Former governor Andrew Cuomo enters race for NYC mayor


Ex-Gov. Andrew Cuomo has finally announced his bid for City Hall — a late entry that threatens to eclipse a crowded Democratic primary and deal a diminished incumbent Mayor Eric Adams a political death blow.

Cuomo enters the race already widely considered the front runner after a months-long shadow campaign, in which he coyly avoided officially announcing his comeback while ruthlessly capitalizing behind-the-scenes on Adams’ scandal-plagued first term.

The backroom maneuvering by Cuomo quietly amassed a formidable amount of support and siphoned off many of Adams’ prominent backers, even before the three-term governor jumped into the race.

Adams — who was widely considered a Democratic star when elected in 2021 — saw his support dwindle after his historic corruption indictment and a swirl of scandals that ensnared some of his closest confidantes.

Cuomo, meanwhile, is making a return to public life following his own scandals — he resigned from the governor’s office in 2021 while facing a slew of sexual harassment accusations, which he has vigorously denied.


Cuomo is seen as a front runner to become the next mayor of New York City. Aaron Schwartz – CNP

Though scandal-scarred, few expected the ambitious and formidable Cuomo to stay out of politics for long.

And opportunity opened when Adams’ polling hit record lows last year.

Rumors steadily grew that Cuomo would make a run for Gracie Mansion his political comeback bid.

The speculation eventually coalesced into an open secret that Cuomo would enter the race, especially as Adams cozied up to President Trump and the Department of Justice moved to toss his criminal case.

As Cuomo enters the crowded field, he’s the early favorite in polls, benefiting from his name recognition as he sat on the sidelines while Adams’ administration grabbed increasing negative headlines.

He will have to fend off a slate of city Democrats looking to dethrone the former state leader by attacking him over the sexual harassment claims that pushed him out of office.

Opponents will also likely slam Cuomo for lying about the handling of nursing homes during the COVID pandemic that led to hundreds of deaths, signing the controversial bail reforms into laws and paving the way for congestion pricing.

Cuomo famously followed his father Mario Cuomo’s footsteps in becoming New York’s governor.

And he now seeks to do what his father could not: become New York City’s mayor.

Mario Cuomo failed in his 1977 bid for mayor, losing first in a razor-thin Democratic primary and then by a wider margin in the general election to Ed Koch.

The younger Cuomo, despite his baggage, has led poll after poll.


Mayor Eric Adams visits "Fox & Friends" at Fox News Channel Studios on February 14, 2025 in New York City.
In what could be a crowded Democratic primary, it could be the political death blow for Mayor Eric Adams. Getty Images

The most recent poll showed him grabbing a 51% majority of ranked-choice votes after seven rounds.

Adams lagged far behind democratic socialists Brad Lander, the city’s comptroller, and state Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani, who’d finish with 31% and 18%, respectively, in the final round of ranked-choice voting.

The mayor would get eliminated in the fifth round with 9% of the vote, the poll found.

Voters surveyed in the poll were overwhelmingly sour on Adams, with 84% saying they would not vote for Adams and nearly 60% deeming his administration “chaotic.”

In another poll funded by opponents, Cuomo was polling at 31% support– but when voters were reminded of those scandals his numbers dropped to 19%.

Still, he remains one of the only Dems with name recognition who isn’t a far-left candidate.

Already declared for the unusual race are: Lander, Mamdani, ex-Comptroller Scott Stringer, state Sens. Jessica Ramos and Zelnor Myrie, former Obama aide Michael Blake and Wall Street investor Whitney Tilson.

The desire for a moderate Dem — and growing doubts about Adams’ viability — have pushed many power brokers publicly and privately toward a Cuomo candidacy.

Frank Seddio, the former Brooklyn Democratic Party boss, this week backed Cuomo.

His endorsement was all the more noteworthy because he’s the law partner of Adams’ political adviser and former City Hall chief-of-staff Frank Carone.

“I have been friends with Eric all these years,” he said.

“But looking at the circumstances, I don’t see a path where Eric could win.”

Cuomo, despite his powerful backers and favorable polling, still needs to quickly raise a war chest to campaign across the Big Apple.

The ranked-choice primary will be held on June 24.

The winner likely will face Guardian Angels founder Curtis Sliwa, the declared Republican candidate for mayor, in November’s general election.



Source link

Related Posts