The Independent

Future president to liability

Just months ago, Andrew Cuomo’s handling of Covid saw him touted for the highest office. Now accusation­s of sexual harassment have left him fighting for his political career

- SEAN O’GRADY

It is perfectly possible that by now the White House would have been engulfed in allegation­s of sexual misconduct and inappropri­ate behaviour by a president – President Andrew Cuomo, the alternativ­e history 46th president of the United States.

It seems a past political age now, but only a few months ago the current, and still for the time being, governor of the state of New York was touted as the great hope of the Democrats. His response to the Covid crisis put Donald Trump to shame, as it was intended to. “We’re not going to put a dollar figure in human life,” was Cuomo’s promise.

His sombre, sprightly talking gravelly streetwise press conference­s were watched with a mixture of

admiration and hope, in America and around the world. Like Anthony Fauci, here was a man levelling with the public, not trying to pretend the coronaviru­s was a Chinese hoax.

Governor Cuomo took his struggle with the Trump administra­tion for resources public, and with some success. When the Covid case rates started going down, Trump tried to purloin the credit. There was “Cuomo 2020” merch going on Amazon. You could buy a “Cuomosexua­l” coffee mug, a reference to his stand for LGBT+ rights, though it reads less happily now.

Cuomo produced another book – Lessons in Leadership, which at least looked like a job applicatio­n for something. He was interviewe­d on CNN, by his brother Chris as it happens, for Cuomo Prime Time, bashfully turning down every suggestion that he might be thinking about a late run for the Democrat nomination and the White House.

The only question anyone raised was whether America needed another vain, thin-skinned arrogant New Yorker either on the campaign trail or in the White House. It was, though, a modest objection. Quicker witted and younger (63 now) than Joe Biden, progressiv­e but not as radical as Bernie Sanders, and with a certain charisma, Cuomo was, in the words of a sympatheti­c biography, “the contender”. More than that, he was a cult.

That’s not the word you’d use about him now. Fortunatel­y, for all concerned, there never was a president Cuomo, and, as it was for his famous father Mario, governor of the state through the 1980s, a Cuomo presidency was a chimera.

There was, however, much buzz after the Biden victory on 3 November about Cuomo being appointed attorney general of the United States in the Biden administra­tion. Cuomo was more than well qualified. He had trained as lawyer, ran his own law firm (again, just like his father), had served in Bill Clinton’s administra­tion, as assistant secretary and then secretary (at cabinet level) for Housing and Urban Developmen­t.

He had made time to work with homelessne­ss charities. Before he was elected governor of New York in 2010, he had spent four years chasing down corruption in the administra­tion of New York and outside as attorney general of the state.

He obviously had the political clout, and the Dems surely owed him for defying Trump. It was publicly discussed. It was, though, all too much to bear for a former Cuomo staffer, Lindsey Boylan, who had reason, she believed, to think that Cuomo was far from the ideal candidate for the post. It triggered her. On 13 December 2020 she decided to send a series of Tweets that continue to reverberat­e, stating: “Yes, @NYGovCuomo sexually harassed me for years. Many saw it, and watched. I could never anticipate what to expect: would I be grilled on my work (which was very good) or harassed about my looks. Or would it be both in the same conversati­on? This was the way for years.” Later she wrote this account of one of the alleged incidents. In her own words, then:

“‘Let’s play strip poker.’

I should have been shocked by the governor’s crude comment, but I wasn’t.

We were flying home from an October 2017 event in western New

‘Let’s play strip poker.” I should have been shocked by the governor’s crude comment, but I wasn’t

York on his taxpayer-funded jet. He was seated facing me, so close our knees almost touched. His press aide was to my right and a state trooper behind us.

‘That’s exactly what I was thinking,’ I responded sarcastica­lly and awkwardly. I tried to play it cool. But in that moment, I realised just how acquiescen­t I had become.

Governor Andrew Cuomo has created a culture within his administra­tion where sexual harassment and bullying is so pervasive that it is not only condoned but expected. His inappropri­ate behaviour toward women was an affirmatio­n that he liked you, that you must be doing something right. He used intimidati­on to silence his critics. And if you dared to speak up, you would face consequenc­es.”

Boylan, like others, in due course left the state’s employment. She also claims that he touched her without consent and frequently made inappropri­ate comments to her and other women about their appearance­s. Cuomo’s spokespers­on says that “Ms Boylan’s claims of inappropri­ate behaviour are quite simply false.”

As with the earlier cases in the #MeToo movement, her claims promoted others to come forward. Charlotte Bennett, another staff member who had dealings with Cuomo, claims he asked her questions about her sex life, whether she was monogamous in her relationsh­ips and if she had ever had sex with older men (she was 25).

And then there was a third, though not in a work environmen­t, who alleged that Cuomo had kissed on the lips, unwanted, and at a wedding reception. There is a photograph of him holding her, much shorter than him, holding her face in his palms like some medieval Lord of the Manor making the most of his ancestral droit du seigneur.

Cuomo has not handled the allegation­s especially well. He appeared to minimise things by issuing a nonapology that was pretty transparen­t: “I now understand that my interactio­ns may have been insensitiv­e or too personal and that some of my comments, given my position, made others feel in ways I never intended,” Cuomo wrote. “I acknowledg­e some of the things I have said have been misinterpr­eted as an unwanted flirtation. To the extent anyone felt that way, I am truly sorry about that.” According to the governor, he “never inappropri­ately touched anybody”.

Conceding that some sort of independen­t inquiry was needed, Cuomo first tried to get a judge familiar to administra­tion officials appointed, but his own attorney general, Letitia James, had other ideas. Instead, she approached an external legal firm and granted them full subpoena powers and her authority to go digging. The mayor of New York City, Bill de Blasio, says Cuomo was not treating the situation seriously enough, and should go. The pair are rivals, but it still must hurt. Other members of the state legislatur­e have also expressed unease about alleged (non-sexualised) bullying, and Cuomo has few vocal supporters. His accusers say he will not take full responsibi­lity for his actions.

Cuomo certainly no longer appears to be the polar opposite of Trump in his attitude to women. Unhelpfull­y for Cuomo, the details of his past associatio­n as a legal adviser to the Trump organisati­on in the 1980s have been dredged up. Just as Mario had been one of the elder Trump’s legal advisers in the 1960s, so too was Andrew close to Donald.

It was natural that the Trumps, as important real estate developers, should have dealings with the preeminent political family in the city and state of New York, and Mario Cuomo was a senior member of the state administra­tion before his time as governor from 1983 to 1994, and one of the few Democrats to have a national profile and a remote chance of challengin­g Ronald Reagan and later George HW Bush for the presidency.

There’s no reason to think that there was anything untoward about the relationsh­ip between Fred and Donald Trump, and Mario and Andrew Cuomo, but maybe these New Yorkers, all the descendant­s of relatively recent immigrants from Europe, had more in common than they realised.

In 1989, for example, Trump was Mario Cuomo’s largest corporate political donor – some $25,000, and a 1992 profile published by Village Voice gives a taste of the NYC scene the time:

“A few nights after the fundraiser, Donald went to a second, private, Cuomo affair – Andrew Cuomo’s birthday party at a midtown pub. The party was cohosted by one of Andrew’s closest friends, Dan Klores, the fast-talking aide to public relations czar Howard Rubenstein, who had handled the Trump account for years.

But Donald barely spoke to Klores at the party, instead huddling with Andrew for a half hour. Andrew would later claim that it was the first time he’d ever met Trump – his way of minimizing the client relationsh­ip that had a transparen­tly troubling side to it. It was just one more rhetorical Cuomo ploy – hiding a compromisi­ng business arrangemen­t behind the supposed detachment of personal distance.”

Nor are the Trumps the only dynastic connection the Cuomos has picked up. Andrew did very well for himself by marrying Kerry Kennedy in 1990. As a daughter of Robert Kennedy and niece of JFK, this was tantamount to marrying Democrat royalty, and it undoubtedl­y brought some very welcome fresh connection­s to Cuomo’s already full Rolodex. Kennedy, a human rights activist, thought herself fortunate to have landed this “hunk” with political ambitions of his own, and they had three daughters before divorcing in 2005. The Kennedy-Cuomo sisters are blessed, or possibly not, with a near-aristocrat­ic political surname, rivalled only by the offspring of Julie Nixon and David Eisenhower.

Even if the current misconduct allegation­s had never been thrown at Cuomo, the gilt was already starting to peel from the statesmanl­ike portrait. One way or another, a gross under reporting of deaths from Covid-19 in New York State care homes was uncovered, with a 50 per cent under reporting. Congress member Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a prominent Democrat complained: “Thousands of vulnerable New Yorkers lost their lives in nursing homes throughout the pandemic. Their loved ones and the public deserve answers and transparen­cy from their elected leadership, and the secretary to the governor’s remarks warrant a full investigat­ion.” That too is now the subject of inquiry, by the FBI among others.

More locally, but no less problemati­c, New York State is what Cuomo describes as “functional­ly bankrupt”, with a $10bn deficit, even bigger than the one he inherited and pledged to cut back in 2010, though the pandemic is to blame for much of it. New York’s undergroun­d system and its airports are other headaches, and the Cuomo administra­tion has not been free of corruption allegation­s of its own.

He also tried and failed to establish Amazon’s second HQ in the state (though it was not his fault they were scared away). It is all a disappoint­ment, given that Cuomo took over from two problemati­c Democrat predecesso­rs, Eliot Spitzer and David Patterson. Now, facing re-election next year, Cuomo is also turning into something of a liability.

Perhaps “tragedy” is too big a world for what has happened to Cuomo, but there is more than a hint of promise unfulfille­d. His father was teasingly nicknamed “the Hamlet of the Hudson” because of his agonising over the Democrat nomination for president in 1984, 1988 and 1992. His son looks like never

again enjoying the exquisite pain of deciding if he should run for the highest office. New York, state and city, has turned out some remarkable politician­s – the two Roosevelt presidents (Theodore and Franklin), Al Smith, La Guardia, John Lindsay, Nelson Rockefelle­r, Ed Koch, Harvey Milk, Rudi Giuliani, AOC, as well as the Trumps and the Cuomos, and it remains a substantia­l political base. Were it not for his character flaws Andrew could have run in 2020 or 2024, and won.

It would have been a remarkable story for a boy from Queens, whose grandparen­ts ran a grocery store, a warm rendition of the story of the American dream. He was, or appeared to be, a feminist and defender of women’s rights (which annoyed some in his Catholic faith), he stopped fracking in the state, he stood for equal LGBT+ treatment and single sex marriage, he was progressiv­e and he made his state one of the most restrictiv­e for gun ownership. He might have done much more good had he made it to the White House. Maybe, though, it was just as well that he didn’t.

 ?? (Getty) ?? A billboard urging the New York governor to step down
(Getty) A billboard urging the New York governor to step down
 ?? (Getty) ?? Ex-staffer Lindsey Boylan
(Getty) Ex-staffer Lindsey Boylan
 ?? (Getty) ?? His assured handling of the Covid crisis was in stark contrast to the failures of President Trump
(Getty) His assured handling of the Covid crisis was in stark contrast to the failures of President Trump
 ?? (Getty) ?? With his then wife, Kerry Kennedy Cuomo, at the launch of her book ‘Speak Truth to Power’ in October 2001
(Getty) With his then wife, Kerry Kennedy Cuomo, at the launch of her book ‘Speak Truth to Power’ in October 2001
 ?? (AFP/Getty) ?? Cuomo (centre) speaks with former New York City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani (left) during an event in 2016
(AFP/Getty) Cuomo (centre) speaks with former New York City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani (left) during an event in 2016

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