NEW YORKER: The Meaning of Andrew Cuomo’s Embarrassment (hint: it smells like Lieberman)
Zephyr Teachout didn't beat sitting New York Governor Andrew Cuomo for the Democratic nomination, but her strong showing without the benefits of any ads and against a rising star of the corrupt, corporate-owned wing of the Democratic Party may mean Cuomo will retire to K Street a lot sooner than he planned.
Hopefully, this is a sign that the entire corporate wing of the party's days are numbered.
We don't have a democracy if our only choices are a corporate party that sells itself with hate, ignorance, and fear or a corporate party that sells itself with bland platitudes and coasts on the goodwill generated by New Deal and Great Society Democrats.
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The strong showing by Teachout and Wu was a victory for progressive voters who warmed to their message about tackling rising inequality, political corruption, and corporate abuses. It was also a rejection of Cuomos economic philosophy, which led him to introduce a series of tax cuts for the rich, at the same time that he cut the state budgets for education and social services. Id be willing to wager that most Democrats who voted against Cuomo objected more to his policies than to his personality.
Teachout and Wus insurgent campaigns gave voice to this sentiment. Eschewing the etiquette of internal party discourse, Teachout accused Cuomo of governing as a Republican, acting as a shill for the big banks and other campaign contributors, and being part of a corrupt old boys club in Albany. Making full use of social media and appearances in more traditional media, she demonstrated that, even in this day and age, a candidate with a real message doesnt necessarily need the support of the party apparatus, or the financial backing of big donors, to have an impact.
Cuomo wasnt the only one to whom the rise of Teachout and Wu came as a surprise. Their insurgent campaigns also shocked what might be called the official progressive wing of the New York Democratic Party. The Working Families Party, an important player in liberal politics, had endorsed Cuomo. So had Mayor Bill de Blasio and Melissa Mark-Viverito, the City Council Speaker. Six days before the election, when it looked like Wu, a Columbia law professor (who has contributed articles to this site), had a chance of winning the race for lieutenant governor, de Blasio and Mark-Viverito both declared their backing for his opponent, Hochul.
Erich Bloodaxe BSN
(14,733 posts)I wonder what the finals would have been had they endorsed Teachout instead.
yurbud
(39,405 posts)any promises Cuomo made them will be forgotten as soon as they pass his lips or once he's re-elected at the most.
The WFP should do what they gotta do and unless an unequivocal progressive is running for the Democrats, there's no point in making "deals."
adirondacker
(2,921 posts)yurbud
(39,405 posts)You don't fix the part with gangrene you have to cut it off to save the rest of the body