New York Daily News

Williams, Suozzi blast Kathy in gov-race debate

- BY TIM BALK

Public Advocate Jumaane Williams and Rep. Tom Suozzi took turns ripping Gov. Hochul’s stewardshi­p of New York on Thursday as the long-shot challenger­s played nice with each other in the opening debate of New York’s Democratic race for governor.

Notably absent: Hochul, also a Democrat. She holds enormous leads in public and internal polling in the race, and is seeking to become the first woman ever elected to the New York State’s top government post.

The governor spent Thursday in Albany, according to her office, where lawmakers were hurtling toward the final hours of the year’s legislativ­e session.

Williams, a Brooklyn progressiv­e, painted the governor as being out of touch in her response to the racist Buffalo massacre last month.

And he suggested that she had focused on her deal to spend $600 million for a new Bills stadium when she should have prioritize­d highcrime neighborho­ods.

“We asked for a billion dollars to be put in the budget for gun violence prevention and youth services, victim services,” Williams said in the debate at NY1’s Chelsea Market Studios in Manhattan. “We didn’t get that. We got a billion dollars for a Buffalo stadium.”

Suozzi, a centrist from Long

Island, quickly chimed in, “Jumaane’s right.”

Williams and Suozzi are targeting Hochul from opposite sides on many issues, including crime. Williams emphasizes community-level solutions to crime; Suozzi wants to target bail reform,

But the difference­s between the two were mostly eclipsed by comity on the debate stage.

Both touted their support of robust abortion protection­s. Both hammered Hochul for soaring violent crime rates.

Both expressed opposition to the “defund the police” slogan.

Given the chance to question each other, Williams asked Suozzi how he maintained an F rating from the

National Rifle Associatio­n. (Hochul was once endorsed by the NRA, but has moved to the left on guns).

Suozzi, in turn, asked Williams how Hochul has done as governor.

Williams laughed, and tied Hochul to former Gov. Andrew Cuomo, whose resignatio­n last month vaulted her from lieutenant governor to governor. He described failures of “Cuomo-Hochul leadership,” tying the two.

Disagreeme­nts between Williams and Suozzi did emerge. They diverged, for example, on increasing the number of safe-injection sites (Williams supported, Suozzi did not), and on their music tastes. (Williams vouched for hip-hop, Suozzi for oldies).

In an Emerson College opinion poll of the race conducted last month, Hochul led Suozzi by 33 percentage points, and Williams by 38. Twenty-two percent of voters said they were undecided.

She is hardly the first New York politician to seek to stay above the fray as an overwhelmi­ng favorite. Cuomo was famously debate-averse.

Hohul has been comparativ­ely open to debates. She has agreed to participat­e in a pair in the primary, including a TV showdown two days before early voting starts.

Jen Goodman, a spokeswoma­n for Hochul, said the governor “declined to participat­e in tonight’s debate to focus on the end of the legislativ­e session in Albany.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States