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Newsweek
30 minutes ago
- Newsweek
White House Launches Smithsonian Review To 'Ensure Alignment'
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. The White House has announced a review of some Smithsonian Institution museums to "ensure alignment" with President Donald Trump's goals. Newsweek has contacted the Smithsonian for comment via email outside regular working hours. Why It Matters In March, Trump signed an executive order, titled "Restoring Truth and Sanity to American History," to eliminate what his administration described as "improper ideology" across all branches of the Smithsonian—including its museums, research centers, educational initiatives and the National Zoo. The move sparked backlash online and from museum volunteers. In July, the Smithsonian National Museum of American History removed references to Trump's two impeachments from its exhibit on presidential impeachments, prompting a debate about historical accuracy and political influence on public institutions. A Smithsonian Institution sign on the National Air and Space Museum on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., on March 28. A Smithsonian Institution sign on the National Air and Space Museum on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., on March To Know A letter dated August 12 and addressed to Smithsonian Secretary Lonnie Bunch said the White House would be leading "a comprehensive internal review of selected Smithsonian museums and exhibitions." According to the letter, the review is timed to coincide with next year's celebrations of the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence being signed. The letter described the review as a "constructive and collaborative effort," adding that it would focus on key areas such as public-facing content, the curatorial process, exhibition planning, collection use and narrative standards. The letter also said the initial review would focus on the following museums: National Museum of American History, National Museum of Natural History, National Museum of African American History and Culture, National Museum of the American Indian, National Air and Space Museum, Smithsonian American Art Museum, National Portrait Gallery, and Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden. These are not the only museums being reviewed. The letter said additional museums would be reviewed in "Phase II." While the Smithsonian is independent of the government, it receives funding from Congress. As with Trump's March executive order, the review has received backlash online. Some social media users have raised concerns about the level of government intervention with the museums. What People Are Saying The White House's letter to the Smithsonian said: "This initiative aims to ensure alignment with the President's directive to celebrate American exceptionalism, remove divisive or partisan narratives, and restore confidence in our shared cultural institutions." President Donald Trump wrote in his March executive order: "Museums in our Nation's capital should be places where individuals go to learn—not to be subjected to ideological indoctrination or divisive narratives that distort our shared history. To advance this policy, we will restore the Smithsonian Institution to its rightful place as a symbol of inspiration and American greatness." Karly Kingsley, a media personality, wrote on X in a post viewed more than 200,000 times: "We're suspending the jobs report so you don't see how bad the numbers are, auditing the Smithsonian to match Trump's politics, fighting over gerrymandering the map, and deploying the military into cities. This isn't governance anymore. It's authoritarianism in plain sight." Journalist Dan Friedman wrote on X in a post viewed more than 40,000 times: "The White House pressuring the Smithsonian to 'eliminate political influence' from its presentation of history is some freaky Orwellian s***." What Happens Next The letter includes a 30-, 75- and 120-day implementation timeline. By the 120-day mark, "museums should begin implementing content corrections where necessary, replacing divisive or ideologically driven language with unifying, historically accurate, and constructive descriptions across placards, wall didactics, digital displays, and other public-facing materials."


Politico
31 minutes ago
- Politico
Playbook: Laura Loomer's next target
Presented by With help from Eli Okun, Bethany Irvine and Ali Bianco On today's Playbook Podcast, Adam Wren and Dasha Burns talk about Laura Loomer's new campaign against Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s orbit, geopolitical jockeying ahead of the Trump-Putin summit and the latest questions about the trustworthiness of economic data. Good morning, and happy Wednesday. I'm Adam Wren. Have any tips, comments or questions? Send them my way. In today's Playbook … — First in Playbook: Laura Loomer is going after RFK Jr.'s top aide. We have her surprising explanation — and the latest on why the MAHA report has been held up. — President Donald Trump will join Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and other European leaders at an emergency virtual summit about the war in Ukraine at 9 a.m. — And as of this morning, the National Guard has now deployed across Washington. DRIVING THE DAY WELLNESS CHECK: After successfully ousting several officials in the Trump administration over allegations of insufficient loyalty, far-right activist and MAGA influencer Laura Loomer tells Playbook that she has her next targets: HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Stefanie Spear, his principal deputy chief of staff and senior counselor. 'I'm not naive enough to think that the president is going to get rid of RFK, but I will say that … there are concerns about some of the staffing decisions over at HHS,' Loomer tells Playbook. At the top of those concerns — at least to Loomer's eyes — is Spear, who in addition to being one of Kennedy's closest aides, served on his 2024 presidential campaign as his travelling press secretary and principal communications staffer. Across the West Wing, there is not much good will for Spear, multiple people in the president's orbit tell Playbook's Dasha Burns. Even without Loomer's campaign, she's been a thorn in their side for months. Spear is said to tightly control access to Kennedy, and administration officials have expressed concern about her influence and proximity to Kennedy, as POLITICO has previously reported. But it's the reason why Loomer is aiming at Spear that raised our eyebrows. THE 2028 ANGLE: 'I think that there's a clear intention by Stefanie Spear to utilize her position to try to lay the groundwork for a 2028 RFK presidential run,' Loomer alleges. Asked how she knew that, Loomer cited 'sources in HHS.' Spear did not return calls or texts but looped in a senior HHS leader who called Playbook. The senior HHS official did not deny that Kennedy is weighing a presidential bid. A Trump administration official told Dasha that they 'would not be surprised if [Kennedy is] thinking about' a 2028 bid. 'But,' this person said, 'I don't think anyone thinks it's a real threat.' The view from HHS: 'Secretary Kennedy and his team are laser-focused on delivering President Trump's promise to Make America Healthy Again — ignoring the Beltway gossip and political crystal-balling,' HHS acting chief of staff Matt Buckham told Playbook. 'With my dedication to the president and long-standing commitment to his initiatives, I know when people are truly aligned with his goals. Together, we are driving bold reforms including lowering drug prices, eliminating harmful ingredients from our food supply, and addressing the root causes of the chronic disease epidemic.' LOOMER DIGS IN: Kennedy has long raised Loomer's hackles. She has called him a 'Marxist' and 'a very problematic person.' And her new focus on Kennedy's department comes following Vinay Prasad's reinstatement to his role regulating vaccines — just two weeks after Loomer led a successful campaign for his ouster over allegations that he was a 'progressive leftist saboteur undermining President Trump's FDA.' Similar accusations of ideological disloyalty to MAGA center in Loomer's crusade against Spear. 'There's been some things that have happened,' Loomer says. 'There's been several things that have happened at HHS that are contradictory to the initial promises made.' Spear is a founder of EcoWatch, an environmental news outlet that aims to 'empower readers to make informed, environmentally-conscious decisions that support a sustainable future for everyone.' Earlier this year, Loomer posted screenshots from Spear, including one from 2016 in which she accused now-Secretary of State Marco Rubio of being a 'climate change denier,' and one from 2020 arguing that 'fossil fuels [are] more deadly than cigarettes, malaria, HIV/AIDS.' In January, WSJ reported that Spear 'told others she would be Kennedy's chief of staff, [but] was passed over for that post in favor of a veteran of the first Trump administration — in part because of her vaccine priorities and in part because of her lack of experience, according to people familiar with the matter.' Axios' Brittany Gibson reported last month that Spear joined a MAHA PAC call to back a potential Kennedy 2028 bid. Loomer previously told POLITICO that she fields tips from administration officials about colleagues they want booted out. She has played a role in the ouster of a number of administration posts in recent months. Trump has said he likes Loomer, and that 'she doesn't like things going on that she thinks are bad for the country.' Asked to comment, a White House official told Playbook that 'Secretary Kennedy and the entire HHS team are doing a terrific job as they deliver on President Trump's mandate to Make America Healthy Again. Scores of prominent restaurant chains and food brands dropping artificial ingredients from our food supply and historic reforms at the FDA to fast track lifesaving drugs and treatments prove that the entire HHS team is delivering for the American people.' THE MAHA REPORT: Loomer's watchful eye on Kennedy's department comes as the White House is expecting to unveil a strategy for 'making children healthy again' — an announcement that was delayed due to what the White House told POLITICO was a need to coordinate officials' schedules before releasing the report to the public. Last night, a White House press official stood by a scheduling conflict as the reason for the MAHA report's delay. But the official at HHS told us that 'the team at the White House and HHS is ensuring that whatever is in the report is the best possible product for the American people. If they need more time, they need more time.' Privately, there are additional reasons for the hold up. The delay is because the White House is taking time to review it 'to make sure it's not f--ked up like last time,' a second person familiar with the MAHA report tells Dasha, referencing an error-riddled report from the MAHA Commission earlier this year. 'The goal is just to get the damn thing right,' said a third person familiar with the report. WAR AND PEACE APPROACHING THE SUMMIT: Trump is due to join Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and other European leaders at an emergency virtual summit about the war in Ukraine at 9 a.m. Eastern. Organizer German Chancellor Friedrich Merz and others are expected to urge Trump and VP JD Vance to step up the pressure campaign on Russia to end its invasion. The pre-summit conversations: It's unusual for Ukraine's European allies to get to strategize with Trump before a Putin conversation like they will today, building on repeated consultations and calls between Trump's team and Europe over the past week, POLITICO's Felicia Schwartz and Eli Stokols preview. U.S. Ambassador to NATO Matthew Whitaker has been a pivotal figure in strengthening that relationship. But European officials still are unsure how much sway they really have over Trump's approach to the war: 'The main thing about tomorrow is whether this is a real discussion … or whether it's going to be just some nice words and no real consultation,' one says. Lowering expectations: Trump's Friday summit with Putin will take place at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson in Anchorage, Alaska, CNN's Kristen Holmes and colleagues report, after a scramble to find a suitable venue. Press secretary Karoline Leavitt said the world leaders' meeting will be one on one — and largely a 'listening exercise' for Trump, building on the president's recent comments that downplayed hopes for a quick breakthrough or peace deal, per WaPo. And with the outcome of Friday's meeting wide open, 'critics worry that the hastily planned conversation will play into the hands of Mr. Putin, a former K.G.B. agent known as a master manipulator,' NYT's Michael Crowley reports. Jockeying for leverage: Russia's recent battlefield advances give Putin a leg up ahead of potential ceasefire negotiations, though Ukraine is similarly working to attack Russian oil more, NYT's Constant Méheut reports. And Zelenskyy — who hasn't been invited to Alaska — held firm on concessions, telling reporters that Ukraine can't give up the Donbas region and would need any land swaps to be paired with security guarantees for Kyiv, POLITICO's Veronika Melkozerova reports. Advocating for Trump to impose more Russia sanctions, Zelenskyy also warned that 'Putin will benefit from this [summit], because what he is seeking, frankly, is photographs.' More from NewsNation The backdrop: Perhaps complicating matters for the Kremlin is new evidence 'that Russia is at least partly responsible for a recent hack of the computer system that manages federal court documents, including highly sensitive records,' NYT's Adam Goldman and colleagues reveal. THE MAGA REVOLUTION HERE COME THE TROOPS: As of this morning, the National Guard has now deployed across Washington after the White House said troops arrived and started to patrol city streets last night, per the AP. D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser and local leaders projected a calm if 'uneasy partnership' with the feds — who've taken over the police department — to tackle crime in the city, which remains significant though Trump's claims of rising violent crime and dystopian mass disorder were false. Also getting underway: Leavitt said homeless people will be forced to go to shelters for treatment — or face fines and jail, per the Washington Examiner. Questions remain: As of last night, D.C. police were still waiting to find out whether they'd get new directives from federal overseers, WaPo's Olivia George and colleagues report. Local officers were confused by the lack of clarity, and though the White House emphasized that federal officials are in control, police chief Pamela Smith 'has been supplying ideas about how federal law enforcement could be used by D.C. — not the other way around.' DAMNED LIES AND STATISTICS: What would E.J. Antoni do as Bureau of Labor Statistics commissioner? After he floated suspending the monthly jobs report, Leavitt didn't rule out doing so for a time. Heritage's Stephen Moore told CNN's Alicia Wallace and David Goldman that Antoni has now backed off the idea. But the White House and Labor Department more broadly are weighing changes to how the government collects the data, WSJ's Josh Dawsey reports. Their aim is to lift the response rate and use technology to make the process more efficient — and to limit large revisions, because Trump has baselessly claimed they're meant to weaken him politically. But skepticism abounds: After Trump fired Erika McEntarfer in the wake of revisions that showed the labor market in much worse shape, any alterations 'could attract criticism that Trump is trying to game the numbers for political purposes,' Dawsey writes. 'The president has long questioned data that doesn't align with his worldview. He has also taken steps to assert more control over agencies that historically operate independently.' Antoni under fire: Economists of all ideological stripes roundly lambasted Antoni, a conservative critic of the agency, as an unqualified pick that injects partisanship into government statistics — and warned that Trump politicizing the process would make data unreliable. Axios, the NYT and the FT all round up the withering criticism, which includes economists accusing Antoni of having distorted data in the past, although some say no BLS chief can really manipulate the numbers. Nonetheless, the White House has stood firmly behind him, and it remains to be seen whether a historically compliant Senate GOP will buck Trump here. By the numbers: Economists fear that if crucial government data is hidden or manipulated, there will be no good replacements to gauge the health of the economy, Axios' Courtenay Brown and Emily Peck report. And it's not just BLS: Trump's call for a new census, along with redactions of a farm trade report, the removal of major climate assessments and more, is part of a politicized pattern 'leaving some statisticians and demographers worried the president is undermining the short- and long-term credibility of federal data,' POLITICO's Aaron Pellish reports. MORE FROM THE ADMIN: The Justice Department's newest collegiate target is George Washington University, which it said broke civil rights law in its handling of antisemitism, per The GW Hatchet's Ryan Saenz. … The State Department officially put out human rights reports that significantly scale back criticism of right-wing governments allied with Trump, while ramping up concerns about U.S. allies that Rubio accuses of censoring conservatives, per CBS. … Trump seemingly called for Goldman Sachs to oust its leading economist because he'd predicted negative effects from Trump's tariffs, per the WSJ. … And the FTC undercut yet another top California climate regulation, per POLITICO's Alex Nieves. STATE CAPITALISM: 'Trump's chip deal sets new pay-to-play precedent for U.S. exporters,' by WaPo's Gerrit De Vynck and Jacob Bogage IN THE DOGE HOUSE: The Department of Government Efficiency may have run a chainsaw through the federal workforce and foreign aid, but it has saved far less money than it claims. POLITICO's Jessie Blaeser dug into the numbers: Of $52.8 billion DOGE said it saved taxpayers by axing contracts, she was able to analyze and verify $32.7 billion — and found that in fact only $1.4 billion was saved through July, due to 'faulty math.' And the money won't tackle the deficit: It returns to agencies to be spent elsewhere. BEST OF THE REST RED-LIGHT REDISTRICT: The Texas gerrymandering fight keeps ramping up, at least for now. ABC13's Tom Abrahams reported that Texas Democrats may be folding, with plans to return to the state (date TBD) for Gov. Greg Abbott's next special session after waiting out his first one. Texas Republicans said they'll begin that session Friday, per WaPo. But ABC13's reporting doesn't seem to have been matched yet, and a spokesperson for the Texas Democratic Caucus told ABC that members are 'assessing their strategies going forward and are in a private meeting to make decisions about future plans currently.' The lawmakers who left for Illinois are holding a presser at 2:30 p.m. Eastern with Indiana counterparts to fight against the GOP efforts. The escalation: Texas AG Ken Paxton went to a judge yesterday to request that Beto O'Rourke be jailed for allegedly violating an order not to fundraise for the Dems who have denied the GOP quorum in Austin, per The Texas Tribune. O'Rourke's team said Paxton was misrepresenting his words and they'd seek sanctions on the AG. Sign of the times: As blue states seek to counterbalance Trump's unprecedented power grab with their own mid-decade mapmaking, good-government group Common Cause said it will no longer push against such efforts, POLITICO's Aaron Pellish reports. Though Common Cause said it still opposes partisan gerrymandering, 'a blanket condemnation in this moment would amount to a call for unilateral political disarmament in the face of authoritarian efforts.' More Texas fallout: Rep. Greg Casar (D-Texas) said he won't run in a redrawn district that Republicans plan to gerrymander into a Trump +10 seat, teeing up a primary against fellow Democratic Rep. Lloyd Doggett, per Punchbowl's Ally Mutnick. First in Playbook: Colin Allred's Senate campaign is holding more stops across San Antonio, McAllen and Houston this weekend to continue his 'Unrig Texas' town halls. MORE TRAIL MIX: Rep. Barry Moore (R-Ala.) launched a Senate bid, per … Democrat Mitchell Berman jumped into the race against Rep. Bryan Steil (R-Wis.), per the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. … Trump endorsed Georgia Lt. Gov. Burt Jones for governor, per The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. … Tim Ryan has 'heightened' interest in running for governor of Ohio after Sherrod Brown reportedly opted for the Senate race, per The Plain Dealer's Jeremy Pelzer. First in Playbook: The Andy Barr-aligned Keep America Great PAC is going up with a $1.2 million ad campaign against Nate Morris in the Kentucky Senate GOP primary. The spot calls Morris 'fake' MAGA, citing his donations to support Nikki Haley and Mitch McConnell. Watch it here 2028 watch: Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear got a big reception from donors and other Democrats at House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries' event, where many walked away thinking Beshear's running for president, Axios' Hans Nichols scooped. THE CARTEL CRACKDOWN: In a big new deal with Trump, Mexico transferred 26 top drug cartel figures over to U.S. law enforcement, per the AP. The Justice Department agreed not to go for the death penalty as part of the agreement with Mexico. But POLITICO's Nahal Toosi warns this morning from Mexico City that Trump's cartel strategy may fail: Though his aggressive tactics, including labeling cartels as terrorist groups, could help, they're undercut by the lack of a more comprehensive approach. And Trump's cuts to domestic drug treatment, deportations and tariffs might end up strengthening the cartels. JUDICIARY SQUARE: A federal judge ruled that the Trump administration must restore more than one-third of the funds it has frozen for research at UCLA, per the LA Times. … Another federal judge said ICE must improve conditions at a Manhattan detention facility, where the Justice Department admitted in court to substandard practices: 'access to medication was limited, in-person legal visits were impossible and detainees were given blankets — but not sleeping mats — to rest on,' POLITICO's Erica Orden and Kyle Cheney report. SKRMETTI IN ACTION: After the Supreme Court gave states the green light, a federal appeals court reversed a lower judge and upheld Arkansas' ban on gender transition-related medical care for minors, per the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette's Neal Earley. THE CONNECTICUT CRUSADER: 'Chris Murphy goes all in on funding bill boycott as Dems seek bipartisanship,' by POLITICO's Jennifer Scholtes: 'The third-term senator said in a recent interview that Trump 'doesn't give a fuck what we write' into spending legislation. And so he sees no reason to participate in the drafting of funding bills if the president is going to keep withholding billions of dollars Congress already approved and goading Republican senators to claw back more. 'Every single day, there's new evidence that our democracy is falling, and you've got to take stands. You have to take fights,' Murphy explained.' TALK OF THE TOWN John Tierney of City Journal and Mary Anastasia O'Grady of the WSJ will be honored with this year's awards by The Fund for American Studies for courageous journalism and career achievement, respectively. Chuck Schumer selected Jack Schlossberg for the America 250 commission, set up to coordinate America's 250-year celebration next year. Thomas Skinner enjoyed hanging out with JD Vance in England, though some locals protested the VP. IN MEMORIAM — 'Judge T.S. Ellis III, 85, Dies; Stirred Outcry Over Manafort Sentence,' by NYT's Miguel Salazar: '[He] shocked many judicial observers in 2019 when he sentenced Paul Manafort, Donald Trump's former campaign chairman, to 47 months in prison after sentencing guidelines had recommended up to 24 years … Judge Ellis also oversaw the corruption trial of former Rep. William J. Jefferson … An often sharp-tongued jurist, Judge Ellis was known for sparring with lawyers on both sides in a case.' MEDIA MOVES — Sara Kehaulani Goo is returning to WaPo as president of its new Creator Network, focused on a business model with content creators and AI separate from the newsroom. She previously was editor-in-chief of Axios. … Hannah Brandt will be a Washington correspondent at NewsNation. She previously was a reporter for Nexstar's D.C. multimedia journalist team. … Carine Hajjar has been named the 2025 Steamboat Institute fellow for public policy and American exceptionalism. She is an opinion writer and editorial board member at The Boston Globe. TRANSITIONS — Michael Carpenter is now senior fellow for transatlantic affairs at the International Institute for Strategic Studies. He previously was NSC senior director for Europe in the Biden administration and U.S. ambassador to the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe. … Todd Breasseale is now chief comms and brand officer at Brighton Marine Inc. He previously was senior adviser at the VA and is a Biden DOD and Obama DHS alum. … Dezenhall Resources has added Katie Runkle and Steffen Newman as associates, Amma Boateng as senior director of coalitions, MaryGrace Lucas as VP and Jana Spacek as managing director of organizational development and operations. … … Hayden Jewett is now a partner at Thorn Run Partners. He previously was a principal at the Vogel Group. … Garrett Hawkins is now senior comms manager for public affairs at TD Bank. He previously was director of comms at the Institute of International Bankers. … The Plastics Industry Association is adding Ivy Brittain as regional director of state government affairs and Hodayah Finman as senior director of regulatory affairs. Brittain most recently was legislative affairs director for the Northern California Water Association. Finman previously was acting director of the EPA's Office of International Affairs. WEEKEND WEDDING — Catherine Costakos, a VP on the policy comms team at JPMorgan Chase, and Brett Ruby, senior development manager at the NHP Foundation, got married Sunday at Rosecliff Mansion in Newport, Rhode Island. Their dog Artie featured prominently. The couple met on Bumble. Pic, via Hedieh Field … Another pic WELCOME TO THE WORLD — J. Baylor Myers, VP of corporate development at BitGo and a Trump Treasury alum, and Dakota Myers, a paralegal, on Aug. 4 welcomed John Baylor Myers Jr., who came in at 8 lbs, 13 oz. Pic … Another pic HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders … acting CFTC Chair Caroline Pham … Karine Jean-Pierre … former Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen … Kristalina Georgieva … Larry Weitzner … Jeremy Bash of Beacon Global Strategies … Grace Davis of Rep. Tim Moore's (R-N.C.) office … State Department's Bridget Roddy … MatchPoint Strategies' Isabel Aldunate … Adam Sharon … GrayRobinson's Chris McCannell … Scott Dziengelski of King & Spalding … Gabriel Laizer … AP's Kelly Daschle … Gonzo Gallegos … Owen Jappen of the American Chemistry Council … Kelly Rzendzian … former Surgeon General Joycelyn Elders (92) … Sara Sorcher … former Reps. Tom Marino (R-Pa.) and Pete Visclosky (D-Ind.) … Ben Pack … Herald Group's Ansley Bradwell … Cate Hurley of Beyond Carbon Fund … Douglas Rivlin … Margot Roosevelt … Addy Baird … Josh Romney Send Playbookers tips to playbook@ or text us on Signal here. Playbook couldn't happen without our editor Zack Stanton, deputy editor Garrett Ross and Playbook Podcast producer Callan Tansill-Suddath.


Politico
an hour ago
- Politico
Andrew Cuomo tries out a new persona: Underdog candidate
Cuomo's scaled down team — a coterie of longtime aides remain while consultants have left ahead of the general election — is opening up access to him with reporters after running a press-allergic primary campaign. They are eager to show Cuomo's interactions with New Yorkers, all documented in short videos posted online , a reverse from his paltry retail efforts during the primary. The former governor's new-look campaign, which reported more than $1 million in cash on hand, still has financial resources to last until November. But many of his wealthy backers, like ex-Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who contributed to a Cuomo-allied super PAC, have been publicly silent about his general election effort. The former governor must also contend with the presence of Mayor Eric Adams in the field. Adams, a fellow moderate, shares an overlapping base of support, including Black and Jewish voters. Cuomo and the mayor have tried in vain to convince the other to drop out and unite the field against Mamdani. Cuomo is not running with the same institutional support he's enjoyed for much of his political career, which seemingly ground to a halt in 2021 after a state attorney general report found he sexually harassed 11 women; he's denied any wrongdoing. Despite resigning in disgrace, Cuomo quickly raked in cash and endorsements from the city's political and business elite when he launched his primary run in March, as his advisers insisted he was the all-but-inevitable next mayor of the nation's largest city. Cuomo's team privately believed Mamdani's anti-Israel views, hard-left policies like government-run grocery stores and inexperience would make him an easy primary opponent to dispatch. It didn't work out. The former governor got pummeled by Mamdani, whose focus on affordability vaulted his once afterthought of a candidacy ahead of better known and more experienced candidates. Cuomo retreated in July to make his pitch to the Hamptons elite and directly to voters that he deserved another shot in the general election. Significant endorsements of Cuomo's retooled campaign, however, have not materialized. 'A huge part of his appeal was his sense of inevitability,' said Democratic strategist Alyssa Cass, who advised former Comptroller Scott Stringer's mayoral campaign. 'Once Superman's lost his cape, it's hard to get it back. In politics, no one likes a loser.' Mamdani's campaign has made changes of its own since his upset victory. He's met with wealthy business leaders to assure them his plans to sharply raise taxes on the rich to pay for his proposals like free buses won't damage the city's economy.