The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Andrew Cuomo, the Chutzpah Kid

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The Chutzpah Kid rides again. Yes, that’s right, it’s time for another chapter about the unbelievab­le gall of a politician riding across the plains of New York. Not unlike the red headed cowboy, Donald Trump and his brand of making stuff up, we now have our own trusty companion in the form of Andrew Cuomo who, the press reports, has decided to frontally attack other state Democrats. Like any hero of the old West, he is taking on a crowd of made up desperadoe­s.

Let’s see. There is his old enemy Big Bill de Blasio who, for some unfathomab­le reason he seems to hate with a passion that might better be channeled to his love life.

Then there is the matter of mayoral control of the schools.

He says he’s for it but apparently only for a year or two which is just silly. And with Cuomo, one never knows what game he’s playing.

This is classic Cuomo, say one thing and do another. So who does that remind you of? YES, the red headed cowboy. Go right to the head of the class.

But it doesn’t stop there. Now he pulls the old switcheroo and tries to blame de Blasio for his troubles on the MTA. Like the old song about another politician, Cuomo simply can’t get off of that blame train. Governors are often immune to trouble because way too few people know anything about state government.

It’s just too remote. Mayors, on the other hand, are held responsibl­e for more immediate problems like failure to clear up the snow or collect the garbage. But this time Chutzpah Andrew has literally touched the third rail.

People are sweating in the subways. The trains are breaking down.

They are sweltering infernos and Andrew, the Chutzpah Kid, is getting blamed for the mess.

This is the way it works. Andrew basically owns the Metropolit­an Transporta­tion Authority.

He gets to name the most people on that board and he has always tried to take the credit for anything good that happens on the subways. One case in point is the mule-like braying and credit claiming he did over the opening of the Second Avenue Subway.

You would think that he laid every brick on the line himself. But now, the Chutzpah Kid is ringing his hands suggesting that he doesn’t have ENOUGH power. Whoever is giving out breaks might think about giving me one of them.

Then there are his inexplicab­le attacks on Comptrolle­r Tom DiNapoli. DiNapoli is one great politician. He is SO good that he may actually be giving politician­s a good name. From day one, the Chutzpah Kid has been trying to deprecate DiNapoli. DiNapoli took a damaged Comptrolle­r’s office and set things right. Now it is back to doing its job. That has apparently made the Chutzpah Kid even crazier. As occasional­ly happens, there was a jerk who did some corrupt things working in the office of the Comptrolle­r. DiNapoli fixed it but that didn’t stop Andrew from suggesting that this was the worst thing to have ever happened. This is where the chutzpah thing really showed itself. Remember, this is the same Andrew whose best pals are now on trial for corruption schemes that would and should make any politician blush. In Andrew’s case we are not talking about some schlemiel way down in his administra­tion.

We are talking about his best friends. Who the hell is Cuomo to be casting aspersions on Tom DiNapoli, one of the most honest, decent men in politics?

Not only that, Cuomo worked out a deal with the morally corrupt legislativ­e leaders to take away some of DiNapoli’s pre-audit functions that might have stopped the Cuomo cronies from their schemes.

Instead of giving DiNapoli back his powers, the Chutzpah Kid said that he would appoint people like the ones now on trial to oversee his agencies. Are you kidding?

So the Chutzpah Kid rides off into the sunset, ready for his next adventure.

 ?? MARY ALTAFFER — ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo speaks at a rally, June 6, in New York. Cuomo and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., are hoping to increase the number of congressio­nal seats held by the Democratic Party.
MARY ALTAFFER — ASSOCIATED PRESS New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo speaks at a rally, June 6, in New York. Cuomo and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., are hoping to increase the number of congressio­nal seats held by the Democratic Party.
 ??  ?? Alan Chartock Capitol Connection
Alan Chartock Capitol Connection

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