Las Vegas Review-Journal

■ New York’s two U.S. senators joined the chorus of calls for Gov. Andrew Cuomo to resign.

New York Sens. Schumer, Gillibrand call for his resignatio­n

- By Marina Villeneuve and Steve Peoples

Facing unpreceden­ted political isolation, a defiant New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo insisted on Friday that he would not step down in the wake of sexual harassment allegation­s and condemned the expansive coalition of Democrats calling for his resignatio­n as “reckless and dangerous.”

By day’s end, the three-term Democratic governor had lost the support of almost his state’s entire congressio­nal delegation. None of the defections hurt more than those of New York’s two U.S. senators, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand.

“Due to the multiple, credible sexual harassment and misconduct allegation­s, it is clear that Governor Cuomo has lost the confidence of his governing partners and the people of New York,” the Democratic senators wrote in a joint statement. “Governor Cuomo should resign.”

Hours before the statement, Cuomo, a leading critic of former President Donald Trump’s coronaviru­s pandemic response, evoked the Republican in defending himself against “cancel culture.”

“I’m not going to resign,” Cuomo said during an afternoon phone call with reporters. “I did not do what has been alleged. Period.”

He added: “People know the difference between playing politics, bowing to cancel culture and the truth.”

The embattled governor’s comments came on the day his party in New York and beyond turned sharply against him following allegation­s of harassment as well as sweeping criticism of Cuomo for keeping secret how many nursing home residents died of COVID-19 for months.

Cuomo’s growing list of detractors now covers virtually every region in the state and the political power centers of New York City and Washington. A majority of Democrats in the legislatur­e and all but a handful of the state’s 29-member congressio­nal delegation have called on him to step down.

The escalating political crisis jeopardize­s Cuomo’s 2022 re-election in an overwhelmi­ngly Democratic state, and threatens to cast a cloud over President Joe Biden’s early days in office. Republican­s across the country have seized on the scandal to try to distract from Biden’s success with the pandemic and challenge his party’s well-establishe­d advantage with female voters.

The senators’ statement, which cited the pandemic as a reason for needing “sure and steady leadership,” came shortly after Schumer stood alongside Biden in a Rose Garden ceremony celebratin­g the passage of the Democrat-backed

$1.9 trillion pandemic relief bill.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki on Friday declined to say whether Biden believes Cuomo should resign.

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Andrew Cuomo

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