National Review Online
Tuesday, August 10, 2021
Andrew Cuomo announced at a press conference today
in Albany that he will resign as New York’s governor, effective in 14 days.
Good riddance.
Cuomo’s overdue departure, after months of defiance, is a
salutary act of political hygiene. He was three years into his third term as
governor, following four years as the state’s attorney general, and had been
gearing up to seek a fourth term. His father served three terms as governor,
and was defeated when he sought a fourth. The only justification Cuomo fils could
offer for extending the family’s political dynasty into a seventh term was to
point sane New Yorkers to the state’s nutty progressive wing, and point
Democrats to New York Republicans, and declare: Après moi, le deluge.
But just as Republicans did to Eric Greitens in Missouri and Robert Bentley in
Alabama, and as Democrats did to John Kitzhaber in Oregon, the New York
Democrats finally decided that their hold on state government would be safer
without Cuomo than with him.
For much of 2020, Cuomo was celebrated with preposterous
sycophancy from the national media, not all of whom could claim the excuse of
Chris Cuomo of CNN that they were simply putting their family above their
journalistic integrity. This continued for many months after it was apparent
that Cuomo’s nursing-home mismanagement during the COVID pandemic cost
thousands of lives, and that Cuomo was actively covering up his own misdeeds.
For many of his admirers, Cuomo’s downfall over the sexual-harassment scandal
is a convenient excuse to avoid addressing the malfeasance and corruption that
offered equally good reasons to impeach and remove him from office.
People who claimed the gag-inducing and now-ironic
“Cuomosexual” label and held up Cuomo as a model of leadership deserving of an
Emmy, a multimillion-dollar book deal, and possibly a place on a national
ticket should always have known better. Cuomo had his occasional uses as
governor, mainly in feuding with New York City’s dreadful mayor Bill de Blasio
and in holding back the worst excesses of the state’s progressives. But this
was always the same man who scolded pro-lifers to leave his state and had to be
restrained by the Supreme Court from restricting New Yorkers’ right to worship.
The side of Cuomo on display at the end – the sleazy authoritarianism, the rank
dishonesty and self-aggrandizement, the contempt for everyone’s interests but
his own – was always obvious to even casual observers. Jake Tapper memorably
described Cuomo’s personality in 2002: “the regrettable fact for Cuomo
was that to a sizable number of voters he seemed like an a**hole.” The voters
were right the first time.
Cuomo left as he governed. There was denial: “I never
touched anyone inappropriately or made inappropriate sexual advances.” There
was deflection, such as his complaints that female managers are held to a
“double standard.” There was whining about “a superheated, if not toxic
political environment.” There was chutzpah: “for those who are using this
moment to score political points or seek publicity or personal gain, I say they
actually discredit the legitimate sexual-harassment victims that the law was
designed to protect.” And, of course, there was dishonesty to the very end
celebrating the “progress” of his administration against the COVID pandemic.
New York Democrats have proven ruthless in recent years
in replacing their miscreants. We recall the scandal-tarred downfalls of Cuomo,
Eliot Spitzer, Eric Schneiderman, Sheldon Silver, Anthony Weiner, David
Paterson, Charles Rangel, John Sampson, Scott Stringer, Malcolm Smith, Clarence
Norman, William Boyland, Brian McLaughlin, Carl Kruger, Gloria Davis, Ryan
Karben, Sam Hoyt, Diane Gordon, Efrain Gonzalez, Anthony Seminerio, Hiram
Monserrate, Pedro Espada, William Scarborough, Shirley Huntley, Nelson Castro,
Micah Kellner, Gabriela Rosa, Angela Wozniak, Pamela Harris, and Marc
Panepinto. And those are just the ones who got caught. Maybe they should take a
closer look at why they have so many opportunities to replace miscreants in
their ranks.
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