What I remember most clearly about Cuomo from my own years in New York is his first debate against Lew Lehrman in 1982. Lehrman at the time ran the Rite-Aid chain that's still all over New York. He was a rich, sleek avatar of the then-ascendant Reaganite movement whom the Christian Science Monitor described thus:
In [campaign] ads, as well as in person, Lehrman comes across as an affable, straightforward, well-meaning individual who wants to use his wide experience as a businessman for the public good...
Lehrman esposes economic policies similiar to the proposals Ronald Reagan put forth in his 1980 presidential campaign...
But as much as Cuomo tries to link Lehrman with Reaganomics, analysts point to a concern by many New York State voters that some of the state's economic woes -- including some of the highest taxes in the nation -- can be directly traced to overspending by state Democrats over the last two years of the administration of Gov. Hugh Carey and his lieutenant governor, Mario Cuomo...He was also hot for bringing back the death penalty. Yeah, I know, he sounds like a nightmare, but you have to remember this kind of thing went over big with the yuppies and Reagan Democrats back then, and the race was close. When it came time to debate -- well, let Murray Rothbard, of all people, tell it:
Mario Cuomo, in contrast, proved to be a delightful candidate, a quintessential New Yorker: warm, fast, bright, and very funny. Even the fanatically pro-Lehrman New York Post admitted that Cuomo crushed Lehrman in their first and major TV debate -- a victory so blatant that the Cuomo forces actually worried about a sympathy backlash for Lehrman. In contrast, Lehrman came across as cold, serioso, monomaniacal.Rothbard recalls some of the zingers Cuomo pulled on Lehrman -- including taking note of the fancy watch the Republican was wearing. I recall Lehrman was also wearing red suspenders that night, presumably to telegraph to the folks that he was a Wall Street honcho-type who would free-market them unto glory. At one point, Rothbard reports, "when Lehrman argued that businesses are fleeing New York because of its taxes and regulations, Cuomo riposted: 'Rite-Aid [Lehrman's drug chain] came to New York, and did very well, Lew.'" I remember this got big applause, and thereafter Lehrman spent a lot of time with his hands on his hips, perhaps to push back his jacket and show off those red suspenders, or to dissipate the considerable heat Cuomo put on him.
Cuomo managed to squeak into office then, and continued to stand up for the old-fashioned lunch-bucket Democratic values that pretty much everyone else in his Party was abandoning for third-way, neoliberal bullshit. He wasn't perfect, but he was one of a very few prominent, powerful liberals in the 80s and 90s who hung tough and held the line against the rapid sell-out of the poor and middle-class to the rich. Look at Jacob Weisberg marveling in 1994, "Nor has Cuomo gotten into the spirit of deregulation... Nor has he tried to get rid of rent control..." Weisberg meant these as criticisms, but after decades of asset-stripping by armies of Lehrmans, I see them as badges of honor. Oh, here's more Weisberg '94:
Cuomo has also often indulged, as in a speech he gave at Harvard in 1992, in old-fashioned liberal cant. Talking about the culture of dependency, he said, was blaming the victim. Welfare, he insisted, was a small part of the federal budget. Reform, he said, was “not the solution.” He has excused the rise in single-parent families by calling it “nothing new.” This is truly inexcusable.Cuomo's POV was certainly passing out of favor, and Weisberg's into it; very shortly thereafter, Clinton and Gingrich would make pauper-punching a bi-partisan sport, and their heirs are still trying to make poor people's lives more miserable and peddling marriage-makes-you-rich hokum. I'd say Cuomo will be missed, but I think we've been missing him a long time already.
He's exactly the type of real progressive you need to get into the White House - unfortunately that won't happen as long as the current crop of Democratic Party leaders are in power.
ReplyDeleteCuomo managed to squeak into office then, and continued to stand up for
ReplyDeletethe old-fashioned lunch-bucket Democratic values that pretty much
everyone else in his Party was abandoning for third-way, neoliberal
bullshit
He was a guy who saw his parents bust their asses to make ends meet, a guy who worked as a kid to help them do so. It's just a shame that his children (looking at you, Andy!) lost their way somewhere between Albany and, well, Albany (looking at you, Andy!).
Addio, Zio Mario!
Tragically, he probably could have had an impact in the 90's. He probably wouldn't have embraced the mealy-mouthed "third way" bullshit that Clinton did.
ReplyDeleteSomewhere, in a better parallel universe, he served his two terms, his vice president Pat Leahy served two terms after him, and Carol Moseley Braun is now in her second term as PotUS.
In another better parallel universe, Cuomo went on to a stellar career in the major leagues.
I think Mario may have died from a broken heart. The only good thing to come of his passing will be that he won't have to live to see his opportunistic, condescending asshole of a son shit all over his legacy.
ReplyDeleteI remember Mario, and really liked him as governor and as one of the last great pragmatic liberals.
ReplyDeleteAnd I'm forced to wonder just WTF happened to his kid. Lil' Andy is a mean-spirited, divisive, coat-pocket Republican. He spoke in 2014 about what a handicap it was to enter politics as the child of a former governor and national political figure. That's a hell of a fuck-you to his father. It's also an astonishing public admission of general solipsism and cluelessness. And, finally, I wish Lil' Andy had been the son of a dry cleaner in Mechanicville. Maybe then he wouldn't have struggled so hard to become governor and instead would just be plaguing some town council in upstate New York.
We had the VCR going for the 1984 convention, although I don't remember why. Anyway, we watched Cuomo's speech twice because it was that good.
ReplyDeleteThis is my favorite Mario clip, from the Ken Burns STATUE OF LIBERTY doc. Timeless, and relevant.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_aWqdLFbo5o
Lil' Andy was born on first base and thinks he hit a triple.
ReplyDeleteLil Andy has a hardon for screwing teachers. He's basically a Wall Street puke in Democratic clothing.
ReplyDelete~
OK, you had me until Moseley Braun. Even as someone who gladly voted for her, I have to say that she didn't waste any time in pissing away the considerable goodwill that most of her supporters had for her by sticking up for Sani Abacha.
ReplyDeleteAh, that's beautiful.
ReplyDeleteserioso
ReplyDeleteHe any kin to that edroso feller?
Yeah. Now I know how the people of Howard Beach must feel about John Gotti Jr.
ReplyDeleteI think this picture should have given us a clue about just how different Andrew was from his father. (That's Andrew on the right).
I think he would have made a great Supreme Court justice, and it's a pity he declined, or so the story goes. We did get Ruth Bader Ginsburg, though, as a silver lining.
ReplyDeleteRiposa in pace Mario
ReplyDeleteRemind me how the fuck any state that elected Cuomo as governor three times could then get behind a sack of lukewarm calfshit like George Pataki. (Or should I say "possible 2016 presidential candidate George Pataki"... no, I should not.)
ReplyDeleteIt's almost like the Cuomos are trying to refute the usual notions of heredity...
ReplyDeleteGeorge "The Flying Governor" Pataki?
ReplyDeleteOne of the things that Pataki used to beat Cuomo was Cuomo's supposed "excessive" use of state police helicopters and aircraft. Once elected, Pataki proceeded to use those same assets at a far higher rate than Cuomo ever did.
And then there's the whole question of him extensive home renovations--something that was never answered quite clearly enough for my tastes.
Well, that and being 82, which can also be a factor.
ReplyDeleteWe're not made to last forever, and we're none of us headed towards some heaven beyond sunset. It ain't the father's fault that the son took up with the Clintons and has policies largely indistinguishable from NJ Fats.
Well, there's heredity, and there's the Rebellion of the Progeny, too. Lots of kids choose music guaranteed to piss off the Grups, others might pick politics...
ReplyDeletePugilistic Paupers coming to a county fair venue near you.
ReplyDeleteWhy punch paupers when you can have them punch themselves?
...
PInky. Ring.
ReplyDeleteGoomba.
ReplyDelete...
Bum fights. It's not a coincidence that the Bum Fights films appeared during the reign of Bush the Dumber. They were Republican policies made flesh and bloody.
ReplyDeleteI'm so despondent with Mario Cuomo's death, and the rise of his son to HIS job.
ReplyDeleteJust below that clip is a little scorsese family movie frim 1974 where he interviews his morher about how to make tomato sayce and his father about pucking up nickea on delancey street as a shabbes goy
ReplyDeleteEvidence that personality and behavior are not genetically inherited.
ReplyDeleteI don't really remember Cuomo's time as Governor; unfortunately I wasn't paying a lot of attention to politics back then. But it is interesting to look at the contrast between the remarks from Rothbard and Weisberg and realize just how far we fell into the GOP abyss in just ten years.. and THAT was twenty years AGO.
ReplyDeleteI don't keep up with 3rd world dictators, so I had to look him up. Jesus. Playing footsie with someone like that is right updown there with the Tealibani fucking around in Uganda, and pushing the anti-gay agenda among peoples they wouldn't let mow their lawn. "With Democrats like these..."
ReplyDeleteThat wacky Pataki
ReplyDeleteOT: Fuck your Happy New Year anyway
ReplyDeleteI think I'll spend the weekend watching her videos...
I thought "pucking up nickea" was pretty delightful. I had no idea you could hire a goy to do that. But, if you don't hold with that erev . . .
ReplyDeleteGee looks like momma had an affair - no physical resemblance at all. Maybe they brought the wrong baby home from the hospital.
ReplyDeleteHa ha ha — but after those eight years of Rove/Cheney catastrophe, don't put the hat on Hanoi George—who couldn't preside over the night shift at a stop-n-rob.
ReplyDeleteWhy is it that our best people, those who should have become president (i.e. Cuomo & Hart), didn't? Meanwhile their worst people, those who shouldn't get anywhere near the White House, did?
ReplyDeleteMay I offer Wanda Sykes as a substitute?
ReplyDeleteDon't forget three-term Senator Al D'Amato.
ReplyDeleteAndre the Giant?
ReplyDeleteThanks for cluing me in about that. How about Sheila Jackson-Lee?
ReplyDeleteAnd the whole damn street was covered with Swedish meatballs.
ReplyDeleteEd Rosso? ;)
ReplyDeleteStop it you guys. My typos are legendary, I tell you, legendary.
ReplyDeleteOh--those weren't, by any means their worst.
ReplyDeleteYou need to go to "settings" and scroll down to "James Joyce filter" and click "disable."
ReplyDeleteNot sure that Hart was "our best people". His big idea was to swing the Democratic Party to the right just after the 1984 election.
ReplyDelete"Here's a memo: "Magic Don't Real"!
ReplyDeleteThat's great.
If he's gotten the nomination in 92, he would have had a southerner like Gore or Graham on the ticket.
ReplyDeleteHonestly, I think Hart probably would have had a terrible scandal-plagued presidency. Cuomo would have been great, though.
ReplyDeleteI honestly don't know, and you are probably right, but after reading Matt Bai's All The Truth Is Out, I'm thinking that Hart might have been the better of the worser folks. Things might have been better. I wish I had a smarter brain and could spin out alternate universe stories.
ReplyDeleteYes. And thanks again, Roy, for every single word.
ReplyDeleteHad to look that up. Bumfights sounds like something out of a dystopian SF novel, or maybe Max Headroom. The name of the original production co? "Indecline". Fucking perfect, but not in the way they probably thought....
ReplyDeletePoint taken. But I beg for partial credit for including Cheney.
ReplyDeleteI know a guy who was on her staff for a while, and he said she was an unmitigated disaster. Coherence and focus were, apparently, not her strong suits.
ReplyDeleteHart was a car crash waiting to happen, and his policy outlook was a lot closer to Clinton's than anyone else's. I suspect the wingers and the press would have had even more fun chasing Hart's dick than they did chasing Clinton's.
ReplyDeleteHart would have beat Bush in '88 and without Bush there would have been no W.
ReplyDeleteI think Cuomo had a built-in problem, nationally. The last liberal New York governor to become President really upset the fatcats' applecart. By the end of the `20s, they thought they ran things, and FDR showed them that they didn't (he was still somewhat responsive to their needs, admittedly, but not exclusively so, which only angered them all the more). Cuomo came to national prominence at precisely the point in history when the fatcats were regaining control of government, with the Reagan administration's witting help, and I think they consciously sought to make "liberal New York governor" dogwhistle code for "FDR." Hell, the troglodyte holdovers from Goldwater's run pulled the same routine on a Republican "liberal" New York governor, Rockefeller, and it worked in 1976--they successfully drove him off the ticket.
ReplyDeleteAnd, by the late `80s, the effects of the Southern Strategy were really coming to the fore (it's remarkable that Obama is the first northerner to win the Presidency since Kennedy).
At the point in time that Cuomo was being noticed, it really was an uphill climb for any liberal from the Northeast, especially after the Dukakis loss in 1988. And we've been living with the consequences ever since.
I'm in love.
ReplyDeleteUnless Hart's campaign exploded in scandal, which was entirely likely.
ReplyDeleteTypos of epic proportions. Typos, the Greek god of orthography, has his own epic, indeed.
ReplyDeletePerhaps.
ReplyDeleteI'm not sure he would have stood up to Lee Atwater's withering negative campaign any better than Dukakis did, but I guess we'll never know.
ReplyDeleteI dunno... Pretty much anybody could have done better than Dukakis.
ReplyDeleteIt is a fascinating thing, idnit? So many butterfly wings fluttering in slightly different directions, and things wouldn't be half as fucked up as they've been for ... oh, who's counting?
ReplyDeleteIsn't somebody supposed to keeping track of this shit?
I wonder what Republicans would have tried to impeach President Cuomo for.
ReplyDeleteSign me up! Currency trading is the easy road to unspeakable wealth!
ReplyDeleteWe'd be hearing about Joshua N'Cuomo
ReplyDelete( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joshua_Nkomo )
Typos and Correctos, the twin gods of Autocorrect.
ReplyDeleteYou could end up like this fine young fellow.
ReplyDeleteI wonder if he sees his father's last campaign as a disastrous, embarrassing failure that he doesn't want to repeat.
ReplyDeleteOr maybe he's just an asshole.
Yeah, I think that's it.