logo
A Union That Pushed Cuomo to Resign Spends $1 Million to Elect Him

A Union That Pushed Cuomo to Resign Spends $1 Million to Elect Him

New York Times6 days ago

This is The Sprint for City Hall, a limited-run series on the critical Democratic primary race for mayor.
Andrew M. Cuomo, the Democratic mayoral primary's front-runner and no stranger to million-dollar gifts, is getting another one, this time from a union. He and his rivals kicked their campaigns into a higher gear over Memorial Day weekend, with just four weeks to go until the primary and less than three before the start of early voting.
Hi, I'm Dean Chang, the editor running The New York Times's coverage of the mayoral primary. This week's personal observation involves Cuomo, the former governor, who said Sunday that he disliked the term 'outer borough' because it implied that Manhattan was superior to the other four boroughs. Our style guide concurs. If this mayor thing doesn't work out, might there be an editing job in his future?
In this edition of the newsletter, we'll look at Cuomo's leftward shift in messaging, break news about the union's spending on his behalf and reveal who some of the other candidates say was the best mayor in their lifetimes.
Cuomo's tale of two cities
Many of the Democratic candidates have emphasized the need to address inequality in the city, and argued that the next mayor should focus on helping New Yorkers keep up with the rising costs of rent, food and transportation.
Not Cuomo. He is running on competence, citing his experience as governor and reputation as a pugnacious fighter.
His rivals have noticed. They attack him as a friend of the business class who is out of touch with the concerns of real New Yorkers. Adrienne Adams, the City Council speaker and a mayoral candidate, said on Saturday that those concerns include affordability, safety and health care.
'I know that Andrew Cuomo cannot relate to my everyday situation,' she said, adding that 'we are being shortchanged in communities like yours and mine.'
The very next day in the Bronx, Cuomo, in one of his regular campaign appearances at a Black church, flipped the script. He mentioned his father, Mario M. Cuomo, and his famous speech at the 1984 Democratic National Convention, in which he invoked 'A Tale of Two Cities' to illustrate the nation's inequality under President Reagan.
'There are two cities right here,' the younger Cuomo said Sunday, speaking at the Church of God of Prophecy. 'We have the greatest wealth, and we have the greatest poverty. And we have the greatest opportunity, and we have the greatest places of despair, right here in this city.'
His comments seemed to suggest a new phase in his campaign strategy, a demonstration that he, too, can talk about inequality.
His mention of his father's speech and its catchphrase — 'a lot of people have stolen it since,' he said, perhaps in reference to Bill de Blasio — reminded me of my mother, and how she loves to talk about how the Chinese invented everything. Just don't tell the Cuomos or, for that matter, Charles Dickens.
More news:
A major push by a big union
Cuomo is already the best-funded candidate in the race. Now, his comeback attempt is getting yet another financial boost — this time from a major hotel and casino union.
The Hotel and Gaming Trades Council, which endorsed Cuomo back in April, told The Times that it plans to spend $1 million on paid advertising and canvassing for him before Primary Day.
The spending plans, which have not been previously reported, come as the hotel union rebuilds its relationship with Cuomo four years after urging him to resign as governor in the face of sexual harassment allegations. (Cuomo denied wrongdoing.)
The stakes are high. The union, which represents about 40,000 hotel and casino workers, is preparing for a major, citywide contract negotiation next year, and Cuomo would likely have considerable sway if elected mayor.
'When we endorsed him, we said Andrew Cuomo is a leader who will be in the foxhole fighting alongside our members,' said Rich Maroko, the group's president. 'Now, we've got his back and we're bringing some heavy ammunition to the fight.'
The hotel workers' union has not yet finalized the advertisements, but they are expected to include TV, digital and mail components from the union's campaign arm, Hotel Workers for Stronger Communities. The total is similar to what the group spent supporting Eric Adams in 2021.
Cuomo is certainly not wanting for resources. Fix the City, a super PAC supporting his candidacy, has raised more than $9 million. A second outside group, Restore Sanity NYC, which does not have to disclose its donors before the election, began sending mail this month that promotes Cuomo's platform. And Cuomo announced on Friday that his campaign had raised $3.9 million.
So far, only one other candidate in the race has benefited from a super PAC, and it is far smaller. The group, New Yorkers for Lower Costs, has raised $210,000 to help Mamdani.
For a more detailed look at the candidates, go over to our Who's Running tracker. If you want to brush up on where the nine most prominent Democrats stand on various issues, we've got you covered. And if you want to find stories you may have missed, our mayor's race landing page is right here.
Wishing for a mayor like LaGuardia
We invited the leading Democratic candidates to our newsroom last week to discuss the race and their vision for the city. We'll roll out their responses over the coming days. (Cuomo has not, as of yet, committed to an interview.) Emma Fitzsimmons has a sneak preview: she'll tell us who each candidate picked as the best mayor in their lifetime.
Mamdani got the ball rolling by praising de Blasio, who left office with a gutter-scraping approval rating. Why? Mamdani cited universal prekindergarten, de Blasio's signature policy.
'He created a template for what it could look like for city government to deliver on the affordability crisis in a manner that would make it easier to raise families in the city,' Mamdani said.
Adrienne Adams, the City Council speaker, picked John V. Lindsay, a charismatic leader who was elected mayor as a Republican in 1965 and whose tenure had mixed reviews. She said that her parents liked him when she was growing up.
'I would hearken back to their discretion and their wisdom,' she said.
Myrie, a state senator, praised Michael R. Bloomberg as a strong manager and said that people felt safer when he was mayor.
'It's not that I agree with every outcome, but the city was managed,' Myrie said. 'There was a clear sense that whatever the vision he had in the moment, it would be executed.'
Lander and Stringer, the current and former comptroller, both dodged the question a bit, initially naming Fiorello La Guardia, who was elected in 1933 before they were born.
Lander then said that Bloomberg had managed the city best, but faulted him for growing income inequality and a rise in stop-and-frisk policing; he said de Blasio had the 'best single accomplishment' with universal prekindergarten.
Stringer said the last few mayors had been 'minimalists' and he liked the 'moxie of Ed Koch.'
Jessica Ramos, a state senator, praised de Blasio's creation of universal prekindergarten and Bloomberg's defense of immigrants. Michael Blake, a former state assemblyman, named David N. Dinkins. Whitney Tilson, a former hedge fund executive, picked Bloomberg and pointed out that he shared Bloomberg's status as an outsider and a businessman.
'I think you need someone who is outside the political machine,' he said.
Kathleen Chalfant, Broadway actress
Kathleen Chalfant, an award-winning stage actress, is probably best known for her roles in the original productions of 'Angels in America' and 'Wit.' She shared her ranked-choice ballot plans with Nick Fandos.
Chalfant stars this spring in a new film, 'Familiar Touch,' about a woman confronting dementia. It will make its New York City premiere in June, just a few days before Chalfant, 80, plans to cast her ballot in the mayoral primary, with Mamdani, the youngest candidate in the race, ranked first.
She said her support for Mamdani and Lander, her No. 2, had been shaped by participating in vigils with Israelis for Peace, a group calling for a cease-fire in Gaza and release of hostages taken by Hamas. (Chalfant is not herself Israeli or Jewish.)
'A recognition of the slaughter in Gaza and the necessity for finding a cease-fire and justice and peace for all the people who live between the river and the sea is very important to me,' she said. 'My first two candidates share that view.'
Chalfant, who lives in Brooklyn Heights, said the rest of her ballot showed her 'strong progressive bias' and a desire to make the city more affordable.
'One of the wonders of living in New York is that we all live here together,' she said 'All of these people are trying to make the city a livable place, not only for those of us who are privileged, but for all the people who do the work, who keep the city going.'
She does not plan to rank Cuomo not because of any ranked-choice strategy but because she said he does not share her values.
Reliving a painful chapter
Adams marked the fifth anniversary of her father's death from Covid-19 with an affecting campaign speech last week at Elmhurst Hospital in Queens, a city-run hospital that was overburdened during the pandemic and turned her father away. Her 10-minute address was part a recounting of her father's legacy and part a personal rebuke of Cuomo's, as someone who led the state during the pandemic.
Her remarks mark one way she is trying to cut into Cuomo's share of support among Black voters, a key Democratic bloc that has largely flocked to the former governor but is showing openness to her campaign, according to recent polls.
'Is Andrew Cuomo the only one at fault? Not really. He didn't create this kind of politics,' she said later. 'He just mastered it.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

A Trump Official Threatens to Sue California Schools Over Trans Athletes
A Trump Official Threatens to Sue California Schools Over Trans Athletes

New York Times

time6 minutes ago

  • New York Times

A Trump Official Threatens to Sue California Schools Over Trans Athletes

The U.S. Department of Justice on Monday threatened legal action against California public schools if they continued to allow trans athletes to compete in high school sports, calling the students' participation unconstitutional and giving the schools a week to comply. In a letter sent to public school districts in the state, Harmeet K. Dhillon, assistant attorney general for civil rights, said the California Interscholastic Federation's 2013 bylaw that allowed trans athletes to compete violated the Equal Protection Clause of the Constitution and discriminated against athletes on the basis of sex. 'Scientific evidence shows that upsetting the historical status quo and forcing girls to compete against males would deprive them of athletic opportunities and benefits because of their sex,' Ms. Dhillon wrote, referring to trans girls as males. Elizabeth Sanders, a spokeswoman for the California Department of Education, said on Monday that the department was preparing to send guidance to the state's school districts on how to respond, and that it would do so on Tuesday. The Justice Department's move came two days after a trans girl won championships in two girls' events at the California state track and field meet, and less than a week after President Trump decried her inclusion in the competition, saying that he would cut federal funding to the state if it let her participate. At the meet, held over two days in Clovis, Calif., the trans girl, AB Hernandez, won the girls' high jump and triple jump, and also finished second in the long jump for Jurupa Valley High School, in what is arguably the most competitive high school meet in the nation. In a statement provided by the group TransFamily Support Services, her mother, Nereyda Hernandez, said that it was her daughter's third year of competing in sports. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Trump pushes 'Big, Beautiful Bill' as solution to four years of Biden failures: 'Largest tax cut, EVER'
Trump pushes 'Big, Beautiful Bill' as solution to four years of Biden failures: 'Largest tax cut, EVER'

Fox News

time10 minutes ago

  • Fox News

Trump pushes 'Big, Beautiful Bill' as solution to four years of Biden failures: 'Largest tax cut, EVER'

President Donald Trump turned to social media on Monday evening to sell Americans on his vision for the "Big, Beautiful Bill," calling it an opportunity to turn the U.S. around after what he called "four disastrous years" under former President Joe Biden. The House passed the spending bill in late May and it is now in the Senate's hands. "We will take a massive step to balancing our Budget by enacting the largest mandatory Spending Cut, EVER, and Americans will get to keep more of their money with the largest Tax Cut, EVER, and no longer taxing Tips, Overtime, or Social Security for Seniors — Something 80 Million Voters supported in November," Trump said in a post on Truth Social. "It will unleash American Energy by expediting permitting for Energy, and refilling the Strategic Petroleum Reserve. It will make American Air Travel GREAT AGAIN by purchasing the final Air Traffic Control System." The president said the bill includes the construction of The Gold Dome, which he says will secure American skies from adversaries. The bill will also secure the border by building more of the wall and "supercharging the deportation of millions of Criminal Illegals" that he said Biden allowed into the U.S. "It will kick millions of Illegals off Medicaid, and make sure SNAP is focused on Americans ONLY! It will also restore Choice and Affordability for Car purchases by REPEALING Biden's EV Mandate, and all of the GREEN NEW SCAM Tax Credits and Spending," Trump wrote. "THE ONE, BIG, BEAUTIFUL BILL also protects our beautiful children by stopping funding for sick sex changes for minors." The Senate returned to Washington on Monday, and in his post, Trump called on his Republican allies in Congress to work quickly to get the bill on his desk before July 4. In a separate post, Trump addressed what he referred to as false statements about the bill, reiterating that it is the "single biggest Spending Cut in History." He noted that there will not be any cuts to Social Security, Medicare or Medicaid, adding they will be saved from "the incompetence of the Democrats." "The Democrats, who have totally lost their confidence and their way, are saying whatever comes to mind — Anything to win!" Trump said. "They suffered the Greatest Humiliation in the History of Politics, and they're desperate to get back on their game, but they won't be able to do that because their Policies are so bad, in fact, they would lead to the Destruction of our Country and almost did. "The only 'cutting' we will do is for Waste, Fraud, and Abuse, something that should have been done by the Incompetent, Radical Left Democrats for the last four years, but wasn't," he concluded. Senate Republicans will get their turn to parse through the colossal package and are eying changes that could be a hard sell for House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., who can only afford to lose three votes. Congressional Republicans are in a dead sprint to get the megabill — filled with Trump's policy desires on taxes, immigration, energy, defense and the national debt — onto the president's desk by early July. If passed in its current state, the bill is expected to add roughly $3 trillion to the national debt, including interest, according to the Committee for Responsible Federal Budget.

A Doctor vs. the Hospital Lobby on Medicaid
A Doctor vs. the Hospital Lobby on Medicaid

Wall Street Journal

time13 minutes ago

  • Wall Street Journal

A Doctor vs. the Hospital Lobby on Medicaid

Regarding your editorial 'The Medicaid Scare Campaign' (May 27): I've dealt with this issue after having practiced emergency medicine for more than 30 years in the once Golden State of California. I work in a less affluent urban area of a generally affluent county. In my last two shifts, I saw five new immigrants, all covered by 'Emergency Medi-Cal'—the state's version of Medicaid—for nonemergent conditions. Four arrived by ambulance for drug- or alcohol-related problems, and another had dental issues, having never been seen by a dentist in her home country. One of them asked for a 'general checkup' at midnight once he sobered up. California started by offering prenatal care to immigrant mothers many years ago, in the hope this would improve maternal and pediatric outcomes. The Democratic Legislature rapidly expanded that coverage to all for emergencies, while ignoring the high cost of care in the emergency departments vs. that of clinics. The general public doesn't comprehend the concept of true emergencies, and my state has become a magnet for people seeking all the free stuff.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store