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Trump as foil disappears from Andrew Cuomo's rebooted New York mayoral bid
Trump as foil disappears from Andrew Cuomo's rebooted New York mayoral bid

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Trump as foil disappears from Andrew Cuomo's rebooted New York mayoral bid

Andrew Cuomo framed himself as President Donald Trump's foil during the Democratic mayoral primary in New York City, adamant that his past record standing up to Trump as governor positioned him as the party's best choice to defend the city during Trump's second term. But as the former governor reboots his campaign for a third-party general election bid, after losing the Democratic primary to state Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani, Trump is taking a back seat. In about a half-dozen interviews conducted in his first few days as a general election candidate, Cuomo has hardly referenced Trump, pivoting questions about the president back to the race at hand. Instead, Cuomo and his campaign are framing him as more concerned about policy and campaigning across New York City — after criticism that his primary campaign was too closed off to the media and that his opponent drew his strength from meeting voters where they are, both physically and on key issues like affordability. With 16 weeks to go until Election Day, Cuomo is making it clear he wants to run this race differently. Cuomo framed the Trump presidency as a unique threat to New York City's well-being during the Democratic primary, with his campaign describing the president as 'at the city gates' in a campaign ad that highlighted Trump's decision to call National Guard troops into California. He had gone on to say that 'we need someone experienced to slam them shut.' Addressing a crowd at the National Action Network, a group helped by civil rights activists and MSNBC host Rev. Al Sharpton, weeks before the election, Cuomo hit Trump at the top of his remarks as an 'existential threat' who is 'worse than he was in his first term,' taking personal credit for Trump never sending federal troops to the city in 2020. That message was typical of one of the key points Cuomo hit on the stump and in debates. Then, when Cuomo announced plans to run in the general election with a social media video last week, Trump didn't receive a direct mention. A promise to 'take on anyone who stands in the way' of the city's prosperity could have been a reference to the president, but it could have also been a veiled attack on his general election rivals. Trump virtually never came up in the high-profile media interviews Cuomo did in the past week. When reporters referenced Trump's recent comments about the race (he said Cuomo should 'stay in' because he has a 'good shot' at winning), Cuomo used the comments to criticize his mayoral opponents, with a brief wave at the anti-Trump message he put at the center of the campaign during the primary. 'We have a long history together, the president and myself, we have a lot of back and forth. I fight for New York against Washington, I fought for New York against President Trump,' Cuomo told WABC-TV of New York, framing Trump's comments as simply 'his analysis of the race.' Most of Cuomo's announcement video and interviews focused on policy and strategy, dripping with implicit and explicit acknowledgments that he made mistakes during his primary campaign and won't make them again. Cuomo's campaign did not respond to multiple requests for comment on the change in strategy. 'Unless you've been living under a rock, you probably know that the Democratic primary did not go the way I had hoped,' Cuomo says in the video, amid video of him shaking hands with people in the city. Going on to criticize Mamdani's 'slick slogans, but no real solutions,' Cuomo says he's focused on a city with 'lower rent, safer streets, where buying your first home is once again possible, where child care won't bankrupt you.' And in interview after interview, Cuomo pitched proposals for issues such as lowering rent, building more housing, addressing public transportation and other proposals completely divorced from the politics of clashing with the Republican president. The focus on policy comes after many Democrats credit Mamdani's emphasis on the issue of affordability in the city, as well as his social media and engagement strategy, for his upset victory over the far more established Cuomo. In an interview with NY1, Cuomo sought to go after Mamdani's perceived strength on the issue of affordability by panning his solutions as unrealistic. 'I agree with him on the problem — and by the way, he didn't figure out the problem,' Cuomo said, referencing the quixotic 2010 gubernatorial campaign of Jimmy McMillian, who ran against Cuomo on his slogan, 'The rent is too damn high.' And later, he responded to a question about why he ignored the warning signs of his campaign by admitting he 'did not run a good campaign,' saying it was 'uncharacteristic' of him to run a 'very non-aggressive campaign' considering how he's been tagged as 'too aggressive, too difficult, too hostile' throughout his career because 'all the geniuses said I was way ahead for the entire campaign, so the campaign played it safe.' 'There was no inspiration to it, there wasn't enough positivity to it. But the campaign itself was just not good, not good in aggressively communicating the affirmative, or frankly, in debunking the simplicity of his solutions,' he said. 'Three word solutions are great on social media. Yeah, except in reality, they are all BS.' Shedding the anti-Trump messaging for a more policy-oriented one comes not just after a campaign Cuomo himself admitted was lacking, but it also comes as the race opens up to the wider New York City electorate facing a complicated choice between the Democrat Mamdani, two independents in Cuomo and Mayor Eric Adams (who dropped out of the Democratic primary after the Trump administration dismissed federal corruption charges he had been facing) and Republican nominee Curtis Sliwa. Basil Smikle, a New York Democratic strategist who previously served as the executive director of the state Democratic Party for a portion of Cuomo's governorship and ran Ray McGuire's 2021 mayoral campaign, told NBC News that he understands "Cuomo's need to push Donald Trump to the back burner and speak more positively about himself and what he'll do for New York," particularly amid a need to bring out "more conservative voters who would come out in a general election." But he warned that Cuomo's decades in politics will make it harder for him to reboot. "Are you going to lose more people than you gain by not attacking Trump, by trying to be too cute by half and say: 'I want people to get to know [me] better?' We know you, we know you were governor, we know why you resigned. What is it about Cuomo 2.0 that makes him a better, more relatable candidate?" Smikle said. Sam Raskin, a New York Democratic strategist who worked for Democratic mayoral hopeful Scott Stringer in the primary, told NBC News that while both the 'text and subtext' of Cuomo's launch video show that he recognizes he needs to embark on a different strategy this time, that it remains to be seen whether the campaign addresses the issues with the 'substance' too, because Mamdani didn't just connect with voters because of his style. 'Cuomo is adjusting in certain ways but I have yet to see an overall vision and an overall idea of what exactly Andrew Cuomo is going to do for New Yorkers and what exactly he is going to deliver," he said. Mamdani and his campaign have responded to the reset by accusing Cuomo and his campaign of imitation, needling his comments about housing affordability and arguing that voters won't buy any reset. 'What we found is that New Yorkers knew those answers three weeks ago, they will know those answers in November,' Mamdani said during a rally with a labor union shortly after Cuomo's announcement, discussing pension issues, according to video from a New York Daily News reporter reposted on social media by the candidate's campaign. The schedule demands of having to reboot the campaign so quickly after the late June primary could also be an issue for Cuomo, added Raskin, the Democratic strategist. "Not a lot of time has passed between election night, when we saw him last, and the new and improved Andrew Cuomo out on the street," he said. This article was originally published on

Trump as foil disappears from Andrew Cuomo's rebooted New York mayoral bid
Trump as foil disappears from Andrew Cuomo's rebooted New York mayoral bid

NBC News

time2 days ago

  • Politics
  • NBC News

Trump as foil disappears from Andrew Cuomo's rebooted New York mayoral bid

Andrew Cuomo framed himself as President Donald Trump's foil during the Democratic mayoral primary in New York City, adamant that his past record standing up to Trump as governor positioned him as the party's best choice to defend the city during Trump's second term. But as the former governor reboots his campaign for a third-party general election bid, after losing the Democratic primary to state Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani, Trump is taking a back seat. In about a half-dozen interviews conducted in his first few days as a general election candidate, Cuomo has hardly referenced Trump, pivoting questions about the president back to the race at hand. Instead, Cuomo and his campaign are framing him as more concerned about policy and campaigning across New York City — after criticism that his primary campaign was too closed off to the media and that his opponent drew his strength from meeting voters where they are, both physically and on key issues like affordability. With 16 weeks to go until Election Day, Cuomo is making it clear he wants to run this race differently. Cuomo framed the Trump presidency as a unique threat to New York City's well-being during the Democratic primary, with his campaign describing the president as 'at the city's gates' in a campaign ad that highlighted Trump's decision to call National Guard troops into California. He ad went on to say that 'we need someone experienced to slam them shut.' Addressing a crowd at the National Action Network. a group helped by civil rights activists and MSNBC host Rev. Al Sharpton, weeks before the election, Cuomo hit Trump at the top of his remarks as an 'existential threat' who is 'worse than he was in his first term,' taking personal credit for Trump never sending federal troops to the city in 2020. That message was typical of one of the key points Cuomo hit on the stump and in debates. Then, when Cuomo announced plans to run in the general election with a social media video last week, Trump didn't receive a direct mention. A promise to 'take on anyone who stands in the way' of the city's prosperity could have been a reference to the president, but it could have also been a veiled attack at his general election rivals. Trump virtually never came up in the high-profile media interviews Cuomo did in the past week. When reporters referenced Trump's recent comments about the race (he said Cuomo should 'stay in' because he has a 'good shot' at winning), Cuomo used the comments to criticize his mayoral opponents, with a brief wave at the anti-Trump message he put at the center of the campaign during the primary. 'We have a long history together, the president and myself, we have a lot of back and forth. I fight for New York against Washington, I fought for New York against President Trump,' Cuomo told WABC-TV of New York, framing Trump's comments as simply 'his analysis of the race.' Most of Cuomo's announcement video and interviews focused on policy and strategy, dripping with implicit and explicit acknowledgments that he made mistakes during his primary campaign and won't make them again. Cuomo's campaign did not respond to multiple requests for comment on the change in strategy. 'Unless you've been living under a rock, you probably know that the Democratic primary did not go the way I had hoped,' Cuomo says in the video, amid video of him shaking hands with people in the city. Going on to criticize Mamdani's 'slick slogans, but no real solutions,' Cuomo says he's focused on a city with 'lower rent, safer streets, where buying your first home is once again possible, where child care won't bankrupt you.' And in interview after interview, Cuomo pitched proposals for issues such as lowering rent, building more housing, addressing public transportation and other proposals completely divorced from the politics of clashing with the Republican president. The focus on policy comes after many Democrats credit Mamdani's emphasis on the issue of affordability in the city, as well as his social media and engagement strategy, for his upset victory over the far more established Cuomo. In an interview with NY1, Cuomo sought to go after Mamdani's perceived strength on the issue of affordability by panning his solutions as unrealistic. 'I agree with him on the problem — and by the way, he didn't figure out the problem,' Cuomo said, referencing the quixotic 2010 gubernatorial campaign of Jimmy McMillian, who ran against Cuomo on his slogan, 'The rent is too damn high.' And later, he responded to a question about why he ignored the warning signs of his campaign by admitting he 'did not run a good campaign,' saying it was 'uncharacteristic' of him to run a 'very non-aggressive campaign' considering how he's been tagged as 'too aggressive, too difficult, too hostile' throughout his career because 'all the geniuses said I was way ahead for the entire campaign, so the campaign played it safe.' 'There was no inspiration to it, there wasn't enough positivity to it. But the campaign itself was just not good, not good in aggressively communicating the affirmative, or frankly, in debunking the simplicity of his solutions,' he said. 'Three word solutions are great on social media. Yeah, except in reality, they are all BS.' Shedding the anti-Trump messaging for a more policy-oriented one comes not just after a campaign Cuomo himself admitted was lacking, but it also comes as the race opens up to the wider New York City electorate facing a complicated choice between the Democrat Mamdani, two independents in Cuomo and Mayor Eric Adams (who dropped out of the Democratic primary after the Trump administration dismissed federal corruption charges he had been facing) and Republican nominee Curtis Sliwa. Basil Smikle, a New York Democratic strategist who previously served as the executive director of the state Democratic Party for a portion of Cuomo's governorship and ran Ray McGuire's 2021 mayoral campaign, told NBC News that he understands "Cuomo's need to push Donald Trump to the back burner and speak more positively about himself and what he'll do for New York," particularly amid a need to bring out "more conservative voters who would come out in a general election." But he warned that Cuomo's decades in politics will make it harder for him to reboot. "Are you going to lose more people than you gain by not attacking Trump, by trying to be too cute by half and say: 'I Want people to get to know [me] better?' We know you, we know you were governor, we know why you resigned. What is it about Cuomo 2.0 that makes him a better, more relatable candidate?" Smikle said. Sam Raskin, a New York Democratic strategist who worked for Democratic mayoral hopeful Scott Stringer in the primary, told NBC News that while both the 'text and subtext' of Cuomo's launch video show that he recognizes he needs to embark on a different strategy this time, that it remains to be seen whether the campaign addresses the issues with the 'substance' too, because Mamdani didn't just connect with voters because of his style. 'Cuomo is adjusting in certain ways but I have yet to see an overall vision and an overall idea of what exactly Andrew Cuomo is going to do for New Yorkers and what exactly he is going to deliver," he said. Mamdani and his campaign have responded to the reset by accusing Cuomo and his campaign of imitation, needling his comments about housing affordability and arguing that voters won't buy any reset. 'What we found is that New Yorkers knew those answers three weeks ago, they will know those answers in November,' Mamdani said during a rally with a labor union shortly after Cuomo's announcement, discussing pension issues, according to video from a New York Daily News reporter reposted on social media by the candidate's campaign. The schedule demands of having to reboot the campaign so quickly after the late June primary could also be an issue for Cuomo, added Raskin, the Democratic strategist. "Not a lot of time has passed between election night, when we saw him last, and the new and improved Andrew Cuomo out on the street," he said.

Faith Leaders Can Now Endorse. Will That Swing the N.Y.C. Mayor's Race?
Faith Leaders Can Now Endorse. Will That Swing the N.Y.C. Mayor's Race?

New York Times

time7 days ago

  • Politics
  • New York Times

Faith Leaders Can Now Endorse. Will That Swing the N.Y.C. Mayor's Race?

Four days after his remarkable showing in New York's Democratic mayoral primary, Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani appeared at the Harlem headquarters of a group headed by the Rev. Al Sharpton. He acknowledged the leaders and biblical scriptures that fueled his campaign. 'Weeping may endure for the night, but joy comes in the morning,' Mr. Mamdani said, a reference to Psalm 30:5, a scripture that is especially popular in Black churches. 'And it has been night for far too long in this city.' Mr. Mamdani did not come to the gathering on June 28, for the National Action Network, explicitly seeking an endorsement from the faith leaders in the crowd. But under a new rule change from the I.R.S., he and his opponents in the mayoral race may be able to secure one without tax repercussions. The I.R.S. said in a court filing last week that houses of worship could endorse political candidates to their congregations without losing their tax-exempt status. The move was initially seen as the agency's formal termination of a longstanding but spottily enforced rule against campaigning from the pulpit. But in New York, the ruling could also open up a new front in the city's heated mayoral race, offering candidates the chance to formally consolidate support from not only faith leaders but their congregations. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Mamdani Meets With Black New Yorkers In Harlem
Mamdani Meets With Black New Yorkers In Harlem

Black America Web

time02-07-2025

  • Politics
  • Black America Web

Mamdani Meets With Black New Yorkers In Harlem

Source: MEGA / Getty Last Saturday (June 28), the presumptive Democratic candidate for New York City's mayoral race, Zohran Mamdani, appeared at the Harlem headquarters for the National Action Network. It was the second time that Mamdani spoke before the civil rights organization, having done so in the final days before voting ended. NAN president Reverend Al Sharpton and lauded filmmaker Spike Lee sat behind Mamdani as he spoke, and they met with Mamdani privately after the conference was held. The appearance is a pivotal one for Mamdani, a New York state assemblyman and democratic socialist who has energized the political discourse by defeating former New York Governor Andrew Cuomo in the primary race. A closer look at his victory numbers by The City showed that he won 52% of the first-place ranked-choice votes in areas of the city where more than half the population was Asian. But Cuomo had an overwhelming lead of 59% to 26% in precincts where 70% or more of the population is Black, signaling a divide despite Mamdani's expansion of the electorate. 'They say that Mamdani and Lander endorsed each other, so against the Black woman,' Sharpton said of Mamdani's cross-endorsement of the city comptroller over city councilwoman Adrienne Adams a week earlier. 'Something about that politics ain't progressive to me.' But Sharpton appeared to be more open-minded if not outwardly endorsing Mamdani on this visit. 'We should give credit that this man has energized our young voters, has brought in new voters and has made the city have to deal with some issues,' Sharpton said after Mamdani arrived. 'We all ought to thank him and listen to what he has to say.' 'The more he's out here and community members get to know him, the better he will be received,' local Democratic leader Alyah Horsford-Sidberry said to the New York Times . 'They've just got to get to know him and see him at more events like this. What's important, though, is that his concerns are the community's concerns.' But there seems to be more willingness in the Black community to listen to what Mamdani is offering, but hope he can follow through. '[A]re you able if you win in November to go from aspiration to reality?' senior pastor Dabar Bethlehem Cathedral H. Curtis Douglas said, adding: 'He's going to have to convince people in the next five months that he can deliver.' SEE ALSO Mamdani Meets With Black New Yorkers In Harlem was originally published on

Rev. Al Sharpton calls on Andrew Cuomo to drop out of NYC mayoral race: ‘Look at what is best for the city'
Rev. Al Sharpton calls on Andrew Cuomo to drop out of NYC mayoral race: ‘Look at what is best for the city'

New York Post

time02-07-2025

  • Politics
  • New York Post

Rev. Al Sharpton calls on Andrew Cuomo to drop out of NYC mayoral race: ‘Look at what is best for the city'

Rev. Al Sharpton called on Andrew Cuomo to drop out of the race for New York City mayor — urging the ex-gov to 'look at what is best for the city.' 'I think, in the best interest of the legacy of Andrew Cuomo, that he ought to let them have the one-on-one race,' Sharpton said Wednesday on MSNBC's 'Morning Joe.' 3 Al Sharpton called on Andrew Cuomo to drop out of the NYC mayoral race Wednesday. Lev Radin/Shutterstock 3 Sharpton urged Cuomo to 'look at what is best for the city.' Matthew McDermott 'He can endorse one or the other, and let them have a battle over what is best for New York.' Sharpton added that he had reached out to Cuomo's people to try to get him to abandon his bid. Calls to Cuomo's camp were not returned. The call comes just a day after the full primary results came in, showing socialist Zohran Mamdani trounced Cuomo by 12 points in just three rounds of ranked-choice voting. Days earlier, Sharpton hosted Mamdani at his National Action Network HQ, giving the Democratic nominee a chance to make his pitch to black voters, and seemingly endorsed some of the assemblyman's campaign vows, such as freezing the rent. 3 Zohran Mamdani trounced Cuomo by 12 points in just three rounds of ranked-choice voting. AP The influential Sharpton shopped short of formally endorsing Mamdani. Cuomo has flip-flopped on his run for governor, but he will still be on the ballot on an independent line come November along with Mamdani and GOP nominee Curtis Sliwa, as well as two others on independent lines, Eric Adams and Jim Walden.

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