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Astorino Expected To Announce Candidacy For Governor

Karen DeWitt

It’s expected that Republicans will have an announced candidate for governor as early as next week. Westchester County Executive Rob Astorino has formed an exploratory committee and has expressed interest in what most believe will be an uphill climb, against Governor Andrew Cuomo, who is seeking re-election.

Rob Astorino, a former radio executive, has twice won the county executive’s seat in Westchester County on the Republican line, in a region where Democrats now dominate.

He told reporters at the State Capitol recently that he believes he can draw on his experiences governing a large New York City suburban county into lead New York State.

“This state is going in the wrong direction,” said Astorino.  “I feel very strongly about that.”

He said he was told in the Westchester race that he could not win, but he says “the voters responded.”

Astorino has held fundraisers and addressed Republicans at dinners around the state, including most recently, in Binghamton and he set up a campaign website.

According to his official biography, the 46-year-old speaks fluent Spanish. He is married with three young children.

Astorino is likely to try to keep the focus on economic concerns in a campaign, saying Cuomo has not done enough to create jobs.

“Right now we’re losing in all metrics,” Astorino said.

He also wants major reforms in the implementation of the Common Core learning standards.

Astorino’s expected to make an issue of the state’s five-year de facto moratorium on natural gas drilling, saying that going ahead with fracking could provide needed fuel and create tens of thousands of jobs. Governor Cuomo has said for the past year and a half that he’s awaiting the results of a review from his Health Commissioner, before he can make any decisions. Astorino has accused Cuomo of dawdling because of pressure from environmentalists. He posted a short video on YouTube, in which the county executive stands in front of a stark black and white map of upstate New York.

“To not reasonably and responsibly try natural gas exploration is a dereliction of duty by the governor,” said Astorino in the video.

Astorino says he believes he could get environmental groups and state regulators together to devise a safe way to drill.

Astorino, who formerly ran satellite radio’s Catholic Channel, holds positions on some social issues that differ with the views of a majority of New Yorkers, and could potentially become an issue in a campaign.  For instance, he is pro-life on abortion. But he dismisses any suggestions that he would try to prevent a woman’s right to choose abortion in New York, under current law, as a “straw man.”

“Abortion has been legal in this state for 44 years,” Astorino said. “Abortion, in any major way in New York, is not going anywhere.”

The Westchester County Executive faces numerous challenges. Cuomo has a campaign war chest of $33 million and is consistently popular in opinion polls. Astorino currently has less than a million dollars, though he says he’s confident he can raise much more.  

In the most recent Siena College poll, Cuomo, who’s been consistently popular, leads Astorino by 42 points. Nearly three-quarters of New Yorkers say they’ve never heard of the Westchester County Executive.

“Right now Cuomo is in a very strong potion,” said Siena’s Steve Greenberg. “That said, we are more than eight months away from an election. That’s many lifetimes in politics.”

It’s still not settled whether Astorino would be the only GOP candidate for governor. Real estate developer Donald Trump continues to express interest in running on the Republican ticket, speaking at GOP dinners in New York City, Buffalo and Syracuse, and distracting attention from the little known County Executive.

Governor Cuomo has refrained from commenting on any potential races, saying it’s not yet political season. But he has in recent weeks, without mentioning Astorino, turned around the county executive’s argument against high taxes, by singling out Westchester County’s tax rates.

“Westchester, New York, highest property taxes in the country,” Cuomo said to a crowd in Niagara Falls.  

Cuomo, who already said he wants to run for a second term, has not yet set a date to announce any of his re-election plans.

Karen DeWitt is Capitol Bureau chief for New York State Public Radio, a network of public radio stations in New York state. She has covered state government and politics for the network since 1990.
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