Mario Cuomo
Paterson Spoke, But Carey, Cuomo and Pataki Thundered
With the final speaking schedule for Thursday released, the gubernatorial tally is in: David Paterson was one 15 governors to land a slot at the podium at the Democratic convention this week.
There are 28 Democratic governors in the country, so that puts Paterson in the majority. His time slot (around 3:45 M.S.T Tuesday) was earlier than all but one of them (Governor Chet Culver of swing-state Iowa).
New York is of course no swing state, but there's a long tradition of governors speaking at the national political conventions.
Had Paterson not been given a speaking slot—and the Daily News reported earlier this month that the D. read more »
Cuomo: A Superdelegate Victory Is Still a Victory
Mario Cuomo, for one, can envision a scenario in which Barack Obama leads Hillary Clinton in pledged delegates, states won and total votes—and emerges from the convention as a nominee for vice president.
The superdelegates, he said, could realistically make up for "any number” of elected delegates supporting Obama.
“That's what the superdelegates were designed for,” Cuomo, who is officially neutral, said in a phone interview. “If 100 percent of the delegates had voted the other way, and they thought it was the wrong candidate, they wouldn't have to follow it." read more »
Levy Conjures Cuomo for Cautionary Tale on Bloomberg Bid
Larry Levy thinks there's a limit to what can be learned from all the Bloomberg '08 news stories.
"Even if you had a source saying Michael Bloomberg said he is running, the best thing you have is a source saying that Bloomberg has said he is running," the former Newsday columnist told me yesterday.
"That doesn’t necessarily mean he is actually going to do it," added Levy, who is now the head of Hofstra's Center for Suburban Studies.
He recalled another New Yorker who flirted with running for president: read more »
Gore for Prez? Silly While Obama’s Around
Once again last week Al Gore stepped back into the news in a big way. Once again pundits speculated that it might signal an impending presidential candidacy. And once again, nothing came of it. read more »
Bloomberg Booked for Potentially Eventful Engagement at Cooper Union
Michael Bloomberg will speak with Tom Brokaw in an installment of the Cooper Union discussions which have already featured presidential candidate John Edwards and presidential aspirant Newt Gingrich.
According to the advisory announcing the Sept. 25 event, which will be hosted by Mario Cuomo, the talk "will focus on finding solutions to the national challenges of education, poverty and the environment."
Cuomo has said the discussions - each usually an hour long - are a venue for detailed answers to the questions and issues facing national leaders, who often don't have the opportunity to get into the nitty-gritty aspects of policy while campaigning.
In an earlier interview in the Observer, Cuomo suggested that Bloomberg could yet have a big influence in the 2008 race for the White House, particularly if he chooses to criticize Rudy Giuliani. Could this be an opportunity for Cuomo to bring about a moment that would put that proposition to the test?
Cuomo to Hillary and Obama: ‘Details, Please!’
Many Democrats these days are thrilled, even to the point of smugness, about the state of their field of presidential candidates. Not Mario Cuomo. read more »
Mario's Questions for John Edwards
I just got off the phone with Mario Cuomo, who is preparing for his "dialogue"
with John Edwards this Thursday at Cooper Union. It's part of an ongoing series of presidential candidates going one-on-one with the former governor.
After they speak, each will field questions from WNYC host Brian Lehrer.
Among the questions Cuomo told me he wants to ask Edwards is, “What is the best thing you can achieve by bombing Iran? What is the worst thing you can produce by bombing Iran?”
Also, referring to the constitutional question of congress having the right to exercise discretion over the congress's discretion over declarations of war: “Do you pledge... in picking Supreme Court justices, to ask how they feel about the war
powers and this notion about a political question?”
And though I should have known better, I asked him if he planned to touch on the topic of John Edwards' $400 haircut. His answer:
“Azi, with the kind of questions I’ve just thought up, you want me to talk about haircuts? The haircuts is a question is for the press: you can have fun with it, you can put a big picture up, you can have YouTube do something. It's entertainment. We‘re straining to get some of them to answer our questions. Nobody writes about them. Thank goodness you called. Nobody writes about them.”
The Morning Read: Thursday, April 19, 2007
Virginia Tech gunman Cho Seung-Hui mailed out a disturbing video to NBC News in which he says things like, "You have vandalized my heart, raped my soul and torched my conscience."
Reactions to the late-term-partial-birth abortion ban from the 2008 candidates was quick and broke along party lines.
Hillary Clinton's favorable ratings sunk in a USA Today/Gallup survey.
John Edwards may be having lunch with Mario Cuomo today. read more »
The Crisis of the Upper-Middle Class: Big Pay Is Piddling in New York

Letters
Letters
Elsewhere: Thompson, Clinton, Spitzer
Another group opposing Eliot Spitzer's health care plan is contacting voters in bulk.
Spitzer criticized the state Senate's spending plan for health care.
The IRS is looking into whether there was some "misinterpretation by some state legislators" on how to account for certain work-related expenses.
There are still seats left for a fund-raiser featuring Bill Clinton on March 18.
Mario Cuomo will give the opening remarks at a DMI conference about the middle class on April 2.
A writer on Urban Elephants wonders if Rudy Giuliani would grab more executive power than George W. Bush.
A committee in the Council Council voted to ban metal bats for high school sports.
The state legislature is missing some information about legislation introduced in 2005.
And above is a picture of City Comptroller Bill Thompson, who criticized the Department of Education at a conference today with Schools Chancellor Joel Klein looking on.
-- Azi PaybarahCuomo and Newt at Cooper Union: Gunfire and Orchestras
Early Cuomo Backers
According to a Cuomo staffer at the party, Cuomo expressed his gratitude to his early supporters, and recognized that their backing was no small thing considering his 2002 misadventure. He singled out the support of Council Speaker Christine Quinn, Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer, and Bronx Borough President Adolfo Carrion, and said, according to the staffer, that the "easier" thing to do at the time would have been to sit out the race or back a different horse.
Mario Cuomo picked up on the theme and emphasized that he knew a thing or two about people sticking their neck out for him early. In 1982, he recalled, support was heavily lined up behind Ed Koch.
We'll see how Cuomo interacts with those officials who, like the governor-elect, waited until later in the game to endorse him.
--Jason HorowitzOne Critic's View Of the Pataki Era
One Critic’s View Of the Pataki Era
Giuliani Rethinks Pataki, Cuomo
Rudy Giuliani used his speech at a fund-raiser for NH state House Republican candidates to tout the importance of electing GOP candidates up and down the ballot and the party's general superiority on every issue imaginable. So I asked him if he still thinks Mario Cuomo would make a better governor than George Pataki:
Giuliani's response:
-- Azi Paybarah"It's so long ago, I can't even remember it. George Pataki turned out to be a terrific governor and a good friend. Hindsight always makes things easier, and I guess that's kind of the point I was making about even more serious issues like North Korea, September 11, and even yesterday. But I said this before: George Pataki turned out to be a really good governor. If I had known that beforehand, I probably could have made a different decision. I didn't. With the facts I had available then, that was the right decision, I thought, for the city and the state."
Cuomo's Party
As two jumbo screens projected Andrew Cuomo as winner on opposite sides of a Sheraton ballroom, Mario Cuomo walked around the round tables accepting hugs and kisses from former colleagues and donors. Enthusiasm built in anticipation of the victor's arrival.
Eventually, Charlie King and Christine Quinn shushed the crowd and introduced Cuomo, to furious applause. An enormous smile spread across his face and his fist pumped in the air. He introduced his family, nuclear and extended, and, being the new Andrew Cuomo, thanked Mark Green.
"I want to applaud Mark Green," said Mr. Cuomo. "He called me, he endorsed me, he was gracious. He ran a very very strong campaign, he made me a better candidate and I look forward to working with him."
He thanked his campaign workers and Jennifer Cunningham, "whose birthday is tomorrow," and who stood elated in the back of the room, putting down her tumbler to clap.
Mr. Cuomo then went on the offensive, attacking "the reign of the two Georges" referring to Bush and Pataki, and announcing that "we will not replace Eliot Spitzer with their handpicked candidate Jeanine Pirro. Period."
Mr. Cuomo's speech built to a crescendo, he called himself the "comeback candidate" and the crowd cheered some more. It was the perfect punctuation to his campaign. Except it wasn't the end. Strangely, Alan Hevesi was called to the podium. ("I was just saying to Andrew Cuomo how much Andrew sounds like Matilda," he said.) Then Bill Thompson spoke. Then Christine Quinn. Again. Cuomo's smile turned back to an old fashioned glare as excitement seeped from the room. Finally the band struck up some departing music and the smile returned to Cuomo's face as supporters rushed forward to shake his hand.
--Jason HorowitzElsewhere: Moving Primaries

Sheldon Silver supports moving the primaries away from Sept. 11 and holding them in June. Jerry Skunik notes it was Gov. Carey who initially moved the primaries to September in order to help Mario Cuomo (and to a lesser extent, Ed Koch) in the mayor's race.
200,000 voters were sent to the wrong polling place today because of outdated information mailed to them from the city's Board of Elections.
Newsday wonders if Tom Suozzi will endorse Eliot Spitzer tonight, or just support him.
The Journal News gets a sad phone call:
I was stunned to get a phone call this evening from a woman asking me for the name of the Republican running for governor. I even had to spell it out for her.
When she asked me the name of the Republican running for AG, I asked her if it was a prank call.
It wasn't.
The New York Times unloaded some television stations it owned.
Joe Lieberman leads Ned Lamont 51 to 38 in a new poll.NJ Senator Bob Menendez unveiled a new television ad attacking Bush on port security. read more »
And pictured above is a 9/11 conspiracy theorist who visited Ground Zero yesterday while the names of WTC victims were read.
-- Azi PaybarahAs Pataki Turns: Could This Be It for George?
As Pataki Turns: Could This Be It for George?
Is Chris Cuomo Running for GMA? Mario: 'No'
Is Chris Cuomo Running for GMA? Mario: ‘No’
Candidate Cuomo Returns From Desert Sojourn
Green: Eliot Neutral in AG Race
Here's what he said in a phone interview this afternoon:
"I've been told that Eliot will stay neutral in the '06 AG primary, just as Mario did at the head of the ticket in 1986. Mario Cuomo stayed neutral in the U.S. Senate primary between John Dyson and me. "I'm confident that he will stay neutral and run with whoever wins September 12 based on the precedent of Mario Cuomo himself in 1986."—Nicole Brydson
Editorials
Editorials
Suozzi's Audience
First, there was Mario Cuomo, who doesn't often show up at this sort of thing.
Also at the table of former Cuomo aide and lobbyist Tonio Burgos was Eliot's policy guy, Paul Francis. Scribbling busily, a source notes. So much for ignoring the guy.
Cuomo, Clarified. Mostly.
Here's Healy's transcript, which he notes he gave me as a professional courtesy (a courteous guy, Healy), and not at the request of any campaign:
Q: Now that this campaign is heating up, old stuff is cropping up. One of the ones we're hearing a lot these days on blogs and in whispering campaigns are about the posters that popped up during your father's campaign against Ed Koch, which read "Vote for Cuomo, Not the Homo." Fairly or not, a lot of the times you are described as a driving force behind this postering campaign, which we know did happen. I just was wondering here, today, at the community center, if you once and for all disavow any involvement on your part with this postering campaign, and if you say - if you catch anybody in your campaign involved in that kind, what would be the consequences?
Cuomo: May I ask you something?
(Man nods.)
Cuomo: "When you said that you know that it happened, how do you know that happened?"
Q:"It's been written about in a lot of books, it was in Jack Newfield's books, the one that just came out, Ladies and Gentleman the Bronx is Burning—"
Cuomo: "Jack Newfield said that it had anything to do with the Cuomo campaign?"
Q:"Uh, I don't know—"
Cuomo: "Ok. He didn't. Anyway. In 1977 Mario Cuomo ran against Ed Koch. That was one of the rumors that came out of the campaign, which is now folklore. It was an ugly cheap rumor then; it's a more ugly cheap untrue rumor today. And the previous question, when we talked about negativity in campaigns, let Mark Green say he's better. Let Sean Patrick say he's better. But rumors, gossip, untruth about other people is not positive, and it re-enforces stereotypes. It's just not true." read more »
Pat adds:
"After Mr. Cuomo finished, I told him in an interview that his wording was muddled and asked him to clarify - was he saying the posters did not exist at all, or was he saying that a connection between him and the posters did not exist? He told me he was saying the connection between him and the posters did not exist, saying that was the point on his mind because it was the point raised, and noting his question back to the man about whether Jack Newfield reported a link between the posters and the Cuomo campaign. Mr. Cuomo then told me that the posters themselves were 'disgusting' and added, 'I condemn them.'"It's On
And the answer is...Mark Green.
In an email to supporters today, the campaign forwards a note from his new consultant, Hank Sheinkopf.
Excerpts:
"On the merits, Mark is head and shoulders better qualified than Andrew Cuomo.... If "the best rationale wins," as Mario Cuomo always said, then on the merits Mark's a winner...
"Andrew Cuomo does have a modest head start in polls, almost entirely because of his last name recognition upstate...but then he also had that same head start in 2002 before quitting once voters began paying attention. read more »
"Last week's Quinnipiac Poll, showing both Mark and Andy defeating Jeanine Pirro, was interesting in this context. Among Democrats statewide, which is our "primary" concern, Mark had a 33% favorable vs. a 9% unfavorable, for a 24 percentage point net favorable -- while Andy had a 31% vs. 14% unfavorable, for a 17 percentage point net favorable. So where people know both, Mark's measurably more appealing."
"Andy." Just like old times.Capitol Confidential Blog
It includes such tidbits as Pataki including $500,000 in his proposed budget to help the next governor pay for transition costs, a consideration Mario Cuomo unaccountably didn't afford George. read more »
Now if we can only get Dicker blogging...Pataki-ocracy: Its Sell-by Date Is Years Away
Pataki-ocracy: Its Sell-by Date Is Years Away
A Word on Behalf Of Mature Politicians
Who's Housed In Cuomo Coalition Besides 1199?
Who’s Housed In Cuomo Coalition Besides 1199?

Hillary Poll
The poll was at least testing the responses to a Hillary vow not to seek the presidency. (Eat your heart out, John Podhoretz.)
The pollster didn't identify a client, but the poll included fairly in-depth "message-testing," as it's known, into three aspects of the likely Clinton-Pirro match-up: Pirro's selling points, Pirro's negatives, and -- most suggestive -- how Hillary should be responding to questions for her plans for 2008.
According to the detailed, but possibly imperfect, recounting of the poll provided to the Politicker, the pollster asked how the respondent felt about Hillary's not serving a full term, then tested at least three possible responses to the notion that Clinton's presidential aspirations make her unfit to win reelection from New York:
-She's part of a "great tradition" of officials who won't rule out a presidential run, one that includes Bobby Kennedy, Mario Cuomo, and John Kerry.
-It's good for New York to have a New York Senator with a national presence.
-She should vow not to run.
The Pirro message-testing was less provocative. There were a series of question about which element of her record is most appealing: Stopping gangs? Fighting domestic violence? Advocating for abused children? read more »
There were also a series of possible attacks, none of which mentioned her husband, Al. One, however, did focus on "integrity" and mentioned her tax problems. Another line was that she has "no substance." Another was that she's running for personal advancement.
A Clinton spokesman declined to comment on whether the call came from Clinton pollster Mark Penn. A Pirro spokesman didn't return a call asking if it was her poll. The person who got the poll, a politically sophisticated type whose guess is probably better than mine, felt fairly confident it was from Clinton. But that's only an educated guess.Editorials
Baxtergate: The Other Post Pataki Scandal
Now Pataki finds himself under attack in the paper's Lifestyle section. That's right: The governor's not even safe in The Post's doughy middle section. read more »
From Mr. Nice Guy, Sara Stewart's hard-hitting look at Michael Showalter's indie film, The Baxter:
Look around any New York restaurant, and you can spot one: He's the straight-laced, nice-guy type with the slightly bored-looking date. [...] "Baxters overdo it," says Showalter. "The Baxter is the guy who's going to take a girl to the best restaurant in town, having no clue if it's appropriate for her. All that matters is, it's the best. Anything recommended as the most romantic place, that's where you'll find the Baxter." [...] "George Pataki is a Baxter, no question," Showalter says. "But Mario Cuomo is not a Baxter."Next week in The Post: Pataki gets the Meet Market treatment. —Matt Haber
Timing
"On the record, on values, and on the death penalty there is a crucial difference between Mr. Morgenthau and his opponent in this race." read more »
Not only does this step on her campaign announcement, it hits her on what has to be her weakest issue in Manhattan.Bad Old Days of Urban Crisis Fuel a Bonfire of Nostalgia
As Pataki Turns: Could This Be It for George?
The Quotable Rudy
For most New Yorkers, the compilation of quotes is basically another reminder of why we elected him twice. Conservative true-believers may not see it that way, however.
Anyway, here are some extended bits from the document that has all those GOP opposition researchers licking their chops:
The Quotable Rudolph W. Giuliani
The New York State Liberal Party on Rudy Giuliani:
Some ask, How can the Liberal Party support a candidate who disagrees with the Liberal Party position on so many gut issues? But when the Liberal Party Policy Committee reviewed a list of key social issues of deep concern to progressive New Yorkers, we found that Rudy Giuliani agreed with the Liberal Party's stance on a majority of such issues. He agreed with the Liberal Party's views on affirmative action, gay rights, gun control, school prayer and tuition tax credits. As Mayor, Rudy Giuliani would uphold the Constitutional and legal rights to abortion. --N.Y.S. Liberal Party Endorsement Statement of R. Giuliani for Mayor of New York City April 8, 1989
On the Republican Party:
Mr. Rockefeller represented "a tradition in the Republican Party I've worked hard to re-kindle - the Rockefeller, Javits, Lefkowitz tradition."
--Rudy Giuliani New York Times July 9, 1992
What kind of Republican? Is [Giuliani], for instance, a Reagan Republican? [Giuliani] pauses before answering: "I'm a Republican."
--Village Voice January 24, 1989
On Attending 1996 Republican Convention:
Rudy even expressed his pleasure when he wasn't invited to the Republican National Convention in San Diego. "If I take three or four days off from city business, I want to do it for a substantive purpose. It didn't seem to me any substantive purpose could be served by going to the Republican convention."
--Rudy - An Investigative Biography of Rudolph Giuliani, Page 459, Wayne Barrett
On Barry Goldwater:
He [Giuliani] described John Kennedy as "great and brilliant." Barry Goldwater was an "incompetent, confused and sometimes idiotic man."
--New York Daily News, May 13, 1997
On President Bill Clinton:
Shortly before his last-minute endorsement of Bob Dole in the 1996 presidential election, [Giuliani] told the Post's Jack Newfield that "most of Clinton's policies are very similar to most of mine." The Daily News quoted [Giuliani] as saying that March: "Whether you talk about President Clinton, Senator Dole.... The country would be in very good hands in the hands of any of that group."
Revealing at one point that he was "open" to the idea of endorsing Clinton, he explained: "When I ran for mayor both times, '89 and '93, I promised people that I would be, if not bipartisan, at least open to the possibility of supporting Democrats."
--Rudy - An Investigative Biography of Rudolph Giuliani, Wayne Barrett, Page 459
Rudy Giuliani's October 1994 Endorsement of Democratic Governor Mario Cuomo:
"From my point of view as the mayor of New York City, the question that I have to ask is, ‘Who has the best chance in the next four years of successfully fighting for our interest? Who understands them, and who will make the best case for it?' Our future, our destiny is not a matter of chance. It's a matter of choice. My choice is Mario Cuomo."
--Rudy Giuliani: Emperor of the City Andrew Kirtzman, Page 133
Reaction to Giuliani Endorsement of Cuomo:
"Once again, Rudolph Giuliani has demonstrated that liberalism is the foundation of his political philosophy. While Giuliani sold a bill of goods to trusting Republicans and Reagan Democrats that he had abandoned his roots as a McGovern Democrat, in his endorsement of Mario Cuomo, Mr. Liberal himself, he has shown his true colors. Giuliani's argument that Cuomo will be better for the city has a hollow ring to it. Perhaps Rudy wants a governor who will sign over a blank check to constantly bail out the city from its fiscal problems. Giuliani knows, as do all New Yorkers, that Cuomo's liberal policies have been an economic disaster for our city and state."
"But Rudy doesn't care. He has proven he will do anything to stop the election of a conservative Republican - but he won't succeed."
--Michael Long, Chairman N.Y.S. Conservative Party Press Statement, October 25, 1994
"[Quite] frankly, you have to understand the fact that Rudy Giuliani was a McGovern Democrat, he was endorsed by the Liberal Party when he ran for Mayor. In his heart, he's a Democrat. He's paraded all over this country with Bill Clinton and, in fact, he's very comfortable with Mario Cuomo. But what Rudy Giuliani wants is to be bailed out in the city, in the mess he's in, and everybody understands very clearly in politics that they struck a deal, that Mario's going to continue to be the big spender, save Rudy the options of raising taxes by pouring money statewide into the City of New York and bailing it out. Quite frankly, I predict that he will join the Democratic Party."
--Interview with Michael Long, Chairman N.Y.S. Conservative Party, CNN Crossfire, October 25, 1994
On Gay Domestic-Partner Rights:
National Republicans can lump it if they don't like his new domestic-partners bill, Mayor Giuliani said yesterday.
"I really haven't thought about what the impact is on Republican politics or national politics or Democratic politics," Giuliani said.
The bill he submitted to the City Council would extend the benefits city agencies must grant to gay and lesbian couples.
"I'm proud of it," Giuliani said of the bill. "I think it puts New York City ahead of other places in the country."
--New York Daily News, May 13, 1998
On Gay-Rights\Gay Rights Bill:
Giuliani favors extended civil-rights protection for gays and lesbians. Giuliani urged, by letter, to the New York Senate Majority Leader to pass the state's first ever gay rights bill, but did it privately.
"I am writing to convey my support for the current legislation to prohibit discrimination against gays and lesbians, and to urge you to allow the bill onto the floor of the Senate for prompt action."
"...It is my belief that we can penalize discrimination [against gays] without creating any potentially objectionable special privileges or preferential treatment."
--New York Post, June 5, 1993
Now Rudy Giuliani has jumped on the bandwagon, pressing the state Republican Party to release a gay-rights bill to the Senate floor for a vote. Marching in Sunday's [Gay Pride] parade, he has enlisted in the struggle to destroy the family. What a perfectly abominable springboard to seek high political office.
--Ray Kerrison New York Post, June 30, 1993
Giuliani said homosexuality is "good and normal."
--Ray Kerrison New York Post, July 7, 1989
On Gay Domestic Partnership:
"I have no objection to the concept of domestic partnership."
--Rudy Giuliani Informed Sources New York T.V. Show (PBS), May, 1992
On Abortion:
Leaflets distributed by the Giuliani campaign .... said that he opposes restrictions to Federal Medicaid financing for abortions and opposes the Hyde Amendment, which is intended to deny support for that financing.
--New York Times, June 18, 1993
"I'd give my daughter the money for it [an abortion]."
"I never called for the overturning of Roe vs. Wade."
--Rudy Giuliani New York Newsday, September 1, 1989
As mayor, Rudy Giuliani will uphold a woman's right of choice to have an abortion. Giuliani will fund all city programs which provide abortions to insure that no woman is deprived of her right due to an inability to pay. He will oppose reductions in state funding. He will oppose making abortion illegal.
--New York Times, August 4, 1989
On Partial Birth Abortion:
Mr. Giuliani has said that New York State law should not be changed to outlaw the procedure.
-- New York Times, January 7, 1998
On School Choice:
"I wanted to know if he supports tuition tax credits and vouchers, which he doesn't."
--Sandra Feldman, President of N.Y.C. Teacher's Union, 1993
On Taxes:
[Giuliani] says ruling out a tax increase is "political pandering." read more »
--Newsday, August 31, 1989
Compiled by George J. Marlin










