The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Gubernator­ial debate largely avoided upstate issues

- By David Klepper Associated Press

ALBANY, N.Y. >> In New York state political news, there’s still time for at least one more debate in the governor’s race, but don’t expect Gov. Andrew Cuomo to show up.

The other four candidates have agreed to participat­e in the exchange hosted by the League of Women Voters. But Democratic nominee Cuomo hasn’t agreed to participat­e. He and Republican Marc Molinaro held a oneon-one debate last week in Manhattan.

Meanwhile, the governor is getting some last-minute help from actor and activist Alyssa Milano, and Republican­s are pushing back against state Attorney General Barbara Underwood’s lawsuit against Exxon Mobil.

Here’s a look at stories making news:

One more debate?

Republican Marc Molinaro, Green party nominee Howie Hawkins, Libertaria­n Larry Sharpe and former Syracuse Mayor Stephanie Miner, an independen­t, say they’ll participat­e in the League of Women Voters’ event scheduled for Thursday.

Democratic nominee Cuomo, however, hasn’t re-

sponded to the invitation from the League. There’s still time for Cuomo to accept, and given recent events that remains a possibilit­y.

Cuomo debated Molinaro in a two-man debate last week in Manhattan. He agreed to participat­e in the exchange only 24 hours beforehand. The hour-long, televised debate was a frequently childish affair, with Cuomo frequently interrupti­ng Molinaro with taunts as the Republican struggled to get a word in.

“In normal state with normal governors, several one-on-one debates between incumbent governors and their major party challenger regularly occur,” Molinaro said. “But here in New York we have Andrew Cuomo who truly thinks rules and laws don’t apply to him.”

Cuomo has said he sees little reason to debate Molinaro, who he says has run a campaign void of substance and heavy on conservati­ve ideology. A Cuomo campaign spokeswoma­n said Friday that instead of debating Molinaro and the other candidates, the governor would be “communicat­ing directly with the people” as the campaign comes to a close.

With a huge lead in the polls and in fundraisin­g Cuomo has little to gain politicall­y by appearing on a stage with his rivals. Molinaro, meanwhile, needs all the exposure he can get, with a recent poll showing he remains largely unknown to nearly half of New Yorkers.

Milano backs Cuomo

The Women’s Equality Party, which Cuomo created four years ago, released an ad featuring Alyssa Milano criticizin­g Molinaro for votes he took as a state lawmaker.

In the ad, the actor and #MeToo movement leader cited Molinaro’s votes against bills that would have made it easier to seize firearms from domestic abusers and banned the practice of shackling pregnant inmates when they give birth.

“No, we’re not talking about a distant figure from an ugly past. We’re talking about the current Republican candidate for governor, Marc Molinaro,” she says in the ad.

Upstate left out

Tuesday’s debate, on WCBS-TV, had a decidedly downstate focus, with only one question focused on an upstate issue: state subsidies for a potential new stadium for the Buffalo Bills.

The moderators did have time to ask the candidates to name their favorite type of sausage, however, as well as their favorite song.

Not surprising­ly, the dearth of questions about issues directly impacting half of the state left some groups that advocate for upstate feeling left out, and demanding a second debate focused entirely on the region that, depending on who you ask, starts somewhere north of New York City.

“There was no specific discussion about upstate’s declining population, the state’s job-killing business climate or crumbling local roads and bridges,” said Michael Kracker, director of the group Unshackle Upstate. “Ignoring the very real concerns of millions of Upstate taxpayers is completely unacceptab­le.”

 ?? AP PHOTO/MARY ALTAFFER, POOL ?? New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, left, and Republican gubernator­ial candidate Marc Molinaro, right, argue during the New York gubernator­ial debate hosted by CBS 2 chief political correspond­ent Marcia Kramer, second from left, and WCBS Newsradio 880 reporter Rich Lamb on Tuesday in New York.
AP PHOTO/MARY ALTAFFER, POOL New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, left, and Republican gubernator­ial candidate Marc Molinaro, right, argue during the New York gubernator­ial debate hosted by CBS 2 chief political correspond­ent Marcia Kramer, second from left, and WCBS Newsradio 880 reporter Rich Lamb on Tuesday in New York.

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