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Cuomo's Pledge To Clean Up Albany Unfulfilled

Mike Groll
/
AP

The criminal charges against nine of Governor Cuomo’s associates is the latest incident in a wave of corruption that has enveloped the State Capitol for the past several years.  When Cuomo first became governor in 2011, he promised to do something about it. So far, he has not been particularly successful.  

Cuomo, in his inaugural speech as governor, January 1, 2011, promised that corruption at the Capitol would end, and the public trust would be restored during his tenure in office.

“We have lost the trust,” Cuomo said. “And we’re not going to get it back until we’ve cleaned up Albany, and there’s real transparency.”

At the time, two former Senate leaders and a former state comptroller had been convicted of fraud and bribery, and a number of rank and file lawmakers had been convicted of corruption, and in one case, assaulting a girlfriend.

Since the governor’s term began, things have only gotten worse. Another Senate leader, Dean Skelos, and the former speaker of the Assembly, Sheldon Silver, were convicted of masterminding schemes defrauding taxpayers of millions of dollars, and sentenced to lengthy prison terms.  

U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara looked into Cuomo’s handling of a Moreland Act Commission that was supposed to investigate the legislature, and found no wrong doing in that instance. But the governor’s office had never been implicated, until the criminal complaint was issued against long time former Cuomo associates Joe Percoco, Todd Howe, SUNY Polytechnic leader Alain Kaloyeros and six others, by U.S. Attorney Bharara.

Cuomo, appearing at the Albright Knox Art Gallery in Buffalo one day after the charges were made public, addressed the issue head-on. He says the allegations against his “longtime friend” and former close aide Joe Percoco are “sad” and “truly disappointing.” He says Percoco started working for his father, the later former Governor Mario Cuomo, when Percoco was just 19.

“It’s the first time since we lost my father that I didn’t miss him being here yesterday because it would have broken his heart,” Cuomo said.

Cuomo says he will cooperate with the U.S. Attorney to make sure wrongdoers are punished severely.

The governor regarded the incident as the failings of a few individuals, not an indictment of the system. And he announced that upstate economic development projects headed by suspended SUNY Polytechnic head Kaloyeros will continue, under Empire State Development Chair Howard Zemsky, though he says Zemsky will take steps to ensure that there is no more corruption.

Long-time reform advocate Blair Horner, with the New York Public Interest Research Group, says it’s the system that needs to be fixed.

He says some of the governor top aides and allies viewed the governor’s economic development and energy policies “as a gold rush, where they were supposed to make themselves wealthy.”

Horner says more transparency about the bidding process would prevent a few insiders from gaming the process.

“It’s the culture of secrecy,” Horner said. “Basically the governor has an honor system with a very small number of top aides.”

Despite his pledge when he began as governor, Cuomo has not achieved any big changes in ethics reform. He set up a new ethics commission, which has been widely criticized as flawed and secretive. He has proposed public campaign financing several times, but has not been able to convince the legislature to pass it. Horner says it’s time for Cuomo to try again.

“It should move ethics to the governor’s number one priority for next year,” he said.

But the governor, with a stain now on his own administration, will be in a weakened position to seek any changes.

Karen has covered state government and politics for New York State Public Radio, a network of 10 New York and Connecticut stations, since 1990. She is also a regular contributor to the statewide public television program about New York State government, New York Now. She appears on the reporter’s roundtable segment, and interviews newsmakers.
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