The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

NY Gov. Hochul hits election hurdle in running mate’s arrest

- By Marina Villeneuve

ALBANY, N.Y. » One man’s scandal catapulted New York Gov. Kathy Hochul into office. Will alleged misconduct by another man hurt her chances of holding on to the job?

Hochul’s previously smooth path to a Democratic primary win hit a major bump this week when her lieutenant governor, Brian Benjamin, resigned following his arrest in a federal corruption investigat­ion.

One of Hochul’s first big decisions as governor was to appoint Benjamin, then a state senator, after she took over from Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who resigned last summer rather than face impeachmen­t over sexual harassment allegation­s, which he has denied.

Her leading opponents in both the primary and general election pounced, saying Hochul’s pick of Benjamin at a time when he was already under scrutiny showed poor judgement.

“Either she’s consistent­ly shamefully out of the loop, or shamefully enabling through her inaction, and either way it’s clear that unless we elect leadership outside of the old ways of Albany, these patterns of scandal and corruption will keep repeating,” said New York City Public Advocate Jumaane Williams, who is running against Hochul for the Democratic nomination.

U.S. Rep. Tom Suozzi, a Long Island Democrat also trying to beat Hochul, piled on, saying her pick of Benjamin was part of a pattern of bad choices, which he said included cutting a deal that will give her hometown Buffalo Bills more than $1.1 billion to build and operate a new stadium.

“Hochul has fostered a culture of continued corruption with months of fundraisin­g from pay to play insiders and people doing business with the state, and secretive budget deals that resulted in the billion dollar Bills stadium and little else,” Suozzi tweeted.

Hochul, though, hasn’t appeared to lose support from top allies.

News of Benjamin’s arrest and resignatio­n was nearly lost in the noise of a mass shooting on a subway train in New York City.

Hochul raced into town to attend a police news conference about the attack, where she ducked a question about Benjamin, then visited shooting victims in the hospital and rode the rails in a symbolic statement against fear.

“Right now Kathy Hochul has such a significan­t lead as far as polling and fundraisin­g is concerned, I don’t think as of now the troubles will hurt her drasticall­y for the June primary,” Fordham University political science professor Christina Greer said. “Obviously her opponents will raise questions and have raised questions about what she knew.”

Federal prosecutor­s say Benjamin accepted bribes, in the form of illegal campaign contributi­ons, during a failed run for New York City comptrolle­r.

An indictment said that in exchange for the illicit donations, he helped a nonprofit organizati­on controlled by the donor get a $50,000 state grant.

Prosecutor­s said Benjamin also offered to help the donor, a real estate developer, get a zoning variance from the city in exchange for a $15,000 donation to a political committee. And they said he lied to state officials about the investigat­ion when he was being considered for the lieutenant governor appointmen­t.

Benjamin’s lawyers said there was “nothing inappropri­ate” about the grant and that their client’s actions were “laudable — not criminal.”

Hochul used a public radio interview Wednesday to defend her selection of Benjamin, and said the vetting process didn’t raise red flags.

“It was a surprise, it really was,” Hochul told WNYC host Brian Lehrer. “I made the best decision I could with the informatio­n I had at that time.”

Questions about Benjamin’s campaign committee and use of expense accounts had been the subject of scrutiny by journalist­s and state regulators prior to his selection as lieutenant governor, including stories in the Daily News about potential use of campaign funds for personal expenses, such as auto repairs and a party at a jazz club to celebrate his wedding.

Last week, Hochul had reiterated her support of Benjamin and described the probe into his campaign as “related to other people.”

Hochul — who had also said she wasn’t aware of any harassment in Cuomo’s administra­tion until after the claims became public — will now have to thread a fine line with voters, Greer said.

While she needs to claim ignorance of any wrongdoing by Benjamin, “she doesn’t want to seem as though she’s inept, as if she doesn’t know what’s going on right underneath her,” Greer said.

Still, Hochul holds some big advantages. She raised nearly $22 million for her election campaign as of January, which dwarfed the $5.4 million raised by Suozzi and $222,000 raised by Williams.

One of the candidates expected to mount a serious challenge, Attorney General Letitia

James, dropped out of the race quickly.

Just over half of Democratic voters said they would vote for Hochul in the June primary in a Siena College poll released in late March, compared with onefourth of voters supporting Suozzi or Williams.

Democratic strategist Evan Stavisky said voters will likely ultimately judge Hochul based on their pocket books and her record.

“The governor being misled by someone who was then charged by the federal government for lying to her is probably not a salient point with voters,” Stavisky said.

If Democrats wind up sticking with Hochul in the primary, she would be the expected favorite over most potential Republican challenger­s in a heavily blue state.

One wildcard: Cuomo has acknowledg­ed thinking about entering the race late to potentiall­y get his old job back. He’s been making public appearance­s again lately, criticizin­g the state’s Democratic leaders for shifting too far to the left and potentiall­y positionin­g himself for a run.

Cuomo still sits on millions of dollars in campaign funds he could use to run as an independen­t candidate, if he chooses.

Republican gubernator­ial candidate U.S. Rep. Lee Zeldin of Long Island criticized Hochul Wednesday for having “zero criticism, condemnati­on or outrage” for Benjamin.

“She’s getting hit on both sides, that’s a very bad spot to be in,” said Republican strategist Alex Degrasse.

Hochul hasn’t named a new lieutenant governor.

 ?? MARY ALTAFFER/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? State Sen. Brian Benjamin embraces Gov. Kathy Hochul during an event in the Harlem, New York, after she made him lieutenant governor, Aug. 26, 2021. Hochul’s previously smooth path to the Democratic primary hit a major bump this week when Benjamin resigned following his arrest in a federal corruption investigat­ion.
MARY ALTAFFER/ASSOCIATED PRESS State Sen. Brian Benjamin embraces Gov. Kathy Hochul during an event in the Harlem, New York, after she made him lieutenant governor, Aug. 26, 2021. Hochul’s previously smooth path to the Democratic primary hit a major bump this week when Benjamin resigned following his arrest in a federal corruption investigat­ion.
 ?? HANS PENNINK/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? New York City Public Advocate Jumaane Williams, a gubernator­ial candidate, speaks to reporters at the state Capitol, Friday, April 8, 2022, in Albany, N.Y. Williams criticized New York Governor Kathy Hochul after her lieutenant governor, Brian Benjamin, resigned following his arrest in a federal corruption investigat­ion. “Either she’s consistent­ly shamefully out of the loop, or shamefully enabling through her inaction,” said Williams.
HANS PENNINK/ASSOCIATED PRESS New York City Public Advocate Jumaane Williams, a gubernator­ial candidate, speaks to reporters at the state Capitol, Friday, April 8, 2022, in Albany, N.Y. Williams criticized New York Governor Kathy Hochul after her lieutenant governor, Brian Benjamin, resigned following his arrest in a federal corruption investigat­ion. “Either she’s consistent­ly shamefully out of the loop, or shamefully enabling through her inaction,” said Williams.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States