Tag: Ms. Hochul

  • U.S. Justice Department finds that former New York Governor Cuomo sexually harassed employees

    U.S. Justice Department finds that former New York Governor Cuomo sexually harassed employees

    A probe launched in August 2021 found that Cuomo had illegally groped, kissed or made suggestive comments to 11 women

    WASHINGTON, D.C. (TIP): The U.S. Justice Department on January 26 agreed with a finding by the New York attorney general that the State’s former Governor, Andrew Cuomo, violated federal law by sexually harassing female employees and retaliating against those who spoke out.

    As a result of its findings, the federal agency signed a settlement with the New York Executive Chamber approving reforms that Cuomo’s successor, Kathy Hochul, had passed to prevent and address misconduct, and also added several more. Ms. Hochul’s reforms included firing employees who facilitated or helped retaliate against Cuomo’s accusers, opening a human resources department and creating new means for employees to report instances of sexual harassment. The Justice Department settlement announced on Friday calls for the State’s executive chamber to expand the human resources department, add new avenues for reporting and resolving complaints involving high-level officials, and implementing new training and anti-retaliation programs. In response to Friday’s announcement, an attorney for Cuomo, Rita Glavin, said the former governor “did not sexually harass anyone.” Glavin, in a statement, accused the Justice Department’s probe of being entirely based on the State Attorney General’s report, which she characterized as “deeply flawed, inaccurate, biased, and misleading.”

    Friday’s announcement concluded a probe launched in August 2021 after New York’s Democratic attorney general found that Cuomo, who is also a Democrat, had illegally groped, kissed or made suggestive comments to 11 women, and that his office had retaliated against the first accuser to go public.

    Cuomo, who had served since 2011 as governor of New York, the fourth-largest U.S. state, resigned a week later after pressure from President Joe Biden and others.

    In 2023, one of Cuomo’s aides filed a civil lawsuit against the former governor, saying she was “continuously subjected” to sexual harassment while working for Cuomo, beginning in December 2019, including sexual comments and unwanted touching.

    She previously filed a criminal complaint against Cuomo, the only one brought over the allegations against him, but it was dropped by a local prosecutor who said he could not prove a crime beyond reasonable doubt.

  • Gov. Hochul  Wins  Democratic Primary  in New York

    Gov. Hochul Wins Democratic Primary in New York

    NEW YORK (TIP): Gov. Kathy Hochul of New York took a crucial step toward winning a full term on Tuesday, easily fending off a pair of spirited primary challengers and cementing her status as the state’s top Democrat less than a year after she unexpectedly took office, says a New York Times report. The runaway victory by Ms. Hochul, the state’s first female governor, sets the stage for what could be a grueling general election contest against Representative Lee Zeldin, a conservative congressional ally of former President Donald J. Trump who beat out three fellow Republicans in a gritty race for his party’s nomination. Ms. Hochul enters the November contest with deep structural advantages: She has the power of the governor’s office and overflowing campaign accounts, her party enjoys a more than two-to-one registration advantage and Republicans have not won statewide in New York since Gov. George E. Pataki secured a third term in 2002. But with warning signs flashing red for Democrats nationally and New Yorkers in a dour mood over elevated crime and skyrocketing prices for housing, gas and a week’s groceries, both parties were preparing to run as if even deep blue New York could be in play this fall. The general election contest promises to have sweeping implications that ripple well beyond New York in the aftermath of two recent landmark Supreme Court decisions that ended the federal right to an abortion and curtailed New York’s ability to regulate firearms. The state has long been a safe haven for abortion and until the decision had one of the most restrictive gun laws, positions Mr. Zeldin opposes and issues he could influence if he wins. With that fight looming, Democratic primary voters on Tuesday chose Ms. Hochul, a middle-of-the-road incumbent who spent the campaign’s final weeks casting herself as a steady protector of the state’s liberal values — if not the firebrand or soaring orator who have found success in other races. “We cannot and will not let right-wing extremists set us backwards on all the decades of progress we’ve made right here, whether it’s a Trump cheerleader running for the governor of the State of New York or Trump-appointed justices on the Supreme Court,” Ms. Hochul told supporters at a victory party in TriBeCa in Manhattan. Standing, symbolically, under a glass ceiling, a jubilant Ms. Hochul added that she stood “on the shoulders of generations of women” in her effort to become the first to win the governorship.

    Ms. Hochul planned to quickly return to Albany, where she has called the Legislature back for a rare special session to respond to the Supreme Court ruling invalidating a century-old state gun control law.

    The race was called by The Associated Press 25 minutes after the polls closed in New York. Ms. Hochul had won 67 percent of the Democratic primary vote, with 55 percent of the expected vote counted. Jumaane D. Williams, the left-leaning New York City public advocate, had won 20 percent of the vote. Representative Thomas R. Suozzi, a Long Island moderate who ran an aggressively adversarial campaign focused on cutting crime and taxes, won roughly 13 percent of the vote.

    Democratic voters also rewarded Ms. Hochul’s handpicked lieutenant governor and running mate, Antonio Delgado, who survived a spirited challenge from Ana María Archila, a progressive activist aligned with Mr. Williams. Mr. Suozzi’s running mate, Diana Reyna, was also on track to finish third. Mr. Delgado, a former Hudson Valley congressman, was only sworn in a month ago after the governor’s first lieutenant, Brian A. Benjamin, resigned in the face of federal bribery charges and after Ms. Hochul pushed for a legal change to get him on the ballot.

    His victory was the night’s second significant disappointment for progressives, who saw Ms. Archila as their best shot at winning statewide office this year. Ultimately, she could not overcome the vast financial and institutional advantages that helped Mr. Delgado blanket TVs and radios in advertising. Primaries in other statewide races — for U.S. Senate, state attorney general, comptroller and the Republican nominee for lieutenant governor — were uncontested.

    Turnout dipped somewhat across the state, especially compared with 2018. Combined with President Biden’s slumping approval ratings, Ms. Hochul’s relative newness to office and strong Republican performances last fall in Virginia, New Jersey and on Long Island, the figures were enough to give Democrats some cause for concern as they pivoted toward a general election. “Democrats better not take this for granted because Lee Zeldin is a wolf in sheep’s clothing,” said Isaac Goldberg, a New York Democratic strategist not working on the race. “He will appeal well to his fellow suburbanites who don’t know how far right he truly is.” Mr. Zeldin, 42, defeated Andrew Giuliani, who had captured far-right support based on his connections to Mr. Trump, his former boss, and the former New York City mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani, his father. Mr. Zeldin had 44 percent of the vote, with 75 percent of expected votes reported.

    He also beat Harry Wilson, a corporate turnaround specialist who burned more than $10 million of his own money into his campaign, and Rob Astorino, the party’s 2014 nominee for governor.

    The victory was a triumph for the state’s Republican establishment, which threw money and support behind Mr. Zeldin early — a wager that a young Army veteran with a track record of winning tight races on eastern Long Island could appeal to the independents and disaffected Democrats that Republicans need to sway in New York to have a path to victory.

    Mr. Zeldin has tried to orient his campaign around bipartisan fears about public safety and inflation, promising to open up the state’s Southern Tier to fracking natural gas, reverse the state’s cashless bail law and end coronavirus vaccine requirements, while accusing Ms. Hochul of doing too little to restore public safety.

    “This isn’t just a red wave, this is a common-sense wave that reaches out to everybody across this state in all counties, in all regions,” Mr. Zeldin said during a victory speech in Baldwin on Long Island that included explicit overtures both to his conservative base and Asian American, Black, Latino and Jewish voters in New York City who tend to vote Democratic.

    “This November in the State of New York, one-party rule will end, Kathy Hochul will be fired, we will restore common sense and balance to Albany,” added Mr. Zeldin, who took the stage to the sound of DJ Khaled’s “All I Do Is Win.”

    But Democrats have already started amplifying Mr. Zeldin’s more conservative positions on guns (Mr. Zeldin once said he opposed New York’s red-flag law), abortion rights (he celebrated last week’s Supreme Court decision overturning Roe v. Wade), and, above all, his embrace of Mr. Trump and vote on Jan. 6, 2021, to overturn the results of the presidential election in key swing states. No Republican candidate who opposes abortion rights has won New York’s top office in the half-century since the state legalized abortion. For Ms. Hochul, 63, Tuesday’s vote was the first major test of electoral strength since she unexpectedly came to power last August, when Mr. Cuomo resigned as governor in the face of sexual harassment allegations.

    A Buffalo native in a party dominated by New York City Democrats, Ms. Hochul had spent much of career toiling in relative obscurity, briefly as a congresswoman from western New York and for nearly six years as Mr. Cuomo’s lieutenant governor.

    She moved quickly to establish herself as a political force as much as a governing one, leaving little doubt that she was the Democratic front-runner.

    She won the endorsement of nearly every major Democrat and labor union, assembled a $34 million war chest to vastly outspend her opponents on TV and glossy mailers and took pains to balance the concerns of Black and progressive lawmakers and New Yorkers fearful of crime when pushing for a set of modest changes to the state’s bail laws this spring.

    She had to withstand aggressive critiques from Mr. Suozzi on her right and Mr. Williams on her left, who argued that she was doing too little to address soaring housing prices or crime and portrayed the governor as another creature of Albany’s corrupt establishment. Polls also showed that Ms. Hochul’s decision to spend hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars on a new stadium for the Buffalo Bills was especially unpopular with voters. Like fears about public safety, the deal could re-emerge as a campaign issue this fall. But in the primary contest, at least, it did not matter. Ms. Hochul’s winning margin and coalition closely resembled the ones that sent Mr. Cuomo to Albany for three terms: a strong showing in the New York City suburbs; upstate strongholds in Albany, Buffalo and Rochester; and among Black and Latino voters in New York City.

    (Source: New York Times)