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NY Republicans Have Short Field For Governor's Race

NY Assemblyman Brian Kolb and WAMC's Alan Chartock
WAMC
Leader Brian Kolb and Alan Chartock

The 2018 election season is beginning, but state Republicans are still trying to settle on a strong candidate to challenge Democratic Governor Andrew Cuomo, who has said he wants to seek a third term.  Republican State Party Chair Ed Cox says the GOP will have a “good,” qualified and viable candidate. 

Cox denies a report in Politico New York  that says Republicans are “in a panic” over the lack of well known challenger to Governor Andrew Cuomo, after millionaire businessman Harry Wilson decided against a race.  

The GOP chair spoke after spending  Monday interviewing announced and potential candidates.

Among them, Assembly Republican Minority Leader Brian Kolb, who has already announced his candidacy, and Senate Deputy Majority Leader John DeFrancisco, who has expressed an interest in a race.

“Here at least we have two candidates who are well known,” Cox said. “And either could serve as governor of the state.”

Cox is less receptive to a run by former Erie County Executive Joel Giambra. Giambra has expressed interest in running as a Republican candidate for governor, but he has previously supported Cuomo, a Democrat, as well as 2016 Democratic Presidential candidate Hillary Clinton. 

Cuomo has more than $25 million dollars in his campaign account , but the GOP state chair says he expects national republican groups will donate money to help a Republican candidate compete.

And Cox says ultimately, the race will come down to whether voters want to continue with Cuomo, or desire a change. He says it’s the same dynamic as in the 1994 race for governor of New York, when little known State Senator George Pataki beat the current governor’s father, former Governor Mario Cuomo.

“It’s an ABC election,” Cox said. “Anybody but Cuomo.”

Cox says voters are unhappy with the slow growing economy in all regions of the state except New York City. And he says Cuomo has a problem with corruption. Eight former associates, including a former top aide, face trial this year on charges ranging from bribery to bid rigging.

Assembly Minority Leader Brian Kolb, in a speech on the Assembly floor on the opening day of the session January 8th, repeated that theme.

“This year Albany is going to be on trial again,” Kolb said. “Are we not tired of this?”

Cuomo, in his State of the State speech on January 3rd, said actions by President Trump and the Republican led Congress, including funding cuts and the federal tax overhaul, have severely harmed the state and its finances. Kolb criticized Cuomo, for blaming too many of the state’s problems on actions in Washington.  Kolb says since 2010, about when the governor took office, the state has experienced outmigration.

“Over one million people have left this state,” Kolb said. “That has nothing to do with Washington, D.C.”.

Senator DeFrancisco says he still hasn’t decided whether he’ll be a candidate. Speaking after a Senate GOP press conference on 2018 priorities, he says he’s “still reviewing it”.

“I will know when the time is right,” DeFrancisco said. “It’s sort of like a fine wine. You have to let it sit for along time and then you get the right answer.”

State Democratic Party executive director Geoff Berman,  in a written statement, said both the GOP and conservatives in the state “insist on denying reality”, by not being more critical of the federal government.  And he says they are “standing as wooden soldiers behind their President”.

Cox was asked by reporters whether President Trump, a native New Yorker, might campaign with the GOP’s  choice for governor. The President, Cox says, “has his hands full” right now in Washington.

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