BFF-20,21,22 Tense New York primary highlights Democrats’ national divide

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Tense New York primary highlights Democrats’ national divide

NEW YORK, Sept 1, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – She hasn’t yet taken off in the polls,
but as actress Cynthia Nixon seeks the Democratic nomination for governor of
New York, she has managed to push incumbent Andrew Cuomo to the left while
raising concerns among other establishment Democrats about the party’s rising
and restive progressive wing.

The 60-year-old Cuomo — whose father, the late Mario Cuomo, was himself a
respected governor — is the embodiment of an establishment Democrat and
remains strongly favored in the state’s September 13 primary election.

The most recent poll, published July 31 by Siena College, gave him a
lopsided 31-point lead over Nixon. Another survey, released July 18 by
Quinnipiac University, showed him with an even wider 36-point lead.

With a campaign budget exceeding $30 million, Cuomo can flood the airwaves
with ads extolling his record and positioning him as a last line of defense
against a president, Donald Trump, who took only one-third of the state’s
vote in 2016.

For her part, Nixon has refused to accept the big donations from wealthy
individuals, unions and corporations that Cuomo has raked in, relying instead
on small donors, an aggressive use of social media and an enthusiastic base
of supporters.

Still, the sometimes biting tone and personal attacks Cuomo lobbed at the
“Sex and the City” star during their lone televised debate Wednesday
suggested that the two-term governor does not think he is out of danger.

“Can you stop interrupting me?” an exasperated Cuomo snapped at one point,
prompting Nixon to shoot back, “Can you stop lying?”

The 52-year-old actress and activist has never held elected office, but is
clearly at ease before the public.

Cuomo had not taken part in a debate since 2006. The fact he agreed to a
televised faceoff against Nixon showed he “is sufficiently worried (and)…
did not want to take his opponent for granted,” said Robert Shapiro, a
political science professor at Columbia University in New York.

– As progressive as she is –

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“Her running has pushed him to the left politically,” Shapiro said. “He
needed to be on the stage with her to show that, on certain issues, he
compares in a sufficiently liberal way.”

Cuomo is now quick to describe himself as a “progressive leader,” citing
his work for the homeless, the environment and for a higher minimum wage.
Since Nixon announced her candidacy he has begun saying he is open to
legalizing recreational marijuana.

Nixon, an openly bisexual mother of three, has long been active in the
causes of public education and LGBTQ rights. She describes herself as a
“socialist.” She has denounced Democratic establishment figures as being
overly cozy with Wall Street bosses.

And she advocates for working-class people and minorities in areas as
diverse as housing, education, justice and transportation.

Her positions are largely in line with those of Bernie Sanders, the
radical Vermont politician who lost to Clinton in the 2016 Democratic
presidential primaries.

She is even closer to the stances of the young Alexandra Ocasio-Cortez,
who stunned the political world in late June when she won a New York primary
election against greatly favored Democratic heavyweight Joe Crowley.

Ocasio-Cortez’s victory galvanized the Democrats’ progressive wing, which
scored another victory on Tuesday in Florida. In a major upset, Democratic
primary voters there chose Andrew Gillum — a black progressive backed by
Sanders — to represent the party in the November election for governor.

Can Nixon similarly beat the odds to become the first woman to govern New
York’s 20 million people?

– A Democratic microcosm –

Shapiro and most other observers consider a Nixon victory unlikely but not
impossible.

“Her campaign should be taken seriously,” said Michael G. Miller,
assistant professor of political science at New York’s Barnard College.

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He said New York, a Democratic bastion, is something of a microcosm of the
national debate within the party over how to respond to the Trump phenomenon.

What makes New York different, he added, “is there is a greater chance for
a candidate like Nixon to win, compared to places like Midwestern states like
Ohio or Minnesota, where Democratic candidates have to walk the line on guns
or fiscal issues.”

Miller said the debate between centrists and progressives could benefit
the party.

But some Democratic strategists fear the party could be caught up in an
internecine tempest such as divided establishment Republicans from the
ultraconservative Tea Party movement in 2010.

Given the depth of opposition to Trump — a new high of 60 percent of
Americans disapprove of his job performance, according to a Washington Post-
ABC poll released Friday — “Democrats have a golden opportunity” to regain a
congressional majority in November, said Sam Abrams, a politics professor at
Sarah Lawrence College.

“But it means they have to stop fighting and have to start acting in a
governed, responsible way,” he added.

“When you have Democrats in complete disarray, as you had Wednesday night”
in the Cuomo/Nixon debate, “it opens the door to a GOP win.”

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