Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Cuomo gives final daily briefing on virus

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The governor’s midday talks became must-see TV not only in the Empire State but across the nation.

Gov. Andrew Cuomo wrapped up a string of more than 100 daily briefings that became appointmen­t viewing around the nation, alternativ­ely informativ­e, grave, jocular and combative, by declaring Friday that New York has “done the impossible” in taming the coronaviru­s.

Cuomo appeared alone behind his desk during a brief address, a departure from his routine of presenting slides with bar graphs of COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations and then taking questions from reporters. But his message was the same as in recent days: New Yorkers at the epicenter of the U.S. outbreak worked together to fight the virus and now must be on guard for a second wave.

“If we could accomplish together what we did here, this impossible task of beating back this deadly virus, then there is nothing we can’t do,” Cuomo said. “And we will be better. And we will be stronger for what we have gone through.”

As case numbers climbed, the briefings, usually from the state Capitol, were covered live daily by networks, notably CNN, the employer of the governor’s younger brother and onair sparring partner, Chris Cuomo. The elder brother promised “just the facts” and shared the screen daily with slides loaded with statistics. But a politician famous for being calculatin­g and controllin­g frequently provided glimpses of his humanity though 110 briefings with reporters.

On any given day, he would fret over the safety of his 88-year-old mother, expound on the grittiness of New Yorkers, get mistyeyed over the gift of a single mask, defend charges he locked down the state too late, chide young people for not wearing masks, or grieve over daily death tolls that climbed as high as 800 in early april.

On Friday, Cuomo said an average of 25 people per day died from COVID-19 this week. The number of people hospitaliz­ed with COVID was 1,284, compared with more than 18,000 at the peak of the outbreak.

The governor has repeatedly said there was not time for politics during the crisis, though the briefings highlighte­d his sometimes contentiou­s relationsh­ips with New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio, a fellow Democrat, and President Donald Trump.

Cuomo announced a statewide “pause” in March, days after knocking down de Blasio’s statement that city residents should be prepared for the possibilit­y of a “shelter-in-place” order. In April, he dismissed the mayor’s announceme­nt of continued city school closings this spring as an “opinion,” confusing parents and teachers.

Cuomo had made a point of thanking Trump for help acquiring more hospital beds and equipment, but the pair clashed intermitte­ntly over the federal response to the outbreak. In April, they traded barbs during a briefing, with Cuomo responding to a real-time Trump tweet read to him by a reporter.

The governor has repeatedly denied he wants to run for president this year, but his briefings — that he’s said drawn 59 million viewers — has undeniably raised his stature as he prepares to helm the National Governors Associatio­n this fall. Cuomo used his briefings to urge governors to work together to address the pandemic and the criminal justice system in the wake of George Floyd’s killing.

“I think the daily briefings made the governor essentiall­y the voice of the governors who were tasked by their obligation and circumstan­ce to fight COVID-19,” said Gerald Benjamin, founding director of the Benjamin Center for Public Policy Initiative­s at tSUNY New Paltz. “He was also an alternativ­e voice to the president who didn’t take leadership in the matter.”

Benjamin, a longtime political science professor, said he can’t remember any chief executive ever being available for over 100 days of press conference­s in a row.

For local coverage related to the coronaviru­s, go to bit.ly/DFCOVID19. For live updates, visit bit.ly/DFcovid19l­ive.

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York Gov. Andrew Cuomo speaks from his office on Friday, June 19.
NY.GOV New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo speaks from his office on Friday, June 19.

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