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Cuomo Pushes For Democratic Takeover Of State Senate

New York Governor Andrew Cuomo greets crowd of union workers after speech on raising  the minimum wage at a rally outside the State Capitol on Tuesday.
Karen Dewitt
New York Governor Andrew Cuomo greets crowd of union workers after speech on raising the minimum wage at a rally outside the State Capitol on Tuesday.

New York Governor Andrew Cuomo took a step deeper into the partisan politics of the state Senate Tuesday night, telling two Democratic factions they’ll have to work together if the November elections go their way.

Cuomo, long an ally of Republicans in the Senate, for the first time headlined a major fundraiser for the Democratic Senate Campaign Committee, and told them that he can no longer rely on Senate Republicans to approve key issues like the DREAM Act for children of undocumented immigrants, and a reform package that limits campaign contributions.

“They don’t believe in it, they believe it’s antithetical to their philosophy,” Cuomo said. “And they’re not going to pass it.”

The governor also told the Democrats that if they win, and keep, enough seats in November, they’ll likely have to learn to work with a breakaway faction of Democrats, the Independent Democratic Conference, in order to form a governing coalition.   He likened the arraignment to a “marriage” with many compromises.

Cuomo has been offering increasing support to Democratic candidates in the Senate as Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump falls and Hillary Clinton rises in polls. The state Democratic Committee, which he controls, will be offering phone banking and other Get Out the Vote support in the next two weeks.

Senate Republicans have begun to hit back, bringing up a corruption scandal now afflicting Governor Cuomo’s administration.

Chris McGrath is the GOP candidate running in the district of former Senate Republican Majority Leader Dean Skelos, who is facing prison time for corruption. McGrath issued a scathing statement against Cuomo after the governor endorsed the Democrat who now holds the seat, Todd Kaminsky.

McGrath says Kaminsky has now allied himself with a governor “who is right in the middle of the most serious and far-reaching corruption scandal in state history, which involves billions of dollars in taxpayer money being steered to his campaign contributors.” Nine people, including Cuomo’s former top advisor, have been charged with federal bid-rigging, extortion and bribery. The governor has said he didn’t know anything about the alleged wrongdoing.

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