Albany Times Union

Democrat Suozzi says he’s jumping in race to be next governor of N.Y.

Seeks to challenge Hochul and others in competitiv­e primary

- By Michelle L. Price and Marina Villeneuve

Democratic U.S. Rep. Tom Suozzi said Monday that he is running for New York governor in next year’s election, joining a competitiv­e primary race that became wide open when former Gov. Andrew Cuomo resigned.

Suozzi told reporters on a virtual news conference that he’s jumping into the 2022 race.

“I’m a common sense Democrat,“Suozzi said. “I don’t believe it’s about going to the far left or to the far right; it’s about trying to find the answers to the problems that we face.”

The announceme­nt by the 59-year-old congressma­n from Long Island came days after the U.S. House passed President Joe Biden’s expansive social and environmen­t bill.

The legislatio­n contains a provision boosting the limit on state and local taxes that people can deduct from federal taxes, something that disproport­ionately helps top earners from high-tax coastal states like New York and that Suozzi has been fighting for.

Suozzi had said for months he’s been considerin­g a gubernator­ial campaign but first wanted to get the tax deduction cap raised in Congress and use that to make his pitch to voters.

The bill passed by the House raised the $10,000 cap to $80,000. The legislatio­n now moves to the Senate, where it could get scaled back.

Suozzi represents Long Island, including its wealthy north shore, and parts of Queens in New York’s 3rd Congressio­nal District. He survived a tough reelection in 2020, eking out a win in the swing district.

The open race to replace him will likely be highly contested by both parties. Democrats have a five-vote margin in the House and historical­ly are expected to lose seats in the midterm elections because they are the party in power.

Rather than face another tough GOP challenge in a reelection battle, Suozzi in the governor’s race is expected to be able to draw on his moderate credential­s as he faces several primary challenger­s running to his left.

The Democratic primary race includes Gov. Kathy Hochul, who took office after Cuomo resigned amid sexual harassment allegation­s; Attorney General Letitia James, whose investigat­ion of the allegation­s prompted Cuomo’s resignatio­n; and Jumaane Williams, New York City’s elected public advocate.

New York Mayor Bill de Blasio, whose term ends this year, has also been hinting that he may enter the race. De Blasio filed paperwork to create a fundraisin­g committee last month.

He has repeatedly said he’d like to continue in public service, and in an appearance recently on MSNBC’S “Morning Joe” unveiled a campaignst­yle state education plan but danced around questions about whether he would run for governor.

De Blasio, James and Williams all count on a base of voter support in Brooklyn, while Hochul hails from Buffalo in western New York.

Suozzi first drew his first statewide attention in 2004 as a local elected official leading a “Fix Albany” movement to stop mandates in the state capital on local government­s that raised local taxes. His effort helped unseat two incumbent state legislator­s.

Suozzi, an accountant and lawyer, made one run for governor before, in 2006. He lost the Democratic primary to Eliot Spitzer. Spitzer later resigned in a sex scandal.

Before he was elected to Congress in 2016, Suozzi served as mayor of Glen Cove from 1994 to 2001, and as Nassau County’s elected executive from 2002 to 2009.

 ?? Stefani Reynolds / New York Times ?? U.S. Rep. Thomas Suozzi, who ran for governor of New York in 2006, will enter next year’s race.
Stefani Reynolds / New York Times U.S. Rep. Thomas Suozzi, who ran for governor of New York in 2006, will enter next year’s race.

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