New York Post

Staffers: It is ‘torture’

‘Want him gone, too’

- By SARA DORN

Disillusio­ned staffers are abandoning embattled Gov. Cuomo, sources have told The Post.

“I hear that most people aren’t even coming into work, and the offices at the Capitol are empty,” said one well-placed insider.

“He’ll fight and fight and fight, but the staffers I’ve talked to are ready for him to hang up the gloves. Everyone feels like there is an inevitable conclusion — I mean at some point will [President] Biden call on him to step down? They [staffers] just want this torture to stop.”

Rebellion in the ranks deepened as Cuomo on Friday refused to step aside and blamed “cancel culture” for his fall from grace.

“I feel a level of rage toward this fake tough guy,” seethed a second source, an ex-aide. “The guy thinks he’s the toughest, the hardest working, he’s the smartest. The truth is, he’s anything but. He’s the weakest, he’s the dumbest and he’s the most shallow of them all. He is genuinely a very small man who pretends to be big.”

The former high-ranking staffer said many employees, increasing­ly worried that their careers are in jeopardy, are choosing to work remotely or at vaccine sites instead of coming in to the executive office.

“Sometimes you have an ability to claim to be out in the field,” said the ex-aide, who shared a text sent from a current staffer Friday morning that read, “He has to resign now right? (I say for the 15th time this week).”

Both sources said virtually all staffers they’ve spoken to believe his seven accusers and are eager for the governor to step aside.

“There’s a deep sense within the governor’s staff that he is guilty of everything, and that is weighing on people,” the ex-aide said. “He had that conversati­on with Charlotte Bennett. Everyone knows that.”

Bennett, 25, a former junior staffer, claimed Cuomo, 63, was grooming her to sleep with him.

Staffers still at work are being met with vitriol.

“The nature of the calls in Cuomo world have changed. The leverage has completely shifted. It always felt like, when Cuomo’s people call, you must figure out how you are going to try to meet the demand,” the former aide said. “Now, they call, and there’s almost an eagerness to say, ‘F--k you,’ without hesitation.”

At least five aides have announced their resignatio­ns in the past two weeks.

Cuomo spokespers­on Rich Azzopardi on Saturday called the claims of a staff exodus “greatly exaggerate­d.”

TWO decades ago, as Bill Clinton’s time in the White House was coming to a messy finish, a member of Clinton’s Cabinet told me the soon-to-be former president was in for a rude awakening.

“There’s no bigger step down than the one out of the Oval Office,” I recall the official saying. “It’s going to be painful.”

That official was Andrew Cuomo, then the secretary of Housing and Urban Developmen­t and now a man facing his own messy exit from power. True, it’s the governor’s mansion in Albany, not the White House, but Cuomo’s fall from grace is as dramatic as they come.

Six weeks ago he was riding high, feted by the media and Hollywood, headed for a fourth term and perhaps the presidency. Then twin scandals began to emerge, and now he is surrounded by serious accusation­s that appear insurmount­able.

And there is no respite in sight. Even if he were to leave office today, the federal investigat­ion into the nursing-home coverup and the state attorney general’s probe into the sexual-harassment allegation­s will continue.

Cuomo’s single accomplish­ment of late has been to unite both parties against him, with fellow Democrats and Republican­s in nearly equal numbers calling for him to resign or be impeached. The wave reached a peak Friday when New York’s senators, Chuck Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand, called for him to step down.

The media, much of which lavished praise on him not long ago, is similarly uniform now, with not a single major outlet defending Cuomo.

Among their sordid revelation­s, the scandals show the governor to be a one-trick pony, as his defense against the assault claims mirrors his defense against the 15,000 nursing-home deaths. In both, presented with evidence of his own mistakes and misconduct, he attacks, blaming everyone else.

On the nursing homes, it was The Post, Donald Trump, Fox News and even God. On the sexual allegation­s, the women might have “many motivation­s” and he won’t be ousted by “cancel culture.”

As for the resignatio­n calls by Democratic House members, it’s because he’s not a member of the “political club.” That’s a tough sell coming from a three-term governor who is the son of a three-term governor.

The broad assumption that he’s toast is restrained only by questions of when he leaves and whether it will be with a whimper or a bang. The difference doesn’t matter as much as he thinks.

His refusal to resign loses resonance as each new allegation surfaces. The exposure of his megalomani­a robs him of any sympathy and fewer and fewer people fear him.

Yet the heroes of the unfolding spectacle are not the politician­s calling for his ouster or the scribes and talking heads recounting the battle from the sidelines.

The honor goes to the 10 people in the arena who courageous­ly broke from the cult of fear that Cuomo created. The 10 are all women, which renders a special comeuppanc­e.

The first three women turned the nursing-home issue into a cause — and maybe a criminal case. The initial spark came from Arlene Mullin, a retired Long Island educator whose mother died from the coronaviru­s in a nursing home in early April.

After hearing a reference to an order mandating that nursing homes accept COVID patients being discharged from hospitals, Mullin found the directive on a state Web site and wrote to me about it. I had never heard of the order, nor had anybody at The Post, so Albany reporter Bernadette Hogan asked Cuomo about it at his briefing last April 20th.

He denied knowing anything about it, which I believe was a lie. The next day’s paper nonetheles­s reported the apparent tragic results of the order and how it made no sense, given that the virus had killed so many elderly in Europe and elsewhere. Soon, other families and nursing-home operators described the carnage the order was causing in New York facilities.

Still, the issue might have faded had an unspeakabl­e tragedy not brought a second woman into the battle. Janice Dean, the Fox meteorolog­ist who lost both in-laws to COVID in nursing homes, began expressing her outrage at Cuomo’s heartlessn­ess and refusal to accept responsibi­lity. Tentative at first, Dean quickly became a forceful presence among grieving families despite being insulted by Cuomo’s office.

Finally, the efforts bore fruit when state AG Letitia James reported on Jan. 28th that Cuomo had undercount­ed nursing-home deaths by more than 50 percent. Two weeks later, The Post obtained a recorded phone call when Cuomo aide Melissa DeRosa confessed to legislator­s the governor’s team had withheld the data because a federal inquiry could use the numbers “against us.”

Thanks to James and a judge’s order in a Freedom of Informatio­n lawsuit, the 8,700 nursing-home deaths the state had reported suddenly grew to more than 15,000.

Meanwhile, federal prosecutor­s in Brooklyn opened a case and I’m told FBI agents “are very active,” with a focus on DeRosa’s admission and the phony July report where Cuomo’s team deleted the real number of deaths.

The other women who deserve recognitio­n are the seven who alleged Cuomo’s sexual misconduct. Ironically, his reputation for revenge gives their accusation­s extra credibilit­y.

Because she went first, Lindsey Boylan exhibited remarkable courage. The former Cuomo aide hinted in December he had harassed her, and was met with leaks of her personnel file to reporters.

One of the other accusers who came forward later, Ana Liss, said she thought at the time that Boylan was brave because “they’re going to crush you like a bug.”

Instead of shrinking, Boylan unloaded her story in an expose published online on Feb. 24. It was a shocking descriptio­n of Cuomo pursuing and touching her repeatedly, and planting an unwanted kiss on her lips. She included e-mails showing his aides played along with his “crush” on her, even though she was married with a child.

Soon, former aide Charlotte Bennett followed with her disturbing tale, claiming Cuomo “groomed her” and propositio­ned her for sex during a meeting in his office. She, too, insisted that aides knew what the governor was doing and helped him.

One by one, five more women soon made allegation­s against Cuomo. Although the details vary, Karen Hinton, Anna Ruch, Liss, an unidentifi­ed woman and Jessica Bakeman, at great risk to their own reputation­s, each described Cuomo behaving in ways that are outrageous and, in some cases, perhaps illegal.

Other men and women who worked with Cuomo are now coming forward to depict a culture that resembled a harem, where young women were hired only for their looks, ordered to dress fashionabl­y and wear high heels while their work was ignored or demeaned. Those who accepted Cuomo’s flirtation­s and touching reportedly got assigned desks closer to his offices in Manhattan and Albany.

As the cases increase and the outrage mounts, the only surprise now is that Cuomo still thinks he can hang on to power. Earth to him: Tick tock, tick tock.

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 ??  ?? BRAVE: Onetime Cuomo aide Lindsey Boylan (from left), Fox meteorolog­ist Janice Dean and retired educator Arlene Mullin are among the brave women whose fight for truth has brought Gov. Cuomo to a breaking point.
BRAVE: Onetime Cuomo aide Lindsey Boylan (from left), Fox meteorolog­ist Janice Dean and retired educator Arlene Mullin are among the brave women whose fight for truth has brought Gov. Cuomo to a breaking point.
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