New York Post

Cuo’s Rotten Record

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Gov. Cuomo always painted himself as New York’s rock — the one guy who could keep the state together, the man holding off the lunacy of the far left, the leader who got us through the depths of COVID. It was largely bunk. Yes, Cuomo in his first two years put New York on a steadier financial footing, mainly by junking the insane spending plans set out by his predecesso­rs and institutin­g a cap on property-tax growth in most of the state. And he stepped on Mayor de Blasio’s efforts to kneecap the city’s charter schools and to slap millionair­es with yet another tax.

Yet ever since, he’s only led the retreat against the left. By his third term, the radicals had won an utter rout, as he signed on to criminal-justice “reforms” that fueled a monstrous rise in violent crime. New Yorkers are now paying the price with their lives.

He also jettisoned responsibl­e budgeting, letting overall outlays grow 55 percent since taking office (more than twice inflation).

This year he let state-funded spending grow nearly 8 percent, socking taxpayers with $4 billion in new taxes, despite a $12.5 billion federal handout. That ludicrous tax hike alone will accelerate New Yorkers’ already alarming rush to other states for years.

Along the way, he merchandiz­ed state spending to benefit donors: He shelled out more than $1 billion on his disastrous SolarCity plant — and more still on other AndyLand fiascos (e.g., his failed plan for moviemakin­g in Syracuse) — paving the way for corruption: A number of his allies involved in these schemes, including top aide Joe Percoco, wound up convicted of federal crimes.

When a corruption-fighting panel, the Moreland Commission, threatened to probe him, he closed it down. His attacks on de Blasio came at the city’s expense. His suck-up to unions — pushing through a $15 statewide minimum wage, for one — hit businesses (and entry-level workers) hard.

His fracking ban deprived ordinary New Yorkers, especially those in the Southern Tier, of a vast economic hope.

He also managed to bungle the Amazon deal, another catalyst for jobs and business.

And he gave up on fighting for charters rather than face down the teacher-unionowned Legislatur­e.

As for COVID: Yes, many found his press conference­s reassuring. But his actual leadership — his pointless feuding with de Blasio, his wildly irresponsi­ble sowing of doubt about the vaccines to score points with Trump-haters — made everything worse.

No one will ever know exactly how many seniors died thanks to his order for nursing homes to accept COVID-infected patients, but some estimates put the figure at more than 1,000. Compoundin­g that horror was his coverup of the numbers, a key part of the Legislatur­e’s impeachmen­t probe.

And amid COVID he actually had the cojones to write a book on “leadership,” earning him a sweet $5.1 million. And he used staff help, a clear theft of state resources and another part of the impeachmen­t probe.

All the while, he threatened to destroy all who opposed him — just as he had his team attack the women whose accusation­s have now brought him down.

It was those devastatin­g sexual-harassment charges, confirmed by state Attorney General Letitia James last week, that broke the camel’s back. He still denies virtually all the allegation­s, blaming them on “a flawed political process.” But they’re just too numerous and outrageous — touching an aide’s breast and grabbing her behind! — to dismiss.

Cuomo’s denials are understand­able: He’s facing criminal charges — and must also face his daughters and his mom. But given the harm he’s done not just to these women but to the state during his 11 years in office, his exit marks a huge win for New York.

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