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Cuomo Campaign Deflects Blame For Mailer Claiming Cynthia Nixon Is Anti-Semitic; To Face Off in NY Primary on Thursday


New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s campaign says a campaign worker created a mailer questioning Cynthia Nixon’s support for Jewish people.

The widely condemned flier came out days before Thursday’s Democratic primary matchup between Cuomo and Nixon, a longtime liberal activist and former actress.

It says Nixon opposes Jewish school funding, supports boycotts of Israel and is “silent on the rise of anti-Semitism.” YWN has previously reported on Nixon’s ties to the anti-Israel, pro-BDS movement.

Nixon, who is raising her two children Jewish, slammed the mailing in a statement on Sunday, calling it “an attack not only on my children and my character, but on all New Yorkers.” She’s asked Cuomo to apologize for what she calls “sleazy politics.”

Nixon is not Jewish, but is raising two children from her previous relationship with a Jewish man in the Jewish faith. She attends a Reform synagogue in Manhattan.

Nixon has condemned “the rising hate crimes we are seeing against Muslims, Jews and many other communities” as recently as late August.

The New York State Democratic Committee, which is effectively controlled by the two-term governor, funded the mailer after Cuomo contributed $2.5 million.

Cuomo has denied knowing about the mailer. His campaign spokeswoman said Tuesday that someone working on “constituent outreach” created the mailer. She said changes would be made to prevent similar incidents in the future.

A Siena College survey released Monday found Cuomo has an overwhelming 63-22 percentage point lead over Nixon. Earlier polls had given Cuomo a more than 30 percentage point lead. But he has spent heavily through the race’s final weeks, including an outlay of more than $8 million during a three-week stretch in August, when Nixon’s campaign, which has not aired a single television ad, spent only about $450,000.

Nixon says there’s a movement of left-leaning voters tired of piecemeal progress on crumbling subways, political corruption and income inequality. She points to recent upset primary wins in New York, Florida and Massachusetts as proof that pundits can get it wrong, and that she has a shot at leading the nation’s fourth-largest state.

“We need fundamental change. That has come from a groundswell from the people,” Nixon  said on public radio Tuesday. “Don’t believe the polls, don’t believe the hype. We have a chance to strike a blow for real progressives.”

Cuomo, for one, takes the threat seriously. Four years ago he largely ignored primary challenger Zephyr Teachout, refusing even to shake her hand, and lost a third of the vote. This year he’s spent millions on ads, marshalled key endorsements and, intentionally or not, moved to the left on issues such as legalizing marijuana, banning plastic bags, returning voting rights to former inmates and addressing conditions in New York City public housing.

His campaign has dismissed Nixon as a dilettante while Cuomo has tried to make the race about President Donald Trump.

“I am the most aggressive governor in the United States of America in taking him on,” he said in a campaign speech Monday in Syracuse that didn’t include one mention of Nixon’s name. “This Thursday the 13th, we’re going to make it an unlucky day for Donald Trump… let’s fight back and let’s show him that his nonsense doesn’t sell here.”

The winner of the primary will face Republican Dutchess County Executive Marc Molinaro, Green Party candidate Howie Hawkins and former Syracuse Mayor Stephanie Miner, an independent, in the November general election.

Throughout the campaign, Nixon has hammered Cuomo for not investing enough in New York City’s beleaguered transit system, for not addressing political corruption and for failing to deliver on economic development promises upstate.

Yet in the final weeks of the campaign Cuomo himself turned out to be one of his campaign’s biggest liabilities.

He was mocked for saying America “was never that great” during remarks criticizing Trump’s “Make America Great Again” slogan.

He invited Hillary Clinton to a celebratory opening of the final span of the new Gov. Mario M. Cuomo Bridge over the Hudson — only to keep the bridge closed after engineers warned that pieces from the largely disassembled Tappan Zee Bridge could hit the new bridge.

Nixon points to socialist Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s primary victory over longtime Congressman Joe Crowley as evidence that underdog challengers can defy the odds. But Siena pollster Steven Greenberg said surveys show Cuomo remains the pick of a majority of female voters, voters under 35 and voters who describe themselves as liberal.

Cuomo “now seems poised to overwhelm Nixon,” Greenberg said.

Thursday’s primary also features a four-way Democratic contest for attorney general, which is being closely watched because of the office’s ability to investigate Trump and his business and charity dealings. New York City Public Advocate Tish James, who has Cuomo’s support, faces Congressman Sean Patrick Maloney, attorney Leecia Eve and Teachout, a Fordham University law professor who has Nixon’s endorsement. James was the early front runner but Monday’s Siena poll suggests she’s now nearly neck-and-neck with Maloney and Teachout.

Whoever wins that race would be heavily favored against Republican Keith Wofford in November.

Several competitive primaries for the state Legislature will also be decided, including some high-profile contests featuring challengers hoping to retire state senators who were former members in the Independent Democratic Conference, a now defunct faction that broke with mainline Democrats to support GOP control of the chamber.

(YWN / AP)



2 Responses

  1. The fact that he said America was never great is enough of a reason to vote for Nixon to kick Cuomo out of the primary. But this is new York and most of the voters aren’t normal and/or hate America

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