
Campaign board fines Andrew Cuomo $675,000; awards rival Adrienne Adams millions
The news out of the New York City Campaign Finance Board meeting was critical for Adams, whose late entrance into the race has been hampered by her low name recognition and insufficient funds. She's the only major candidate in the race yet to air TV ads ahead of the June 24 Democratic primary.
As of last week, Adams had raised $521,000 and transferred $219,000 from a previous campaign account. She'd spent $445,528, leaving her with just $293,994 — not nearly enough to air ads. Friday's cash infusion gives her the funds necessary to do so.
The board meanwhile fined the former governor for the second time this campaign cycle, charging that his campaign improperly coordinated with a super PAC backing him.
The board fined Cuomo $622,056 two weeks ago over a commercial the PAC aired on Cuomo's behalf, which the board suspected was created via improper coordination with the campaign.
On Friday, board member Richard Davis noted the PAC, Fix the City, spent a further $675,000 to continue airing the ad in question even after the first penalty. As a result, the board withheld that amount in public funds from the Cuomo team and also counted it against his spending cap — another embarrassing setback for a candidate running on his management bona fides.
'The board will continue to investigate the issue,' he said.
The CFB's decision brings the total fines levied against Cuomo's campaign for improper coordination to around $1.3 million, a significant sum that will hamper his ability to run a fully functional campaign.
Cuomo spokesperson Rich Azzopardi disputed the board's findings and maintained the campaign has had no improper contact with Fix the City.
"We look forward to making that clear and receiving the full matching funds to which the campaign is entitled," he said in a statement.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Bloomberg
25 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
Voters 'Sick of the Bloodsport' of Politics, Says Texas Democrat Talarico
Texas state Representative James Talarico, a rising Democratic Party star, said voters want to see authentic moral leadership from their politicians. He said that he is considering jumping into the 2026 race for Senate, but is right now focused on the special legislative session in the Texas statehouse and combating republic redistricting efforts. (Source: Bloomberg)
Yahoo
28 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Project 2025 author Paul Dans will challenge Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham in South Carolina
WASHINGTON (AP) — A chief architect of Project 2025, Paul Dans, is launching a Republican primary challenge to Sen. Lindsey Graham in South Carolina, joining a crowded field that will test the loyalties of President Donald Trump and his MAGA movement in next year's midterm election. Dans told The Associated Press the Trump administration's federal workforce reductions and cuts to federal programs are what he had hoped for in drafting Project 2025. But he said there's 'more work to do,' particularly in the Senate. 'What we've done with Project 2025 is really change the game in terms of closing the door on the progressive era," Dans said in an AP interview. 'If you look at where the chokepoint is, it's the United States Senate. That's the headwaters of the swamp." Dans, who is set to formally announce his campaign at an event Wednesday in Charleston, said Graham has spent most of his career in Washington and 'it's time to show him the door.' Chris LaCivita, a senior adviser to Graham's campaign who co-managed President Donald Trump's 2024 bid, predicted in a statement to the AP that Dans' campaign would 'end prematurely.' 'After being unceremoniously dumped in 2024 while trying to torpedo Donald Trump's historic campaign, Paul Dans has parachuted himself into the state of South Carolina in direct opposition to President Trump's longtime friend and ally in the Senate, Lindsey Graham," LaCivita said. Challenging the long-serving Graham, who has routinely batted back contenders over the years, is something of a political long shot in what is fast becoming a crowded field ahead of the November 2026 midterm election that will determine control of Congress. Trump early on gave his endorsement of Graham, a political confidant and regular golfing partner of the president, despite their on-again-off-again relationship. Graham, in announcing he would seek a fifth term in the Senate, also secured the state's leading Republicans, Sen. Tim Scott and Gov. Henry McMaster, to chair his 2026 run. He has amassed millions of dollars in his campaign account. Other candidates, including Republican former South Carolina Lt. Gov. André Bauer, a wealthy developer, and Democratic challenger Dr. Annie Andrews, have announced their campaigns for the Senate seat in an early start to the election season, more than a year away. Graham, in an appearance Sunday on NBC's 'Meet the Press,' did not discuss his reelection campaign but fielded questions on topics including his push to release 'as much as you can' from the case files on Jeffrey Epstein, something many of Trump's supporters want the government to do. Dans, an attorney who worked in the first Trump administration as White House liaison to the office of personnel management, said he expects to have support from Project 2025 allies, as well as the ranks of Trump's supporters in the state who have publicly tired of Graham. After Trump left the White House, Dans, now a father of four, went to work at the Heritage Foundation, often commuting on weekdays to Washington as he organized Project 2025. The nearly 1,000-page policy blueprint, with chapters written by leading conservative thinkers, calls for dismantling the federal government and downsizing the federal workforce, among other right-wing proposals for the next White House. 'To be clear, I believe that there is a 'deep state' out there, and I'm the single one who stepped forward at the end of the first term of Trump and really started to drain the swamp,' Dans said, noting he compiled much of the book from his kitchen table in Charleston. Among the goals, he said, was to 'deconstruct the administrative state,' which he said is what the Trump administration has been doing, pointing in particular to former Trump adviser Elon Musk's work at the Department of Government Efficiency shuttering federal offices. Dans and Heritage parted ways in July 2024 amid blowback over Project 2025. It catapulted into political culture that summer during the presidential campaign season, as Democrats and their allies showcased the hard-right policy proposals — from mass firings to budget cuts — as a dire warning of what could come in a second Trump term. Trump distanced himself from Project 2025, and his campaign insisted it had nothing to do with his own "Agenda 47." Dans is launching his campaign with a prayer breakfast followed by a kick-off event at a historic venue in Charleston. ___ Kinnard reported from Chapin, South Carolina, and can be reached at


New York Post
an hour ago
- New York Post
Andrew Cuomo slams Eric Adams as ‘spoiler' in NYC mayoral race: ‘It's about you and your ego'
What's good for the goose isn't good for the ex-governor. Andrew Cuomo contended that Eric Adams' longshot independent re-election campaign only makes it easier for socialist Zohran Mamdani to become mayor. Cuomo, who is mounting an independent mayoral bid of his own after Mamdani walloped him in the Democratic primary, accused Adams of consistently putting himself above the interests of New Yorkers. Advertisement 'If you're going to run, even if you're just a spoiler, then it's about you and your ego,' Cuomo told reporters at the Colombian Day Parade in Jackson Heights on Sunday. 'It's not about the people of the city of New York. And that is consistent. He puts himself above the city of New York. He always has.' 3 Former Gov. Andrew Cuomo accused Eric Adams of being a 'spoiler' candidate in the mayoral race. Kevin C Downs forThe New York Post The dismissive words by Cuomo came in response to Adams not only blasting him exclusively to The Post for stepping down as governor amid a sexual harassment scandal, but also supposedly stealing the mayor's 'playbook' by running as an independent. Advertisement Adams argued his own 'personal strife' — meaning his historic federal corruption indictment — didn't lead him to resign like Cuomo. 'During my personal strife, I stepped up. I continued to deliver for the city,' he said, breezing over the Trump administration controversially dismissing his charges. 3 Adams himself had accused Cuomo of stealing his 'playbook' by running as an independent. J.C. Rice The war of words — and arguable battle to show who's the least self-aware — between Adams and Cuomo comes as both jockey to coalesce anti-Mamdani support from business leaders, moderates and other New Yorkers wary of a socialist mayor. Advertisement Polling shows Mamdani could easily win November's election if he faces a ballot with three independents — Adams, Cuomo and lawyer Jim Walden — and Republican nominee Curtis Sliwa. Many powerbrokers, such as former Gov. David Paterson, have called for candidates to clear the lane for a strong contender against Mamdani if they're not polling well. Cuomo defiantly has tried to pitch himself as that candidate, despite his double-digit loss to Mamdani in the Democratic primary and a chorus of calls afterward for him to stop actively campaigning. His decision to stay in the race as an independent drew accusations that he was acting as a spoiler candidate. Advertisement Adams has tried to gobble up Cuomo's big business backers by arguing he's the best anti-Mamdani candidate. But his argument has been undercut by abysmal polling, with one recent survey finding him in a distant fourth. 3 Cuomo has faced numerous calls to drop out after being walloped by Zohran Mamdani in the Democratic primary. Kevin C Downs forThe New York Post Beyond attacking Adams, Cuomo again accused Mamdani of offering 'hollow promises.' 'None of it would make a difference,' he said, before launching into a takedown of Mamdani's signature policy proposals. 'One grocery store in every county. What is that gonna do for anybody? Fast, free buses. Why should I get a free bus ride? Why would you subsidize wealthy people on a bus? 'None of that makes sense. New Yorkers would say it's BS. And that has to be exposed. It is all a fraud. Slick salesman.'