The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

N.Y. leaders need to grow up, shape up

- Alan Chartock Capitol Connection

With corruption charges against two of his closest friends, Cuomo needs to rethink his pals.

This past year was a very tough year but as the old saying goes, “That which does not kill us makes us stronger.” So I thought I’d take a look at some of the things that happened in the year just passed and diagnose what we may have learned. In state politics, Andrew Cuomo suffered an incredible reversal when two of his closest friends and another who he had touted as a hero were indicted for ripping off the system. One of them was his socalled “third brother,” Joe Percoco. Another, a former friend and coworker turned lobbyist, Todd Howe, actually took a plea and is cooperatin­g with the U.S. Attorney. In this case, the expectatio­n is that he is singing like a canary.

Everyone is waiting to see whether Percoco and Howe will implicate the governor if and when they actually go to trial. Quite often these things don’t get to trial because a trial would be politicall­y inconvenie­nt for powerful people like Cuomo so the accused plead guilty to something and make a deal for leniency with government prosecutor­s. Since Andrew Cuomo sees himself as a future presidenti­al candidate and has successful­ly weathered many other crises, it is in his interest that there are no trials. He saw what happened to New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie in the infamous Bridgegate trial. Christie ended up with polling numbers lower than a hound’s belly.

Cuomo’s problem is that the SUNY Poly genius, Alain Kaloyeros, who was not personally all that close to Cuomo, will be a hold out on a plea deal. It is doubtful that he has a bigger fish to throw in exchange for a more lenient sentence. Cuomo, of course, ran for office on a program of cleaning up Albany and it seems that far from cleaning up Albany, his closest compatriot­s turned out, according to the U.S. Attorney, to be crooks.

Diagnosis to fix the problem in the future:

Surround yourself with people who are so squeaky clean that they won’t steal. Among other things, make sure that they are not living above their means which is always a pretty good road map to temptation. Also, make sure they are smart -- these two clowns appeared to be loyal to the governor but were not all that top heavy in the grey matter department. Also, don’t set yourself up for a fall and a charge of hypocrisy by saying that you’ll do something that others have failed to do.

That leads us to the loggerhead­s that the legislatur­e and the governor found themselves at. Probably to wash the stench of his friends’ betrayal off of him, the governor, quite correctly, tried an all or nothing push to get the legislator­s to clean up their act. He offered them a deal, a pay raise for real ethics reform. The greedy legislatur­e said, “Nothing doing.” They turned down the pay raise rather than be forced to have to limit their outside income. In what looks like a fit of pique, the governor has announced that he would not deliver a State of the State address in the usual way. So, of course, he looks bad and so does the Legislatur­e,

Diagnosis and fix: First of all, “Be a grownup.” Up to now, Cuomo has settled for half an ethics loaf and tried to convince all of us that his fixes were real, sort of like “The Emperor’s New Clothes.” After a while that got cold and old. As for the legislatur­e, those foolish people just have to recognize how bad they look. After all, the United States Congress puts severe limits on their outside income. Now their reputation will be further diminished. Instead of having something on their grave stones to be proud of, they will look like the bums they are. Also, let those legislator­s who don’t do work on the outside pressure the big bosses to cut out their morally corrupt ways.

 ?? MIKE GROLL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this file photo, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, right, and Joseph Percoco, executive deputy secretary, stand at a news conference in Albany, N.Y. In 2016, Cuomo’s administra­tion was rocked by a federal investigat­ion into alleged extortion and bribery...
MIKE GROLL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this file photo, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, right, and Joseph Percoco, executive deputy secretary, stand at a news conference in Albany, N.Y. In 2016, Cuomo’s administra­tion was rocked by a federal investigat­ion into alleged extortion and bribery...
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