New York Post

Grounding Cuomo’s Shakedown Ship

- BOB McMANUS Bob McManus is a contributi­ng editor of City Journal.

EMPEROR Andrew has no clothes — and Amazon noticed.

Or perhaps Jeff Bezos was channeling George Bernard Shaw — “I learned long ago never to wrestle with a pig. You get dirty, and the pig likes it” — and decided that, whatever the upside of a major presence in the Big Apple, the cost of doing business here was just too high. Either way, arrivederc­i Amazon! What’s astonishin­g is that the digital dynamo decided to come to Queens in the first place.

Isn’t the bulk of Gov. Cuomo’s economicde­velopment varsity — including his as-close-as-a-brother top aide — on its way to prison because of the team’s first-term pocket-lining? Haven’t all of his grand plans flopped spectacula­rly, one after another and usually mired in scandal?

And then there is Mayor de Blasio, a party to the Amazon deal and a fellow who spent most of his first term under investigat­ion for corrupt practices; who has a kindergart­ener’s attention span; and who nobody takes seriously anyway — to say nothing of trusts.

Why would any self-respecting company want to do business in such an environmen­t?

That is, in a culture where a signed, sealed and delivered agreement traditiona­lly is just a starting point for the so-called community-benefits-agreements hake down—the process where local politician­s attempt to squeeze cash and other considerat­ions from good-faith investors.

And, sure enough, local pols began circling the deal the instant it was announced — piously preaching policy concerns, but clearly on the make for extracurri­cular advantages. It’s a tradition, don’t you know.

Thing is, when you’re one of the world’s most significan­t economic engines, you don’t have to play by local rules. So Bezos bagged it. He may have had other reasons — at the level Amazon plays, who knows? — but now Cuomo must live with the consequenc­es. They will be substantia­l.

Has any sitting governor ever been so artfully decapitate­d by a rookie legislativ­e leader quite like the way Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins did it to Cuomo?

Stewart-Cousins, who has been chafing at her treatment by Cuomo for years, finally had a chance to even things up: She put the Amazon deal’s principal opponent, Sen. Michael N. Gianaris of Queens, in a position to kill it — sending an unmistakab­le message both to Amazon and to the governor: Your troubles are just beginning, boys! Amazon split. Cuomo can’t. The outcome doesn’t necessaril­y signal a tectonic power shift in Albany, but it definitely was a challenge to a governor who pretty much had his way with the Legislatur­e for his first two terms — and who is entering a third facing ideologica­lly energized and powerfully placed lawmakers dedicated to making New York America’s most progressiv­e state.

That is, on making Cuomo live up to pugnacious­ly lefty rhetoric that in fact often masks more moderate policies.

One should never underestim­ate an experience­d governor — certainly one who has been an Albany operative since 1982. Tradition, and the state Constituti­on, favor the executive branch over the legislativ­e. Plus, Cuomo has appointed every one of the state’s seven Court of Appeals judges, and he effectivel­y hand-picked New York’s new attorney general.

But the tide is running against moderate governance in Albany, and critical issues will be coming before the Legislatur­e in coming months.

Among them are renewal of New York City rent regulation; continuati­on of property-tax caps; extension of the state’s so-called millionair­es tax and a proposed radical expansion of taxpayer-financed health care.

A run-amok Legislatur­e could do substantia­l damage to New York’s tax base, its housing stock and its hideously expensive, but by and large effective, health-care system.

So, far beyond the economic impact of the Amazon pull-out, the question is how damaged Cuomo is politicall­y by the decision. He had attached enormous prestige to the project — and then demonstrat­ed unequivoca­lly that he didn’t command the horsepower to get the job done.

Now he stands naked, so to speak. Can he recover?

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