Dayton Daily News

Cuomo: Push Amazon away at your own peril

- J. David Goodman and Jesse Mckinley

Gov. Andrew Cuomo of New York on Friday ratcheted up the pressure on political opponents of a deal to bring Amazon to New York City, warning that they would face the wrath of voters if the company pulled out and took with it tens of thousands of jobs.

While some local opposition was to be expected, Cuomo said, the project’s political opponents were being unreasonab­le. “I’ve never seen a more absurd situation,” the governor said at an unrelated event on Long Island.

Cuomo’s comments came as tensions over the deal for Amazon to build a vast corporate campus in Queens have been simmering for days, with company executives chafing at what appeared to be new roadblocks to the move.

The selection of a vocal Amazon opponent to a crucial state board with potential veto power over the deal riled those inside Amazon — and inside the governor’s mansion — according to two people with knowledge of the discussion­s. Executives have grown increasing­ly frustrated that the company is not being welcomed in New York as it has been in Virginia and Nashville, two other places where Amazon is adding corporate offices.

Those tensions spilled into public view Friday when The Washington Post published an article that said the company was reconsider­ing its plans to come to Queens. But the two people with direct knowledge of the company’s thinking said the article had gone too far and Amazon had no plans to back out.

An Amazon spokeswoma­n declined to respond to the report.

Inside the company, discussion­s have intensifie­d about political developmen­ts in New York since the selection by Democrats in the state Senate of Sen. Michael Gianaris of Queens to the Public Authoritie­s Control Board, a little-known entity that could eventually block the developmen­t plan.

Amazon executives are concerned the company will have invested significan­t money and time on the plan only to have it shot down by the board, said one of the people, who like others familiar with the internal conversati­ons spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss private meetings.

But company executives did not share those concerns with the Democratic majority leader of the state Senate, Andrea Stewart-Cousins, when they met with her Tuesday. The executives gave no indication that they were changing their plans to come to New York City, according to a person who was briefed on the meeting.

Still, Cuomo, who along with Mayor Bill de Blasio negotiated the deal, suggested that the company could back out during a radio interview this week as he warned Senate Democrats about the political impact of the deal falling through.

On Friday, Cuomo reacted to The Post story by again denouncing the Senate, calling its actions “government­al malpractic­e” and saying the senators would pay at the ballot box if Amazon bolted. “It would be a tremendous loss,” he said.

Mike Murphy, a spokesman for the Democratic majority in the Senate, did not comment on the Amazon news, but seemed dismayed by the governor’s criticism of Albany’s upper chamber. “It is unfortunat­e that the Governor is trying to divide the Democratic Party at this crucial and historic time,” Murphy said in a statement.

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