibrand, joined national and state representatives late Friday afternoon in calling for Governor Andrew Cuomo’s resignation.

Cuomo had earlier again refused to resign after a group of New York’s most powerful and prominent Democrats in the House of Representatives joined calls for the governor to step down over the multiple sexual misconduct allegations against him, and scrutiny over his administration’s misreporting of Covid-19 deaths among nursing home residents.”

Schumer and Gillibrand put out a joint statement, saying: “Confronting and overcoming the Covid crisis requires sure and steady leadership. We commend the brave actions of the individuals who have come forward with serious allegations of abuse and misconduct.”

It continued: “Due to the multiple, credible sexual harassment and misconduct allegations, it is clear that Governor Cuomo has lost the confidence of his governing partners and the people of New York. Governor Cuomo should resign.”

At a press conference earlier on Friday, Cuomo denied all of the sexual misconduct allegations and castigated politicians calling for him to quit as “reckless and dangerous” and engaging in “cancel culture”.

“I did not do what has been alleged. Period,” Cuomo said. The governor said he wanted investigations into the allegations to proceed but added: “I’m not going to resign. Period.

“Politicians who don’t know a single fact but yet form a conclusion and an opinion are, in my opinion, reckless and dangerous,” he added.

His statement came shortly after a group of congressional representatives includes Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a standard bearer for the party’s progressive wing, as well as Jerry Nadler, who chairs the House judiciary committee, and Carolyn Maloney, the chair of the House oversight committee.

Nadler said on Friday that Cuomo had lost the confidence of New Yorkers. “The repeated accusations against the governor, and the manner in which he has responded to them, have made it impossible for him to continue to govern at this point,” the congressman said.

In a joint statement issued with Jamaal Bowman, another New York congressman, Ocasio-Cortez said the latest allegation of sexual harassment against Cuomo was “alarming” and “raises concerns about the present safety and well-being of the administration’s staff. These allegations have all been consistent and highly detailed, and there are also credible media reports substantiating their accounts.”

The duo added that the six accusations of sexual harassment and misconduct leveled at Cuomo came on top of claims that the governor’s administration hid data on Covid-19 deaths in nursing homes, a combination that means that Cuomo “can no longer effectively lead in the face of so many challenges”.

In total, 10 of the 19 Democrats from New York elected to the House of Representatives have now called for Cuomo’s resignation, with Kathleen Rice, who represents a section of New York’s Long Island, previously calling for his removal.

On Thursday, Bill de Blasio, mayor of New York City and a longtime Cuomo rival, also urged the governor to step down, alongside 59 New York state lawmakers, meaning that almost all major New York Democratshave now turned on the state’s chief executive.

The New York state assembly also launched an “impeachment investigation” into the sexual misconduct allegations made by the six women. A separate investigation is being led by the state attorney general, Letitia James.

“The reports of accusations concerning the governor are serious,” said Carl Heastie, the speaker of the state assembly. The assembly judiciary committee will oversee the investigation, which will have the power to interview witnesses and subpoena documents. Forty-seven state senators have already said Cuomo should step down, more than the 46 needed to convict the governor if he was impeached.

Separately, police in Albany said that they have been notified of the allegations and that these “may have risen to the level of a crime” although this does not mean they have opened a criminal investigation.

Cuomo had previously denied any wrongdoing in his treatment of women, although he has provided a general apology if any of his previous actions made anyone feel uncomfortable.

On Friday, Cuomo, who was attorney general of New York and Bill Clinton’s housing secretary and is the son of the late governor Mario Cuomo, said: “I am not part of the political club.”

He said it wasn’t clear why all the sexual misconduct allegations had been made now. He said they should be taken very seriously, but he denied any inappropriate conduct.

“Look, it’s very simple: I never harassed someone. I’ve never abused anyone,” Cuomo said.

“You need to know the facts before you make a decision,” he said, referring to his critics. “People know the difference between playing politics, bowing to cancel culture and the truth.”

On the nursing home deaths, the governor has previously claimed his administration had to verify deaths of residents at hospitals, but critics questioned why that hadn’t held up the release of data in other states. Cuomo’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Along with an allegation that the governor groped a female aide at the Executive Mansion last year, Cuomo is facing allegations of sexually suggestive remarks and behavior toward women, including female aides. One aide said he asked her if she would ever have sex with an older man. And another aide claimed Cuomo once kissed her without consent, and said the governor’s aides publicly smeared her after she accused him of sexual harassment.

The White House press secretary, Jen Psaki, has repeatedly said that Joe Biden and Kamala Harris both support the attorney general’s investigation into the harassment allegations.
 
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-new-york-cuomo-biden/biden-says-cuomo-should-resign-if-sexual-misconduct-allegations-are-true-idUSKBN2B904X

U.S. President Joe Biden said on Tuesday that New York Governor Andrew Cuomo should resign if the allegations of sexual misconduct against him are confirmed by an investigation.

New York state Attorney General Letitia James last week named a team of outside lawyers to lead a probe into accusations that Cuomo harassed women through unwanted, sexually suggestive comments or inappropriate physical contact, including unsolicited kissing.

Asked in an interview with ABC News whether Cuomo should step down if the investigation finds the allegations are true, Biden said: “Yes. I think he’ll probably end up being prosecuted, too.”

Cuomo, a 63-year-old divorced father of three daughters in their 20s, has denied any misconduct and vowed to cooperate with the inquiry by James’ office.

“A woman should be presumed to be telling the truth and should not be scapegoated and become victimized by her coming forward,” Biden said. “There should be an investigation to determine whether what she says is true.”

New York’s two U.S. senators, Chuck Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand, last week urged Cuomo, a fellow Democrat, to resign, saying he had “lost the confidence” of New Yorkers.

The state legislature has said it would open an impeachment investigation into the allegations.
 
https://www.wsj.com/articles/manhattan-law-firm-to-lead-andrew-cuomo-impeachment-probe-11615988002?mod=hp_featst_pos4

ALBANY, N.Y.—Democrats who dominate the New York state Assembly on Wednesday said that a Manhattan law firm will lead an impeachment investigation into allegations that Gov. Andrew Cuomo sexually harassed multiple women as well as his administration’s handling of Covid-19 in nursing homes.

Davis Polk & Wardwell LLP will assist the chamber’s judiciary committee in examining Mr. Cuomo’s conduct, Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie said.

“Hiring Davis Polk will give the committee the experience, independence and resources needed to handle this important investigation in a thorough and expeditious manner,” said Mr. Heastie, a Democrat from the Bronx.

The speaker first announced the impeachment investigation on Thursday and said Monday that he would not predict how long the inquiry would last. A vote to impeach a governor would require a majority of members in the 150-seat chamber.

Three former female aides to the governor and one woman who still works on his staff have accused Mr. Cuomo of sexual harassment or inappropriate behavior. The third-term Democrat has denied he inappropriately touched anybody and apologized if any of his remarks or behavior made people uncomfortable.

Attorney General Letitia James, a Democrat, is overseeing an investigation into the harassment claims and has already interviewed at least one of the women who complained. Mr. Cuomo has asked people to withhold judgment until that review is completed.

The governor has rebuffed calls for his resignation by senior leaders of his own party, including U.S. Sens. Chuck Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand and state Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins, a Democrat from Yonkers.

Separately, federal prosecutors have requested data about nursing home deaths and are interested in the production of a July Health Department report about how Covid-19 affected those facilities, The Wall Street Journal has reported. The governor’s advisers have said they are cooperating with the inquiry.

Mr. Heastie’s position straddled the varying camps in the 107-member Democratic conference. Forty Democratic members last week called for Mr. Cuomo to resign, but 21 members signed a letter saying he should remain until Ms. James’s review is completed.

The leader of the chamber’s 43-person Republican conference started calling for Mr. Cuomo’s impeachment last month. Eight Democrats say they support impeachment, including Assemblyman Charles Barron of Brooklyn.

Mr. Barron said that there needs to be an investigation before any impeachment charges, but was concerned that the process is taking so long.

“I’m upset that we didn’t go this route right after the nursing-home report. It should have been done already,” he said.

Mr. Heastie said that the Davis Polk team would include Angela Burgess, Greg Andres and Martine Beamon. They will work with Assemblyman Charles Lavine, a Democrat from Long Island who chairs the chamber’s judiciary committee.

“These are serious allegations, and they will be treated with fairness, due process and discretion,” Mr. Lavine said.
 
Cuomo has come crashing down to earth.
The harassment allegations and his handling of senior homes during pandemic are two big question marks over his time as governor and future politician plans.
 
Funny what difference a year or so makes. Something to be said about life, tears and all that.

New York senators urge Cuomo to resign after governor refuses to quit

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/mar/12/andrew-cuomo-resign-new-york-democrats-aoc-nadler

Never made sense to me how the Governor of the state with the highest number of Covid deaths was being hailed as a great leader with exceptional management skills.

Apparently the media can say the sky is green and the public will nod in agreement.
 
Never made sense to me how the Governor of the state with the highest number of Covid deaths was being hailed as a great leader with exceptional management skills.

Apparently the media can say the sky is green and the public will nod in agreement.

Yup. The media was desperate last year to push any bulwark against Trump, even blatantly false ones. Even intelligent members of the public have preconceived biases, so it's easy for them to latch on to such narratives.
 
Never made sense to me how the Governor of the state with the highest number of Covid deaths was being hailed as a great leader with exceptional management skills.

Apparently the media can say the sky is green and the public will nod in agreement.

At the time Coumo ordered old people be sent back to aged care centers instead of putting them on the hospital boat that Trump had sent to New York, why would he do that. Answer is it caused more deaths giving the democrats and the media more ammunition to blame Trump.

Coumo is responsible for the deaths of hundreds of aged persons and at the time some were hailing him a hero because it made Trump look bad. Coumo should be charged with homocide for the deaths of these people.
 
Anybody feel like Gov Cuomo of New York has been the most authoritative and present of all world leaders? I feel like he's the best example of how to lead in a crisis. Granted he tried to cut medicaid but other than that he's been on point on this corona counter-offensive.

This is what the power of media propaganda can do
 
Dont think he can survive this! Dems are exposing their double standards here by
not asking him to step down
 
At the time Coumo ordered old people be sent back to aged care centers instead of putting them on the hospital boat that Trump had sent to New York, why would he do that. Answer is it caused more deaths giving the democrats and the media more ammunition to blame Trump.

Coumo is responsible for the deaths of hundreds of aged persons and at the time some were hailing him a hero because it made Trump look bad. Coumo should be charged with homocide for the deaths of these people.

Anything which would have made Trump look good was not acceptable and it resulted in so many deaths....
 
Dont think he can survive this! Dems are exposing their double standards here by
not asking him to step down

Plenty of people within the Democratic Party have asked him to step down. So have news media pundits ( left leaning)
 
Never made sense to me how the Governor of the state with the highest number of Covid deaths was being hailed as a great leader with exceptional management skills.

Apparently the media can say the sky is green and the public will nod in agreement.

Number of reasons

1) Fauci, who is quite political, praised him even after his state had the most deaths
2) Cuomo used to bash Trump regularly
3) His brother is a famous journalist, who again likes to bash Trump

Between 2018 and 2020, even if OBL came back from the dead and held a presser to bash Trump, Democrats would call OBL a great person

It is all about Orange man bad
 
Yup. The media was desperate last year to push any bulwark against Trump, even blatantly false ones. Even intelligent members of the public have preconceived biases, so it's easy for them to latch on to such narratives.

So many examples of this but leftists never accept

Trump mentioned HCQ and suddenly it became a horrible drug. Turns out countries like Turkey, India and others used it for symptoms, but it was Trump saying it so it became a bad drug.
 
Number of reasons

1) Fauci, who is quite political, praised him even after his state had the most deaths
2) Cuomo used to bash Trump regularly
3) His brother is a famous journalist, who again likes to bash Trump

Between 2018 and 2020, even if OBL came back from the dead and held a presser to bash Trump, Democrats would call OBL a great person

It is all about Orange man bad

Well said, hah hah... as I tell my Democrat friends, they pay their money to buy the product of the mainstream media which gives them a biased view of the world and keep them ill-informed!
 
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https://www.reuters.com/world/us/new-york-governor-cuomo-be-deposed-sexual-harassment-probe-nyt-2021-07-17/

Investigators for the New York state attorney general's office are expected to take a deposition from Governor Andrew Cuomo on Saturday as part of a sexual harassment probe, the New York Times reported.

Cuomo, 63, had been riding high last year after public praise of his daily news conferences during the height of the coronavirus pandemic. But he then suddenly faced calls to resign following a flurry of accusations of sexual harassment or misconduct and revelations that his administration under-reported nursing home deaths from COVID-19.

Citing two unnamed sources familiar with the matter, the Times said two outside lawyers hired by Attorney General Letitia James' office would interview the governor in Albany, the state capital.

Over four months the attorney general's investigation has taken testimony from several women who have accused Cuomo of sexual misconduct or harassment while also collecting state documents, emails and text messages, the Times said.

Findings from the investigation are expected to be issued in a public report, the Times said.

Cuomo, a Democrat, has denied any wrongdoing.

"We have said repeatedly that the governor doesn't want to comment on this review until he has cooperated," Richard Azzopardi, a senior aide to Cuomo, told the Times in a statement.

Cuomo has acknowledged it had been a "custom" for him to kiss and hug people when greeting them. He has said he was sorry if his behavior had made "people feel uncomfortable."
 
https://www.reuters.com/world/us/new-york-ag-says-probe-found-gov-cuomo-sexually-harrassed-multiple-women-broke-2021-08-03/

A five-month investigation has found that New York Governor Andrew Cuomo sexually harassed multiple women in violation of federal and state law, creating a "climate of fear" within his office, state Attorney General Letitia James said on Tuesday.

The independent inquiry showed that Cuomo engaged in unwanted groping, kissing and hugging, and made inappropriate comments to a total of 11 women, James told a news briefing, adding that the Democratic governor's office had become a "toxic workplace" that enabled harassment to occur.

The findings, detailed in a scathing 168-page report, could deal a devastating blow to Cuomo's political future and hinder his administration, although the probe was civil in nature and will not directly lead to any criminal charges against him.

"These 11 women were in a hostile and toxic work environment. We should believe women," said James, a Democrat.

"What this investigation revealed was a disturbing pattern of conduct by the governor of the great state of New York," James added.

There was no immediate comment from the governor's office. Cuomo, 63, has denied wrongdoing.

Carl Heastie, speaker of the Democratic-controlled New York Assembly who has authorized an impeachment investigation into Cuomo's conduct, in a statement called the report's findings "disturbing" and said they pointed to "someone who is not fit for office."

Investigators spoke to 179 people, including complainants and current and former members of the executive chamber, James said. She said the probe resulted in a "clear picture" of what she called a "climate of fear" in which Cuomo sexually harassed multiple women, many of them young.

James launched her investigation into the allegations after receiving a formal request from Cuomo's office on March 1 to do so as the number of publicly reported allegations mounted.

James named two veteran outside attorneys to run the investigation: Joon Kim, a former federal prosecutor and acting U.S. attorney in Manhattan, and Anne Clark, an employment lawyer with experience in sexual harassment cases.

Kim told the briefing that the Cuomo workplace was "rife with bullying, fear and intimidation" and one in which crossing the governor or his senior staff meant you would be "written off, cast aside or worse."

The report shows that investigators did not find Cuomo's explanations about his encounters to be credible. It said Cuomo's "blanket denials and lack of recollection as to specific incidents stood in stark contrast to the strength, specificity, and corroboration of the complainants' recollections."

It was a swift fall from grace for the governor. Cuomo became nationally popular last year in the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic by presenting himself as an authoritative figure in daily televised press conferences. The complaints about sexual harassment emerged after broader criticism by Democratic politicians in the state that Cuomo governed through intimidation.

Cuomo, the divorced father of three adult daughters, was elected to three terms as governor, as was his late father, Mario Cuomo. Like his father, Andrew Cuomo resisted the temptation to run for U.S. president despite much speculation about possible national ambitions.
 
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/aug/04/andrew-cuomo-sexual-harassment-report-findings

Andrew Cuomo, the governor of New York who was found by the state’s top prosecutor to have violated the law by sexually harassing 11 women, continued to brave the storm on Wednesday while political support crumbled around him and moves for impeachment gathered pace.

The third-term Democratic governor – the longest-serving chief executive of any state in the nation – showed no sign of capitulating in the face of almost universal calls for his resignation from the Democratic establishment after the state’s top prosecutor released the results of the five-month investigation this week. Demands for him to stand aside poured in from individuals and institutions that had formed the bedrock of his empire.

Among former supporters now abandoning Cuomo, Democratic lawmakers in the state assembly attracted most attention as they will determine the likelihood and outcome of any impeachment. Until the New York attorney general Letitia James released her devastating 168-page report on Tuesday, finding that Cuomo had “sexually harassed current and former New York state employees”, key assembly players had guarded their positions.

But following soundings among the Democratic group, Carl Heastie, the speaker of the assembly, finally broke ranks. “It is abundantly clear to me that the governor has lost the confidence of the assembly Democratic majority and that he can no longer remain in office,” he said.

Heastie promised to move “expeditiously” to hold an impeachment investigation based on the 179 witnesses and 74,000 items of evidence gathered in the attorney general’s probe. But he has yet to specify a timeframe for impeachment charges to be drawn up or any trial staged.

As cogs of impeachment began to turn, several other critical pillars of Cuomo’s base collapsed. In addition to the top Democrats in the nation led by Joe Biden and Nancy Pelosi – both of whom have been longstanding friends of Cuomo – every Democratic member of Congress from New York has now cut ties.

On Wednesday, several trade unions that been among Cuomo’s main advocates similarly bailed out, as did another central supporter, the sexual and reproductive health provider Planned Parenthood.

As a further threat, criminal prosecutors were also beginning to circle overhead. The lead prosecutor in the state capital Albany has opened an investigation into Cuomo’s behavior based on the findings of the official inquiry, and similar moves have been made by district attorneys in Manhattan and Westchester county.

Investigators will have to take on board a three-year statute of limitations for sexual harassment cases under New York state law. However, the attorney general’s report found that Cuomo had created a hostile working environment, and that would allow prosecutors to explore incidents going back through the governor’s entire career.

Despite the seemingly impossible odds stacking up against him, Cuomo remained silent on Wednesday, allowing the statement he made hours after James’s report was published to make his case. In it, the governor followed a standard playbook of numerous powerful men accused of sexual misconduct before him – off-loading blame onto his female accusers, his political enemies, and even “generational” and “cultural perspectives” that he hadn’t “fully appreciated”.

He also included more than 40 photos of prominent politicians hugging people in an attempt to pass off his own actions as innocent. The images included former presidents George Bush and Barack Obama comforting hurricane victims.

“The facts are much different to what has been portrayed. I am 63 years old. I have lived my entire adult life in public service. That is just not who I am or who I ever have been,’ he said.

In making his calculations about whether and for how long to hold out, Cuomo might be counting on appealing directly to New York voters over the heads of his erstwhile Democratic allies. But a Marist poll on Wednesday carried a mixed message for what that could mean for him.

While it indicated that 59% of all New Yorkers thought the governor should resign, that proportion fell to 52% of registered Democratic voters – a much more nuanced result than the wall-to-wall calls for resignation coming from the party’s political leaders.

On the other hand, Cuomo cannot draw comfort from the poll’s finding that Democratic New Yorkers overwhelmingly think he should forego running for a fourth term in the gubernatorial election next year. Just 18% thought he deserved re-election.

The explosive reaction to the attorney general’s report has placed Cuomo in an ignominious position. Not only is he waging a one-man battle to undermine and discredit the gains made by the #MeToo movement in taking women’s accounts of sexual harassment seriously, but he now also runs the risk of becoming only the second New York governor to be impeached and removed from office. (The first was William Sulzer – impeached and convicted in 1913 for campaign finance violations and perjury.)

Should impeachment go ahead, it would follow on broadly the same lines as the two impeachments of Donald Trump during his presidency. Articles of impeachment – effective charges – would go to a vote in the assembly and if passed would then be put before the state senate where members and judges from the New York court of appeals would act as jurors.

A two-thirds majority vote would be needed to convict and expel Cuomo from the executive mansion.

Should he be removed, he would be replaced as governor by the current lieutenant governor Kathy Hochul. She would become the first woman to act as New York’s chief executive since the first governor George Clinton was elected 244 years ago.
 
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/aug/06/andrew-cuomo-criminal-complaint-sexual-harassment

A woman who accused New York governor Andrew Cuomo of groping her last year while they took a selfie photograph together has filed a criminal complaint with the Albany county sheriff’s department, the office said on Friday.

The complaint from a woman identified as “executive assistant #1” to protect her identity increases the possibility Cuomo could face criminal charges related to his conduct, detailed in a 165-page report released this week by the New York state attorney general Letitia James’s office.

The report said Cuomo sexually harassed 11 women and that his administration created a “climate of fear” at a “toxic” workplace and violated federal and state civil laws.

Four criminal prosecutors, in Albany, Westchester, Manhattan and Nassau county, announced in the wake of James’s issue of the report that they would review the evidence she had used as they considered whether to bring criminal charges.

Cuomo has denied inappropriately touching the women or inappropriate sexual conduct and has so far resisted calls to resign. After the attorney general’s investigation was released on Tuesday, Joe Biden was among the powerful Democratic figures calling for Cuomo’s resignation.

The state assembly is also investigating Cuomo and whether the third-term Democrat governor should be impeached.

The Albany county criminal complaint was first reported by the New York Post, which said that the victim filed the complaint on Thursday afternoon after meeting with the sheriff’s office.

She alleged that Cuomo pulled her in for a hug and reached under her shirt and fondled her at the governor’s residence in the state capital, Albany, in November 2020.

The woman’s claims were detailed in the attorney general’s report. She told investigators: “I have to tell you it was – at the moment I was in such shock that I could just tell you that I just remember looking down seeing his hand, seeing the top of my bra and I remember it was like a little even the cup – the kind of bra that I had to the point I could tell you doesn’t really fit me properly, it was a little loose, I just remember seeing exactly that,” she added, according to the report.

Sheriff Craig Apple told the Post the governor could be arrested if the allegations are substantiated. “The end result could either be it sounds substantiated and an arrest is made and it would be up to the DA to prosecute the arrest,” Apple said.

Cuomo has also been accused of retaliating against women who complained about his behavior, and of inappropriately touching a female state trooper whom he engineered to bring onto his security team.
 
https://www.reuters.com/world/us/new-york-governor-cuomo-resigns-after-sexual-harassment-findings-2021-08-10/

New York Governor Andrew Cuomo resigned on Tuesday following an inquiry that found he sexually harassed 11 women, mounting legal pressure and demands for his departure by President Joe Biden and others, a startling downfall for a man once seen as a possible U.S. presidential contender.

Cuomo, a Democrat who had served since 2011 as governor of the fourth most-populous U.S. state, made the announcement after New York Attorney General Letitia James on Aug. 3 released the results of a five-month independent investigation that concluded he had engaged in conduct that violated U.S. and state laws.

The investigation, detailed in a 168-page report, found that Cuomo groped, kissed or made suggestive comments to women including current and former government workers - one a state trooper - and retaliated against at least one woman who accused him of sexual misconduct. Cuomo denied wrongdoing.

Lieutenant Governor Kathy Hochul, a Democrat from western New York, will take over as governor of the state of more than 19 million people until the end of Cuomo's term in December 2022 as outlined in the state's constitution, becoming the first woman to hold the post.

Cuomo's resignation marks the second time in 13 years that a New York governor has stepped down in scandal, after Eliot Spitzer quit in 2008 over his patronage of prostitutes. Cuomo also became the latest powerful man taken down in recent years following the rise of the #MeToo social movement against sexual abuse and harassment that has shaken politics, Hollywood, the business world and the workplace.

His resignation spared Cuomo from possible removal from office through impeachment proceedings in the state legislature. An ongoing impeachment investigation had only promised to intensify.

Cuomo, 63, was elected to three terms as governor, as was his late father, Mario Cuomo. He previously served as U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development secretary from 1997 to 2001 under former President Bill Clinton.

Like his father, Andrew Cuomo never ran for president despite speculation about his possible national ambitions. He gained national prominence last year early in the COVID-19 pandemic after delivering daily news conferences as his state became the U.S. epicenter of the public health crisis.

The civil investigation found that the actions of Cuomo and his senior advisers violated multiple state and federal laws, but James did not pursue criminal charges. Local prosecutors are free to do so, meaning Cuomo still could face legal jeopardy.

Local prosecutors in Manhattan, Nassau County, Albany County and Westchester County said after the report's release that they are looking into the matter and have requested evidence from the independent inquiry. New York City's mayor said Cuomo should face criminal charges.

Cuomo had for months denied mounting allegations of sexual harassment - and renewed those denials after the investigative report was issued. But what was left of his political support crumbled after the findings were made public. Hours later, Biden - a friend of the governor for years - told reporters at the White House: "I think he should resign."

Other prominent Democrats including the state's two U.S. senators, Chuck Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand, and U.S. House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi also lined up in calling on the party's one-time star to resign.

Investigators concluded that Cuomo and his aides created a "toxic" and "hostile" workplace in an office gripped by bullying, fear and intimidation. The complaints about sexual harassment emerged after broader criticism by Democratic politicians in New York that Cuomo governed through intimidation.

Cuomo last year appeared to be a politician in ascent, presenting himself as an authoritative figure in televised news conferences on the pandemic. His image was burnished by television interviews with his younger brother, CNN host Chris Cuomo.

Shortly after James, a fellow Democrat, detailed the findings, Cuomo, the divorced father of three adult daughters, issued a video statement in which he said, "I never touched anyone inappropriately or made inappropriate sexual advances."

"That is just not who I am," Cuomo said in the video, as he argued that what women described as sexual advances were inoffensive gestures and comments inspired by a natural physical warmth arising from the culture in which he was raised. In the video, he indicated he had no plans to resign, mentioning specifically the fight against the pandemic.

A Marist Poll released a day after the report was issued showed that 59% of New Yorkers wanted Cuomo to resign, compared to 32% who said he should serve out his term and 9% who were unsure. Among Democrats, however, only 52% favored resignation.
 
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