The Guardian (USA)

Kathy Hochul sworn in as first female governor of New York state

- Ed Pilkington in New York

Kathy Hochul, the first woman to become governor of New York state, will make her debut speech from the executive mansion in Albany on Tuesday, after she was sworn into the post in a private ceremony in the early hours.

At the stroke of midnight, Hochul, 62, was propelled from relative obscurity as lieutenant governor to one of the most powerful and prominent leadership positions within the Democratic party, as New York’s 57th governor.

After a ceremonial swearing-in on Tuesday morning, Hochul made brief remarks. Asked what her greatest ambition was, she said it was to revive faith in government.

“I want people to believe in our government again. It’s important to me that people have faith – our strength comes from the faith and the confidence of the people who put us into these offices and I take that very seriously.”

She also talked about “changing the culture of Albany. I’m looking forward to a fresh collaborat­ive approach – that’s how I’ve always conducted myself, it’s nothing new to me, but it’s something I’ll be introducin­g to the state Capitol.”

Although she did not mention her predecesso­r by name, her remarks were implicit criticisms of Andrew Cuomo, the Democratic firebrand who was governor for a decade until he was brought down by a devastatin­g report from the state attorney general based on sexual harassment accusation­s from 11 women.

Cuomo denied the allegation­s and departed on Monday in characteri­stically belligeren­t fashion, lambasting the report that toppled him as a “political and media stampede”.

Before he left the executive mansion for the last time, Cuomo wielded his clemency powers in the cases of six men.

The most high-profile case was that of David Gilbert, who at 76 is among the last remaining prisoners for the $1.6m Brink’s robbery carried out in 1981 by members of the leftwing militant group the Weather Undergroun­d, together with the Black Liberation Army.

Cuomo’s act of clemency will allow Gilbert to plead his case for release before the state parole board, though there is no guarantee his wish will be granted.

Gilbert’s son, the San Francisco district attorney, Chesa Boudin, has been leading the campaign to set him free.

One of the first challenges facing Hochul will be to establish her governorsh­ip as a fresh start after the hostile climate that increasing­ly swirled around her predecesso­r. She has vowed to remove any Cuomo staffer found to have acted unethicall­y and pledged that “no one will ever describe my administra­tion as a toxic work environmen­t” – a reference to one of the key findings against Cuomo in the attorney general’s report.

Hochul’s first two major administra­tive appointmen­ts both went to women. Her new legal counsel will be Elizabeth Fine and her top aide, a position known as secretary to the governor, will be Karen Persichill­i Keogh.

The biggest appointmen­t on her todo list has yet to be made: that of her lieutenant governor. While Hochul positions herself generally as a moderate Democrat – she spent a year in Congress in 2011 representi­ng a relatively conservati­ve and rural area of upstate New York – she has indicated she will pick a more progressiv­e figure from New York City for the role.

Hochul’s advancemen­t brings the total number of female governors in the US to nine – tying a record set in 2004 and repeated in 2007 and 2019. As Associated Press pointed out, a century after women won the vote, 19 states have yet to be led by a woman.

Hochul’s history-breaking stature as the first female governor of New York may earn her a honeymoon period in the job, but such are the pressures bearing down on her, it may not last long. As the Delta variant of the coronaviru­s pandemic is causing yet another surge in Covid cases, and with the Pfizer vaccine given full federal approval on Monday, Hochul faces calls to make vaccinatio­ns mandatory for all state employees.

She is also facing ongoing economic turmoil amid the pandemic, with the state suffering the fourth-highest unemployme­nt rate in the country.

 ?? Photograph: Hans Pennink/AFP/Getty Images ?? New York’s chief judge, Janet DiFiore, swears in Kathy Hochul, right, as the first woman to be New York’s governor in Albany.
Photograph: Hans Pennink/AFP/Getty Images New York’s chief judge, Janet DiFiore, swears in Kathy Hochul, right, as the first woman to be New York’s governor in Albany.

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