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NYC pol wants Cuomo cut off from taxpayer funds in mayor campaign: ‘Not following the rules'

NYC pol wants Cuomo cut off from taxpayer funds in mayor campaign: ‘Not following the rules'

New York Post15-05-2025
One City Council member wants ex-Gov. Andrew Cuomo cut off from public matching funds in his comeback campaign for mayor.
Council member Lincoln Restler (D-Brooklyn) called on the city's Campaign Finance Board (CFB) to reject any taxpayer funds from boosting Cuomo over accusations his campaign illegally coordinated with the Super PAC 'Fix the City.'
'Andrew Cuomo is not following the rules,' Rester said outside City Hall on Thursday, three days after the CFB denied Cuomo $600,000 in matching funds over the alleged violation.
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'He is breaking the rules at every turn,' said Restler, chair of council's Government Operations Committee. 'There needs to be accountability.
3 Council Member Lincoln Restler (D-33) of Brooklyn, urged the CFB thursday to conduct a thorough investigation into the former Governor.
Robert Miller
'Where there's smoke, there's fire,' the council member added. 'We're asking for a pause in the disbursement of matching funds. We're asking to see the CFB to investigate and hold him accountable.'
Restler, joined by Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso and election reform groups, called for the CFB to do a 'full and complete' investigation of the Cuomo campaign — even though it wouldn't be completed before the Democratic Party primary next month.
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'We want to make sure that the elected officials are working for the people and not corporations,' Reynoso said ahead of the CFB's budget hearing.
Cuomo, the frontrunner in the crowded primary, was slapped with a CFB complaint by rival mayoral candidate Zellnor Myrie that claimed the ex-governor's campaign of 'Redboxing' — an illegal campaign finance practice in which candidates direct PACs to use specific data points or phrases.
3 Cuomo was denied more than 600K in matching funds while the CFB investigates his campaign for 'redboxing'.
AFP via Getty Images
Despite the suspicions, Cuomo did net $1.5 million from the CFB on Monday.
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Restler bashed Cuomo for allegedly benefitting from at least three undisclosed lobbyists who were fundraising on his behalf, and has ignored multiple warnings from the board about incorrectly soliciting private donations, as was previously reported by The Post.
The CFB dodged specifics on their ongoing investigation when questioned at the budget hearing Thursday.
'I'm not at liberty to discuss any specific candidates with ongoing matters before the board,' CFB executive director Paul Ryan said.
Ryan testified that the board is backlogged as far back as 2021 in their auditing processes — with only 43% of audits from that year completed.
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3 The former New York Governor is currently polling ahead of his democratic opponents at 37%.
James Keivom
Cuomo spokesman Rich Azzopardi slammed Restler as a 'lackey' of mayoral candidate and current city Comptroller Brad Lander. He said New Yorkers would 'see right through this feeble attempt at election interference.'
Our campaign has operated in full compliance with the campaign finance laws and rules, and everything on our website was reviewed and approved by our legal team in advance of publication — as I'm sure [candidates] Scott Stringer, Justin Brannan and others did when they launched similar pages,' he said.
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Chicago voters stuck with ‘America's Worst Mayor' Brandon Johnson send urgent warning to NYC about Zohran Mamdani
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The mayor's competitors — to the extent they focus on Adams instead of each other — paint him as an executive beholden to President Donald Trump, whose Department of Justice successfully moved to dismiss the incumbent's five-count bribery case this spring. The mayor maintains he did nothing wrong — though the case's dismissal prompted a mass upheaval at DOJ — and turned the tables on his competitors: Mamdani in particular has been outspoken in his opposition to the policies being carried out by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement — a position Adams said will make it harder to cooperate with federal authorities on a wider range of public safety investigations. 'You can't let your emotions get in the way of those collaborations,' Adams said. 'We've made it clear to ICE: We're not going to collaborate with anything that's dealing with civil enforcement, but if you guys want to take dangerous people off the streets, particularly dangerous gangs, we want to coordinate.' Adams said his administration set up a daily 10 a.m. meeting between the NYPD, district attorneys and a host of federal authorities including the FBI — a confab he cited as key to a recent arrest of 27 alleged members of Tren de Aragua, an international gang that has attracted national headlines. 'I don't know how they're going to be able to ensure that we deal with some of the international terrorism, the international issues,' he added, referring to Mamdani and Cuomo. 'How do we do that to keep the city safe — which we are a target — if we're not collaborating with the White House and with our partners?' Mamdani's team pushed back against the mayor's characterization. 'Zohran has made it crystal clear that while he will work with the federal government when it's to the benefit of New Yorkers, he will never bow down to Trump's authoritarian attacks,' Mamdani spokesperson Dora Pekec said in a statement. Cuomo — who reportedly had a personal phone call with the president about the race, though he has denied the exchange took place — has said he would similarly balance collaboration and resistance. 'During the first Trump administration, the governor worked with the federal government when it wanted to help New York and stood up to defend New York when the Trump administration sought to hurt it,' Cuomo spokesperson Rich Azzopardi said in a statement. 'No one has a longer or stronger record of that than the governor. The mayor, I believe, was spending a lot of time in Turkey back then and may have missed it.' Adams' criminal case was dismissed April 2. A federal judge did not make any determination about the mayor's innocence or guilt but said the ordeal smacked of a bargain between Adams and Trump's DOJ. Regardless, elements of the accusations have continued to dog the mayor's campaign. The New York City Campaign Finance Board has previously cited the indictment and its allegations of a straw donation scheme involving Turkish interests as among the reasons it has repeatedly blocked Adams from receiving around $3.5 million in public matching funds. Adams has denied those accusations. As POLITICO reported Tuesday, Adams said he is working to obviate the CFB's determination by raising additional private funds and suggested his campaign would sue over the issue for a second time. 'If the courts decide we have a right to get the matching funds, we'll get them,' Adams said. 'If they don't, I have to raise the money based on that. And that's what I'm going to do.' In addition, state and federal prosecutors are pursuing cases against ousted Adams aides — one of whom has pleaded not guilty in a conspiracy, bribery and money laundering case and another who pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit wire fraud Tuesday. Those cases harken back to the mayor's own legal troubles 'When you read about it over and over again, it has an impact on voters,' he said. 'And that's why I have to get out and tell the story. I couldn't tell it for 15 months, … the number one thing that is in my defense, I tell people: read the indictment.' Federal prosecutors accused the mayor of accepting travel perks and straw donations in exchange for inquiring after the status of a fire safety inspection at a Midtown skyscraper owned by the Turkish government. Adams argued the complaint contains no evidence linking him to wrongdoing. After the dismissal, Adams characterized the case as a political hit job carried out by 'deep state' actors in the federal government as punishment for speaking out against former President Joe Biden's immigration policies during an election year. That accusation is undercut by several elements of the case, though. The mayor has also talked about a permanent government on the local level that has undermined pieces of his agenda. 'Now imagine [a city employee working for 35 years], how many mayors have you seen? You've gone through mayors and you already know that mayors are going to come and go, so if they are irritated that you are asking me to do something that I don't like, or you are asking me to do something that's going to hurt someone that I have a relationship in politics, there are ways to tie you up,' Adams said. 'And I was surprised at the depth of it.' Moving or firing city employees who he found problematic, Adams said, was more difficult than it seemed. 'If you were to tell a person your services are no longer needed, some of them are long-term civil service union employees. There's a whole process,' Adams said. 'If you want to reassign, you open yourself up to lawsuits. It's unfortunate that a lot of these actions get in the way of producing for our city. And that is probably one of the biggest barriers to move the cities forward.'

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