The Record (Troy, NY)

CUOMO EYES SUIT TO BLOCK TAX OVERHAUL

Lawsuit just one of the ways Cuomo is positionin­g N.Y. to lead opposition to Trump

- By David Klepper and Chris Carola

ALBANY, N.Y. » New York state will take Washington to court to challenge the new Republican tax overhaul, Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Wednesday, calling the new law an unconstitu­tional assault on states’ rights and New York in particular.

The lawsuit is one of several ways Cuomo, a potential 2020 presidenti­al contender, is positionin­g New York to lead the opposition to President Donald Trump and Congressio­nal Re- publicans. He’s also calling for the state to push back on federal attempts to curb environmen­tal protection­s, immigratio­n and health care spending.

“Our federal government is working to roll back so much of what we have done,” he said in his annual state of the state address to lawmakers in Albany. “We cannot, we must not let those things happen... In the immortal words of John Paul Jones, we have not yet begun to fight, my friends.”

The new tax law caps a deduction for state and local taxes at $10,000, a move that

will increase federal tax liabilitie­s for many homeowners in high-tax states like New York. Cuomo says the change could increase tax liabilitie­s for some New Yorkers by as much as 25 percent, potentiall­y prompting some to leave for cheaper states and making the state less competitiv­e economical­ly.

While many top Republican­s in New York object to the provision too, Senate Leader John Flanagan, R-Long Island, was skeptical about Cuomo’s plans for a lawsuit.

“I don’t see a legal basis,” he told reporters, adding that Cuomo is too focused on policies coming out of Washington instead of improving the state’s own business climate by controllin­g spending and creating jobs.

Cuomo also announced plans to sue opioid manu-

facturers for allegedly violating rules on the monitoring and reporting of suspicious drug shipments. He said any money obtained from the legal action would go toward efforts to fight the scourge of addiction.

“They pumped these pills into society and they created addictions,” Cuomo said. “Like the tobacco industry they killed thousands... We will make them pay.”

New York faces a $4 billion deficit, and this year’s agenda from Cuomo was relatively light on expensive, ambitious programs. Instead, the governor pro-

posed several measures prompted by recent news, including a new, uniform sexual harassment policy for state and local government­s prompted by the recent national attention on sexual misconduct in the workplace.

Cuomo is also calling for new disclosure rules for online political ads, early voting and investment­s in water quality and renewable energy. Other proposals include one that would require people convicted of a domestic violence crime to surrender any firearms.

Many of the governor’s new proposals are aimed squarely at Washington, and a federal government that he says is seeking to set back progress in New York when it comes to the economy, equality, health care and the environmen­t. Cuomo cited recent accomplish­ments such as a higher minimum wage, free college tuition and paid family leave as an alternativ­e to the policies emerging on the national level.

Cuomo ment i oned Trump by name only once, while discussing how diversity has benefited New York. Cuomo noted that the flag in the Oval Office bears the words “e pluribus unum” or “out of many, one.”

“To find the way forward, the president only needs to turn around,” he said.

Lawmakers began their 2018 session earlier in the day Wednesday. In addition to Cuomo’s ideas, they’re expected to consider several other high profile measures, including bills to authorize physician-assisted suicide.

Cuomo says he’s also looking at changes to the state tax code in response to the federal overhaul. Details won’t be released until he unveils his state budget proposal later this month.

A look at some of the measures he’s already announced:

VOTING CHANGES: New Yorkers would be allowed to cast a vote up to 12 days before an election under Cuomo’s voting reform

proposal. He also wants to change voter registrati­on rules to allow for same- day registrati­on and the automatic enrollment of new voters when they visit a motor vehicles office or other state agency.

ONLINE POLITICAL ADS: Cuomo says voters deserve to know more about who is behind online political ads. His proposal would require ads to contain the name of the group paying for the content, and direct platforms like Facebook to maintain a public file containing greater informatio­n about campaign ads.

STEWART AIRPORT UPGRADES: Cuomo is calling for a $34 million investment to upgrade, expand and modernize Stewart Airport, north of New York City, to handle more internatio­nal flights

DOMESTIC VIOLENCE: Anyone convicted of a domestic violence crime would have to surrender any firearms under another proposal from Cuomo. The governor’s proposal was drawn

up following the mass shootings in Las Vegas and Texas, where Cuomo said the gunmen in each shooting had a record of violence against women or threatenin­g violence against women.

FOSSIL FUEL DIVESTMENT: Cuomo wants to see New York state’s pension fund get out of investing in fossil fuels.

BAIL: Cuomo has introduced legislatio­n to eliminate the longstandi­ng practice of requiring defendants to post monetary bail in misdemeano­r and non-violent felony cases. He says it’s unfair, since it allows suspects with financial resources to go free while those without must wait in jail until their trials begin.

Cuomo is proposing instead to release those defendants on their own recognizan­ce or require them to check in with officials.

Suspects accused of violent crimes or felonies could still be required to post bail to win release or be held without bail in some circumstan­ces.

 ?? HANS PENNINK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo makes reference to his father Mario Cuomo as he delivers his state of the state address at the Empire State Plaza Convention Center on Wednesday in Albany, N.Y.
HANS PENNINK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo makes reference to his father Mario Cuomo as he delivers his state of the state address at the Empire State Plaza Convention Center on Wednesday in Albany, N.Y.
 ?? HANS PENNINK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo delivers his state of the state address.
HANS PENNINK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo delivers his state of the state address.

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