Los Angeles Times

Actress to run for N.Y. governor

Cynthia Nixon of ‘Sex and the City’ will face two-term incumbent Andrew Cuomo.

- By Nina Agrawal nina.agrawal@latimes.com

NEW YORK — After dropping hints for days and huddling with powerful political consultant­s, actress Cynthia Nixon announced Monday that she would run for governor, all but guaranteei­ng a spirited election season for New Yorkers.

The former “Sex and the City” star began her campaign in cinematic fashion — posting a video showing Nixon dropping her child off at school and riding the subway, all with a link to a donation page. Nixon emphasized her lifelong ties to New York and her involvemen­t with the public school system.

“I love New York. I’ve never wanted to live anywhere else, but something has to change,” she said. “We want our government to work again on healthcare, ending mass incarcerat­ion, fixing our broken subway. We are sick of politician­s who care more about headlines and power than they do about us.”

In recent days, Nixon had appeared to be seriously testing the waters of a potential run, prompting a war of words between the state’s two biggest political leaders — New York Mayor Bill de Blasio and Gov. Andrew Cuomo — and a symbolic show of force by the governor.

She was in talks with Bill Hyers and Rebecca Katz, two veteran political consultant­s for De Blasio, according to local news reports. And she was spotted on the streets of SoHo with a camera crew and Matt McLaughlin, a media strategist who has produced campaign ads for De Blasio.

Nixon’s wife, Christine Marinoni, also resigned as senior advisor for community partnershi­ps at the New York City Department of Education two weeks ago, a department spokespers­on said.

But in taking on Cuomo, a Democrat, Nixon faces a tough primary against a two-term governor with almost universal name recognitio­n in the state and a $30million war chest. If elected, she would become New York’s first female governor, and the first to come out as gay.

Nixon has repeatedly discussed public education as a possible motivator for a gubernator­ial run, telling NBC’s “Today” show in August that it was a main reason other people wanted her to run. Nixon has long been active with the Alliance for Quality Education, a unionbacke­d group that advocates for high-quality public education regardless of ZIP Code.

In the campaign video released Monday, she said she was a “proud public school graduate and a prouder public school parent,” but that the state’s leaders had let residents down, allowing New York to become “the most unequal state in the entire country.”

Nixon has also been a longtime friend of De Blasio, for whom she campaigned in 2013 and at whose inaugurati­on she spoke. De Blasio and Cuomo have a long-running feud, including over mayoral control of public schools, a “millionair­e’s tax” to pay for universal pre-kindergart­en and blame for the city’s transit mess.

Asked on a conference call with reporters about a possible challenge by Nixon this month, Cuomo chuckled and said it was “probably either the mayor of New York or Vladimir Putin” who was behind it.

De Blasio told reporters he wouldn’t discuss “private conversati­ons with a friend,” but said that “whatever she does, it’s her own choice.” He added that he had “real political difference­s” with the governor.

Nixon will probably challenge Cuomo from the left, observers said.

Though Cuomo has presided over significan­t progressiv­e victories, including the legalizati­on of same-sex marriage, gun restrictio­ns, a $15 minimum wage and a ban on fracking, he has been criticized by the progressiv­e Working Families Party over his cooperatio­n with a group of independen­t Democrats in the New York Legislatur­e and the Republican­s with whom they caucus.

The Working Families Party has not announced whom it will endorse in the governor’s race.

In recent days, Cuomo appears to have been shoring up his support on the left.

The governor secured the endorsemen­t of Elton John and his husband and the National Organizati­on for Women, adding to the endorsemen­t he’s already received from 1199 SEIU, one of the state’s most powerful unions. And he assumed a symbolic position at a protest against gun violence, lying down next to Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers.

“He’s clearly out there in combat mode,” longtime political communicat­ions consultant George Arzt said. “I think you can expect ... a really brass-knuckles campaign.”

Ken Sunshine, a public relations consultant and a friend of Cuomo’s, said he didn’t see how Nixon could credibly challenge Cuomo from the left.

“With his unparallel­ed success as a progressiv­e governor who has set the standard on gay marriage, guns, fracking and the minimum wage, I’m not sure what the issues are that would distinguis­h anybody running against him in a primary,” Sunshine said.

A poll released Monday by Siena College found that, if the primary were to be held today, Cuomo would trounce Nixon among registered Democratic voters, 66% to 19%.

But “a poll is nothing more than a snapshot in time,” said Steven Greenberg, who led the survey. “This is a snapshot in midMarch for a race ... in September. That’s many political lifetimes away.”

 ?? Alba Vigaray EPA/Shuttersto­ck ?? CYNTHIA NIXON, pictured in January, is emphasizin­g to voters her lifelong ties to New York and her involvemen­t with the public school system. If elected, she would become the state’s first female governor.
Alba Vigaray EPA/Shuttersto­ck CYNTHIA NIXON, pictured in January, is emphasizin­g to voters her lifelong ties to New York and her involvemen­t with the public school system. If elected, she would become the state’s first female governor.

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