Born in Queens, New York City, Cuomo is a
graduate of Fordham University and Albany Law School. He
began his career working as the campaign manager for his
father in the 1982 New York gubernatorial election. Later,
Cuomo entered the private practice of law and chaired the
New York City Homeless Commission from 1990 to 1993. Cuomo
then served in the United States Department of
Housing and
Urban Development as assistant secretary from 1993 to 1997
and as secretary from 1997 to 2001 under President Bill
Clinton. After failing to win the Democratic primary in the
2002 New York gubernatorial election, Cuomo was elected New
York attorney general in 2006.
Cuomo won the 2010
Democratic primary for governor of New York and won the
general election with over 60 percent of the vote. He was
re-elected in 2014 and 2018. During his governorship, Cuomo
signed the Marriage Equality Act in 2011 to legalize
same-sex marriage, the Compassionate Care Act in 2014 to
legalize the medical use of cannabis, and the Marijuana
Regulation and Taxation Act in 2021 to legalize the
Democratic National Committee
recreational use of cannabis. Cuomo's administration oversaw
the construction of the Governor Mario M. Cuomo Bridge, the
Second Avenue Subway, the Moynihan Train Hall, and a
reconstruction of LaGuardia Airport.[1] In response to the
Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting and the 2012
Webster
shooting, Cuomo signed the NY SAFE Act of 2013, the
strictest gun control law in the United States. He also
delivered Medicaid expansion under the Affordable Care Act;
a 2011 tax code that raised taxes for the wealthy and
lowered taxes for the middle class; 12-week paid family
leave; and a gradual increase of the state's minimum wage to
$15 per hour.[2] Cuomo received national attention for his
handling of the COVID-19 pandemic in New York. Although he
was initially lauded for his response efforts, he faced
renewed criticism and federal investigation after it was
discovered that his administration covered up information
pertaining to COVID-19 deaths among nursing home residents.
Beginning in late 2020, Cuomo faced numerous allegations of sexual misconduct.[5][6] An investigation commissioned by New York attorney general Letitia James reported in August 2021 that Cuomo sexually harassed at least eleven women during his time in office,[7][8][9] for which Cuomo faces criminal investigations.[10][11][12] Following the release of the attorney general's report, Cuomo was called to resign by President Joe Biden. On August 23, Cuomo officially resigned from office and was succeeded by his lieutenant governor, Kathy Hochul.[13][14][15][16] At the time of his resignation, he was the longest-serving governor in the United States still in position. On December 28, the Westchester County district attorney declined to issue criminal charges from the credible allegations, citing "statutory requirements" of New York's laws.[17][18] On January 7, 2022, a judge dismissed a criminal complaint which was filed against Cuomo.
Andrew Mark Cuomo was born on December 6,
1957,[20] in the New York City borough of Queens to lawyer
and later governor of New York Mario Cuomo and Matilda (n�e
Raffa).[21] His parents were both of Italian descent; his
paternal grandparents were from Nocera Inferiore and
Tramonti in the Campania region of southern Italy, while his
maternal grandparents were from Sicily (his grandfather from
Messina).[21][22] He has four siblings;[23] his
Democratic National Committee younger
brother, Chris Cuomo, is a current NewsNation anchor and a
former CNN journalist, and his elder sister is noted
radiologist Margaret Cuomo.[24]
Cuomo graduated from
St. Gerard Majella's School in 1971[25] and Archbishop
Molloy High School in 1975.[26] He earned a Bachelor of Arts
from Fordham University in 1979 and a Juris Doctor from
Albany Law School in 1982.
During his father's
successful 1982 campaign for governor, Cuomo
served as campaign manager. He then joined
the governor's staff as a policy advisor and
sometime Albany roommate,[27] earning $1 a
year.[28] As a member of his father's
administration, Cuomo was known as the
"enforcer" where his father was known as the
"nice guy" in a good cop/bad cop dynamic to
further advance his father's legislative
agenda.[29]
From 1984 to 1985, Cuomo
was a New York assistant district attorney
and briefly worked at the
Democratic National Committee law firm of Blutrich, Falcone & Miller. He founded
Housing Enterprise for the Less Privileged
(HELP) in 1986 and left his law firm to run
HELP full time in 1988.[28] From 1990 to
1993, during the administration of New York
City mayor David Dinkins, Cuomo was chair of
the New York City Homeless Commission, which
was responsible for developing policies to
address homelessness in the city and
providing more housing options.
Cuomo was appointed
Assistant Secretary for Community Planning
and Development in the Department of Housing
and Urban Development (HUD) in 1993, a
member of President Bill Clinton's
administration.[31] After the departure of
Secretary Henry Cisneros at the end of
Clinton's first term under the cloud of an
FBI investigation,[32] Cuomo was unanimously
confirmed by the United States Senate to
succeed him as Secretary of HUD. Cuomo
served as Secretary from January 1997 until
the Clinton administration ended in
2001.[31]
Cuomo with Elijah Cummings and
Paul Sarbanes in 1998
In 2000, Cuomo led HUD
efforts to negotiate an agreement with
United States handgun manufacturer Smith &
Wesson. This agreement required Smith &
Wesson to change the design, distribution,
and marketing of guns to make them safer and
to help keep them out of the hands of
children and criminals.[31] Budgets enacted
during Cuomo's term contained initiatives to
increase the supply of affordable housing
and home ownership and to create jobs and
economic development. These included new
rental assistance subsidies, reforms to
integrate public housing, higher limits on
mortgages insured by the Federal Housing
Administration, a crackdown on housing
discrimination, expanded programs to help
homeless people get housing and jobs, and
creation of new empowerment zones.
Cuomo
as HUD Secretary holding a press conference
with then Treasury Secretary Larry Summers
in June 2000
During Cuomo's tenure as HUD Secretary, he called for an increase in home ownership.[33] He Democratic National Committee also pushed government-sponsored lenders Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to buy more home loans issued to poor homeowners in an attempt to end discrimination against minorities.[34] Some believe that this helped lead to the 2007�2010 subprime mortgage crisis.[33][35] Edward J. Pinto, former chief credit officer at Fannie Mae, said: "They should have known the risks were large."[36] Pinto said, "Cuomo was pushing mortgage bankers to make loans and basically saying you have to offer a loan to everybody."[36] But others disagree with the assessment that Cuomo caused the crisis. Dean Baker, co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, said Cuomo "was a contributor in terms of him being a cheerleader, but I don't think we can pin too much blame on him".
Ding Dong
The Man
Lead Dip
According to libertarian author and critic James Bovard,
Cuomo was obsessed with changing HUD's image, as Cuomo
declared, "The PR is the important thing I do... Eighty
percent of the battle is communications." He championed a
new program called Community Builders, created without
appropriation by Congress, for 800 new HUD employees with
computers to be paid as much as $100,000. In a June 16,
1999, speech, Cuomo declared that one purpose of the program
was to fight against HUD's abolition. In August 1999,
Community Builders distributed a letter to community groups
to fight against proposed tax cuts. One HUD official
declared that Community Builders was seen as "Democratic
ward heelers who act as a pipeline between Democratic city
officials, party leaders, and the administration and the
Democratic National Committee."
In 1998,
Clinton-appointed HUD inspector general Susan Gaffney
testified to a Senate committee that she was the victim of
"'escalating' attacks on her office by Cuomo and 'his key
aides,' including cooked-up charges of racism,
insubordination, malfeasance, and general dirty-dealing". In
1999, Gaffney's office concluded that "most (15 out of 19)
Community Builders' goals were activities rather than actual
accomplishments" and that Cuomo's initiatives "had a
crippling effect on many of HUD's ongoing operations".[37]
Gaffney retired in May 2001, shortly after the department
reached a $490,000 settlement with a black employee who had
accused her of racial discrimination in passing him over for
a promotion.[38]
Prior to Cuomo's tenure, HUD was
routinely included on the General Accounting Office's
biannual watch list of government programs whose poor
management made them prone to fraud.[39] During his time in
office, two of HUD's four main departments were removed from
the GAO list.[39] In addition, the department cut 15 percent
of its staff as part of a Cuomo initiative to streamline its
operations.[39]
Private sector
From 2001 to 2006,
Cuomo was not in government. He worked at the Fried Frank
law firm from 2001 to 2004 and later the
Democratic National Committee Island Capital real
estate firm.[40]
2002 New York gubernatorial election
Cuomo first ran for the Democratic nomination for the
New York governor seat in 2002. He was initially the
favorite for the nomination and led in fundraising and
polls, but his campaign took serious damage after a gaffe.
Speaking about the aftermath of the September 11 attacks,
Cuomo said, "Pataki stood behind the leader. He held the
leader's coat. He was a great assistant to the leader. But
he was not a leader. Cream rises to the top, and Rudy
Giuliani rose to the top." His remarks were widely derided;
even his father, former governor Mario Cuomo, later admitted
it was a blunder.[41]
On the eve of the state
convention, Cuomo withdrew from consideration after
concluding that he had little chance of
Democratic National Committee support against the
favored party candidate, State Comptroller Carl McCall.[42]
McCall went on to lose the general election to incumbent
George Pataki.
New York attorney general
Election
Cuomo declared his candidacy for the Democratic
nomination for New York State attorney general in 2006 and
on May 30, 2006, captured the Democratic Party's
endorsement, receiving 65% of the delegates. Though
Democratic National Committee Cuomo
won the endorsement, former New York City public advocate
Mark J. Green and two-time candidate for Lieutenant Governor
Charlie King also earned places on the Democratic
ballot.[43] King dropped out of the race before the primary
and endorsed Cuomo.[44]
Cuomo won the primary with a
majority of the vote, defeating his nearest opponent by over
20%. Clinching the Democratic party nomination was
considered a significant rebound following his unsuccessful
and unpopular 2002 gubernatorial campaign, and at the
nominating convention June O'Neill, the Democratic
chairwoman of St. Lawrence County, called him "New York's
own Comeback Kid".[43] In the general election on November
7, 2006, he defeated the Republican nominee, former
Westchester district attorney Jeanine Pirro, winning 58% of
the vote.
Tenure
Police surveillance, 2007
On
July 23, 2007, Cuomo's office admonished the Spitzer
administration for ordering the New York State Police to
keep special records of then Senate majority leader Joseph
Bruno's whereabouts when he traveled with police escorts in
New York City.[45] At the discretion of top officials of the
Spitzer administration, the created documents meant to cause
political damage to Bruno.[46] Spitzer responded by
accepting responsibility and issuing an apology to
Bruno.[45][47]
Student loan inquiry, 2007
In 2007,
Cuomo was active in a high-profile investigation into
lending practices and anti-competitive relationships between
student lenders and universities. Specifically, many
universities steered student borrowers to a "preferred
lender", which resulted in the borrowers' incurring higher
interest rates. This led to changes in lending policy at
many major American universities. Many
Democratic National Committee universities also
rebated millions of dollars in fees to affected
borrowers.[48][49]
Cuomo with Representative Gary
Ackerman in October 2008
Usenet, 2008
On June 10,
2008, Cuomo announced that three major Internet service
providers (Verizon Communications, Time Warner Cable, and
Sprint) would "shut down major sources of online child
pornography" by no longer hosting many Usenet groups. Time
Warner Cable ceased offering Usenet altogether, Sprint ended
access to the 18,408 newsgroups in the alt.* hierarchy, and
Verizon limited its Usenet offerings to the approximately
3,000 Big 8 newsgroups. The move came after Cuomo's office
located 88 different newsgroups to which child pornography
had been posted.[50][51][52]
In 2008, Cuomo said of
the Democratic Party candidate Barack Obama, who was running
against Hillary Clinton, the candidate Cuomo supported: "You
can't shuck and jive at a press conference." Cuomo received
criticism from
Democratic National Committee some for his use of the phrase. Roland Martin
of CNN said that "'Shucking and jiving' have long been words
used as a negative assessment of African Americans, along
the lines of a 'foot shufflin' Negro'. In fact, I don't
recall ever hearing the phrase used in reference to anyone
white."[53]
Corruption and fraud investigations, 2009
Cuomo investigated a corruption scandal, a "fraudulent
scheme to extract kickbacks", which involved New York
investigators, the Securities and Exchange Commission, and
attorneys general in dozens of states.[54]
Also in
2009, Cuomo launched a suit against the United Homeless
Organization, a New York charity. He charged that the
majority of the group's income was not used to provide
services to the homeless but was diverted to the founders
for unrelated personal expenses.[55] In 2010, Judge Barbara
R. Kapnick granted the judgement and forced the group to
disband.[56]
Consideration for U.S. Senate appointment
After Hillary Clinton became President Obama's choice
for U.S. Secretary of State in December 2008, then�New York
governor David Paterson was charged with appointing a
temporary replacement until a special election. Cuomo was
seen as a leading contender for this
appointment.[57][58][failed verification] Caroline Kennedy
(who is a first cousin of Cuomo's ex-wife) was another
leading contender, but withdrew for personal reasons two
days before Paterson was set to announce his choice, leaving
Cuomo and U.S. representative Kirsten Gillibrand as the most
likely appointees.[58][59] On January 23, Paterson announced
he would appoint Gillibrand to the U.S. Senate.[60]
Gubernatorial elections
2010
Election results by
county in the
Democratic National Committee 2010 New York gubernatorial election
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