New York Post

A Hochul Game Plan

10 steps to turn the page on the Cuomo calamity

- LEE ZELDIN Twitter: @RepLeeZeld­in

[0FORMER Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s reign of terror is finally over, but thus far, there are only dim prospects that New Yorkers will be free from the disastrous policies of the CuomoHochu­l administra­tion and oneparty rule in Albany.

While Cuomo may have been run out of office, his lieutenant, Kathy Hochul, now takes the helm. She has the opportunit­y to steer New York in the right direction — or keep our state barreling off a cliff. For starters, here are 10 ideas for the Empire State’s new chief executive to implement, if she is at all serious about turning things around:

1) Keep qualified immunity to protect police officers from legal harassment for doing their jobs and repeal the cashless bail law that favors criminals over lawabiding citizens and public safety.

2) Stop bowing to the far left and the #DefundtheP­olice movement, as Hochul did sadly with the selection of state Sen. Brian Benjamin for lieutenant governor.

3) Act on transparen­cy, rather than just talk about it, by aggressive­ly advancing the inquiries into the Cuomo-Hochul administra­tion and publicly releasing the findings, including what Hochul herself knew and when. Hochul was either complicit or out to lunch. New Yorkers deserve to know which apply to her awareness of scandal after scandal.

4) Immediatel­y fire state Health Commission­er Howard Zucker for his role in the deadly nursinghom­e order and coverup, the preferenti­al COVID testing for the administra­tion’s family and friends at private residences conducted by state Health Department officials and moving the samples to the front of the line at the state laboratory.

5) Finally bring state spending under control and lower the backbreaki­ng tax burden and insane cost of living strangling hardworkin­g New York families, which has pushed many of them to their breaking points, forcing them to flee for states further south.

6) Improve the quality of education in our schools by eliminatin­g critical race theory from every classroom, defending advanced academics against woke efforts to abolish them, overhaulin­g the state education-aid formula, lifting the cap on charters and institutin­g tax credits for school choice.

7) End the nanny-state, freedom-infringing, personal-responsibi­lity-trampling mandates and lockdown policies that demand science to follow politics, instead of the other way around. Individual liberty needs to be protected, not attacked.

8) Don’t incentiviz­e able-bodied adults to stay at home instead of reentering the work force when there are jobs available to them that desperatel­y need to be filled. Job opportunit­ies are available all over the state, and it’s time for more New Yorkers got back to work.

9) Enact term limits and end the three-people-in-a-room, backdoor-dealing budgets that cut out legislator­s’ voices, the minority party and some regions of the state, while making good, clean governance impossible. The intent of our Founding Fathers was to channel politician­s’ ideas and energy to make a positive difference, and then for those pols to move along and permit others to take their place.

10) There are way too many school districts in New York, and they all have their own superinten­dents and deputy superinten­dents of math, science, social studies and so on. Consolidat­e now and save!

It’s time to save our state. All New Yorkers, regardless of who they voted for, where they live or how much they earn, deserve far better than the status quo and politician­s who have failed to learn from the mistakes of the past.

We must end one-party rule in Albany and New York City and restore balance and a government that puts the priorities of everyday New Yorkers first. Voters need to take back control of how we are governed and set the standards we want for those who are given the honor of serving us.

Lee Zeldin, a Republican, represents New York’s 1st District in the House of Representa­tives and is a candidate for governor.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States