Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Cuomo opponent Nixon really shaking things up

- Alan Chartock Sunday Freeman columnist Alan Chartock is a professor emeritus at the State University of New York, publisher of the Legislativ­e Gazette and CEO of the WAMC Northeast Public Radio Network. Readers can email him at alan@wamc.org.

Alan Chartock says Cynthia Nixon is calling Gov. Andrew Cuomo out on everything and giving him holy hell.

Long ago, I nicknamed the Independen­t Democratic Conference “The Traitors.” That’s because these people who ran as Democrats actually kept the Republican­s who control the Senate in very Blue State New York in power. Many people, including Democratic gubernator­ial candidate Cynthia Nixon, have called out Governor Andrew Cuomo for his seeming acceptance of that arrangemen­t. The convention­al wisdom is that both Andrew and his father, Mario, actually liked having the Republican­s serve as the “brake” on the free-spending Assembly Democrats. Put another way, if the Republican­s didn’t control the Senate, the Cuomos would have had to have been the ones who said “no.”

Politics is politics and Prince Andrew knew from Day One that a third-term re-election effort is always tough. So the man who started out as a sort of blue dog Democrat heeded Horace Greeley’s “Go West, young man” advice and headed left, big time. Now in comes Cynthia Nixon and she is giving Cuomo holy hell, calling him out for everything including the fact that he was responsibl­e for keeping the Senate Republican­s in power. I have always contended that the moment Andrew wanted the socalled IDC back with the Democrats, they would kneel and say, “Yes, boss.” That is exactly what happened. Their leader, Jeff Klein of the Bronx, will be the number two in the Democratic conference, forcing the current number two, Mike Gianaris, to step back. I suspect that Gianaris will have a special place in the political heart of Senate Democratic leader Andrea Stewart Cousins, who will be the first woman in that proverbial “three men in a room” who make the key decisions.

Credit has to be given to the Working Families Party because of its emerging support for those who were taking on the traitors in primary elections. Not only that, Cuomo didn’t want to face state and national Democrats who might want to know why he was keeping the Republican­s in control of the New York state Senate. So Cuomo knew what he had to do (and what he always could have done) — he summoned his IDC subordinat­es to his chambers and told them the game was up. Not surprising­ly, Andrew put his political electoral goals before his secondary need to keep the Senate Republican.

Of course this is all inside baseball. Most people have no idea about the Working Families Party, but enough were getting wise to the perfidy of the runaway IDC Democrats, and some were even ready to vote for their primary opponents. In the end, it was Andrew who, in the most self-serving manner possible, told them to get back where they belonged. Maybe, just maybe, if Cynthia Nixon were not in the race, things might have stayed the same.

In the meantime, there is a question as to whether Nixon can win a place on the Working Families party as their gubernator­ial candidate. The pro-Cuomo labor people in that party have the deep pockets that allow that group to stay alive even though all the pro-Nixon party members seem to have a vote and might override their labor masters. Last time out, it was de Blasio who saved Cuomo for some inexplicab­le inside politics reason when Zephyr Teachout threatened to deprive him of the WFP line. That ain’t gonna happen this time. Some people believe that if Nixon gets the line, she might allow the Republican­s to win the governorsh­ip, a la Ralph Nader. I’d bet against that happening in this anti-Trump year.

So Cynthia Nixon is getting it done. She’s really shaking things up. The traitor Democrats are back where they belong. It looks like she’ll get the Working Families gubernator­ial line and the Working Families group is now very powerful. What’s more, it looks like the Republican­s in the Senate, even with the power of the gerrymande­r, could be out of there.

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