(2 pm. – promoted by ek hornbeck)
Cross-posted at Progressive Blue and several other places.
Actually the list of ways to kill off competition from Parties that represent the people is endless. When it comes to getting things done, taking out Third Parties has been one place where the two power parties has always preformed to the utmost of their ability and this is just one New York story.
Some states have evolved Fusion Parties in an attempt to get out from under the scrutiny of these power happy keepers of the plutocracy. One of these upstanding parties is The Working Families Party that has some presence in New York State. They stand for progressive values and labor union rights but this party has endorsed Andrew Cuomo. Reading Cuomo Vows Offensive Against Labor Unions it seems mysterious that the Working Families Party would place Cuomo on the ticket.
Andrew M. Cuomo will mount a presidential-style permanent political campaign to counter the well-financed labor unions he believes have bullied previous governors and lawmakers into making bad decisions. He will seek to transform the state’s weak business lobby into a more formidable ally, believing that corporate leaders in New York have virtually surrendered the field to big labor.
By following the explanation of Celeste Katz who writes The Daily Politic at the New York Daily News the mystery is solved. Did you know that the Working Families Party has to receive 50,000 votes in the governors race this year to be on the ticket in 2010? Not getting those 50,000 (and it was because of Andrew Cuomo) was how the Liberal Party lost a column in New York State and later withered and died.
The short version is that Andrew Cuomo used that 50,000 hurdle to blackmail the Working Families Party but below the fold I’ll follow the full explanation by Celeste Katz to understand how a union hating gubernatorial candidate got the endorsement of a party that is suppose to represent labor.
First there was this story in early June, Cuomo: WFP = NO.
State Attorney General and Democratic gubernatorial nominee Andrew Cuomo is staying far, far away from the controversial Working Families Party line this cycle, his campaign says:
“The Working Families Party Convention is this weekend and we will not be submitting Andrew Cuomo’s name for the nomination,” said Cuomo spokesman Phil Singer. “There are several open issues that need to be considered, including but not limited to an ongoing Federal investigation as well as policy and procedural issues. We will revisit the question in September at which time there will be more information available.”
A number of newspapers (including, in the nature of full disclosure, the Daily News, with whose editorial policy I don’t have any connection) have pressed Cuomo to reject the WFP line.
Cuomo has, however, accepted the nomination of the Independence Party, which has an operative who is also under investigation related to the fate of money spent on Mayor Bloomberg’s 2009 campaign. The operative, John Haggerty, now works for GOP gubernatorial hopeful Carl Paladino, who has defended the hire.
At the time while Cuomo was defending the Independence Party being investigated, the investigation that Cuomo used as an excuse was going quite smoothly. It would seem that the always vainglorious Cuomo had an ulterior motive where that requirement of 50,000 votes in the governor’s race would become his leverage.
To reduce some of Mr. Cuomo’s leverage over the party, allies of the party in the State Senate on Sunday introduced legislation that would allow the Working Families Party to retain its line if any of its endorsed candidates for statewide office, including for United States Senate or comptroller, won 50,000 votes. But the bill’s prospects in the Legislature are uncertain.
Mr. Cuomo has promised to rein in state spending and hold the line on new taxes if he is elected governor. But that agenda clashes with the aims of the Working Families Party, which has advocated for an energetic, expansive public sector and for middle-class property tax relief financed by higher taxes on the wealthiest New Yorkers.
As a result, Mr. Cuomo’s demands have set off a furious debate within the party coalition, which includes labor powerhouses like Service Employees International Union 1199, the health care workers union, and the United Federation of Teachers, which represents New York City teachers. Some of the party’s constituents believe Mr. Cuomo is intent on emasculating their coalition before he arrives in Albany, viewing it as a potential threat to his authority if he becomes governor.
Staying alive with 50,000 votes in any statewide race was a big problem for Cuomo’s “weak business lobby” and those “well-financed labor unions” must not be as strong as he claims because no laws were changed. As to the Daily News editorial, A mandate for Andrew: Cuomo must reject the Working Families Party ballot line.
The WFP – in cahoots with pliable state Senate Democrats – is trying to jam through a major change in election law that would serve no purpose other than saving its own skin.
Under longstanding statutes, the party’s survival depends on garnering 50,000 votes in the governor’s race. That seems unlikely if Democratic candidate Cuomo spurns its endorsement, as he must if he aspires to take office with a clear mandate for fiscally responsible change.
The WFP’s underhanded plan would substantially lower that bar, so winning 50,000 votes in any statewide race would preserve its ballot status – and its power to make or break politicians.
In other words if both major parties picked a union busting and worker hating candidate for gov then with the rule change the WFP could continue to exist without endorsing major party candidate in the governors race and then be allowed to maintain Party integrity, such a foreign word to the major parties. Wouldn’t an empty column or a minor party candidate in the governors race getting the WFP slot just suck for the status quo?
So Cuomo used his power of the 50,000 votes as an ultimatum. You could call Cuomo To WFP: Endorse Me AND Endorse My Agenda “politics as usual.” I’ll call not accepting the WFP endorsement until the WFP changes their platform what it is, blackmail from a power hungry egomaniac.
Andrew Cuomo delivered a blunt message to the Working Families Party this morning that he’s not willing to run on their line UNLESS they sign on to his reform agenda.
“I wouldn’t accept the nomination unless they support my platform,” Cuomo said during an appearance on Albany’s Talk 1300 radio station.
Then torn and tattered with the Working Families Party platform muddled through manipulation, the only choice that means survival is endorsing the union busting Democrat.
Apparently choosing between maintaining their resistance to Andrew Cuomo’s push for money-saving labor concessions and risking losing their ballot status, the Working Families Party has just announced they’ll be nominating Cuomo for governor.
Said a statement from Working Families Party Executive Director Dan Cantor:
“The Working Families Party is proud to announce it will be nominating Andrew Cuomo as our gubernatorial candidate. He’s clearly the right leader for New York. We will be fighting for his electoral victory in November and then fight for legislative passage of his New NY Agenda in January.
“While some of our members have differed in the past on some of the specific issues in the New NY Agenda, the Executive Committee unanimously takes this position because we understand and accept Andrew’s point that this is a pivotal moment in the history of this state, similar to the 1975 New York City fiscal crisis, when leaders in the labor, civic, business and political arena must put aside their individual agendas for the good of the entire state.
Now some “centrist” might wish to argue that Cuomo has a point. Some may feel that Unions have too much power and claim that union have been keeping pace with inflation but that’s far from true. While unions do raise money to protect jobs that pay less and less each year, to claim an alliance with a “weak business lobby” over “well-financed labor unions” is just plain oblivious.
As a matter of fact while our allies in the Democratic leadership and the media claims otherwise, while we have a president in the White House who feels the only problem in American education is union teachers, organized labor have been giving back on every contract for many years and are now counting down to the 40% excise tax on our “Cadillac Health Care.” Cuomo’s “presidential-style permanent political campaign to counter” labor unions sounds very much like a republican platform, until you look at the recent actions of Democrats. Does anyone remember the Employee Free Choice Act?
But even if you agree with Cuomo that unions are too powerful there is no excuse for blackmailing the Working Families Party into changing their platform and going against what they have stood for since 1998. A spokesman for Rick Lazio made a very valid point “Back-room political dealing in Albany is exactly what New Yorkers are tired of and what Andrew Cuomo has perfected over nearly 30 years in Albany.”
There is no excuse but there is a reason behind these back room politics. A Party with integrity represents a threat to Democrats. Voters could start asking “What if these candidates are not planning to capitulate on every promise once elected?” A Party that actually stands for something can’t be allowed by the Democratic machine so Andrew Cuomo took away what the Working Families Party stood for.
This does not make the WFP bad. They are just trying to survive as the only left leaning Party remaining on the ballot in New York and they were forced to choose a right leaning piece of garbage to survive. Now as New York workers have long known the choice is the Democrat that hates us or the Republican that hates us even more. This time to add insult to injury a vote for Andrew Cuomo is a vote for the survival of the Working Families Party.
All New Yorkers should support 50,000 in any statewide race being the hurdle that Third Parties must jump so good Parties don’t need to capitulate to bad people.
23 comments
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Do you remember Mario Cuomo’s 1984 Keynote Address?
Yes I remember what Democrats once sounded like and I also remember that electing the children of former leaders dosen’t always work out so good.
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All we need is 200,000 to vote WFP.
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Well all the candidates must live up to WFP values outside of Cuomo.
Who is Steve?
They have done great work supporting true liberal candidates for office and, with their support, many of those candidates are now in office. I have held union office and worked hard to protect jobs and benefits during negotiations with the city and lobbying in Albany for better working conditions.
I no longer support the Democratic Party either nationally or locally. They have swung too far to the right tobe representative of my values
As sad as it makes me, I will have to vote for Cuomo on the WFP line to help the party that represents my issues.