I think the groundwork is being laid out for the plug to be pulled on ***** and Gov Cuomo to be anointed as the ********ic nominee for President. Perhaps the latest *** assault scandal will be the catalyst for removing Joe.
While Americans are stuck at home, the ******** dominating the airwaves to counter President Donald *****’s messaging about the coronavirus is not the one seeking to replace him in the Oval Office -- it’s New York Governor Andrew Cuomo.
And that’s causing some daydreaming for political junkies with time on their hands.
Joe *****, the presumptive ********ic nominee, is also holding daily briefings that are scoring high marks for empathy, sound advice about physical and mental health, and for offering a solid plan about what he would do if he were not a private citizen waiting out the virus at his home in Delaware.
Amid a global pandemic, Cuomo’s near-daily briefings about New York’s response to Covid-19 have become the ********ic counterpoint to *****’s appearances that most Americans see -- and unlike *****, he’s able to actually put his plans into action.
It’s created a moment in the spotlight for a politician who ruled out running for president in November 2018, and who’s endorsed *****.
Cuomo was U.S. housing secretary in the Clinton administration and is the oldest son of beloved ********ic New York Governor Mario Cuomo, who dallied with running for president in the 1980s and 1990s. As if that wasn’t enough of a ********ic political dynasty, Cuomo, 62, was once married to a Kennedy.
Trending on Twitter
The hashtag #PresidentCuomo trended on Twitter last week. Musings about Cuomo as a wild-card nominee have come from everywhere on the left, including New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd, MSNBC host Rachel Maddow, who called him “president of the coronavirus response,?and a writer at the feminist website Jezebel, Rebecca Fishbein, who headlined her piece, “Help, I think I’m in love with Andrew Cuomo????She wrote another piece after Cuomo called to thank her.
Cuomo has also softened his public image by ribbing his brother, CNN anchor Chris Cuomo, during recent interviews.
In what seemed like a metaphor for the times, cable news networks last week even skipped a speech by ***** and aired one of Cuomo’s briefings instead. ***** still ended up with a few million views of his briefing on his website over several days.
Jim Larocca, a longtime political player in New York who worked with the younger Cuomo when Mario Cuomo was governor, recently wrote a column in the Long Island newspaper Newsday calling for ********s to swap him for *****.
‘Measure of Passion?br />
Cuomo has provided a “stark contrast?to ***** with his response to the coronavirus pandemic -- something ***** hasn’t yet accomplished, Larocca said.
“The governor is displaying a real measure of passion about the subject, compassion for the victims, and humanity about the impacts,?he said. “The contrast with the president’s behavior could not be more pronounced.?/i>
While Americans are stuck at home, the ******** dominating the airwaves to counter President Donald *****’s messaging about the coronavirus is not the one seeking to replace him in the Oval Office -- it’s New York Governor Andrew Cuomo.
And that’s causing some daydreaming for political junkies with time on their hands.
Joe *****, the presumptive ********ic nominee, is also holding daily briefings that are scoring high marks for empathy, sound advice about physical and mental health, and for offering a solid plan about what he would do if he were not a private citizen waiting out the virus at his home in Delaware.
Amid a global pandemic, Cuomo’s near-daily briefings about New York’s response to Covid-19 have become the ********ic counterpoint to *****’s appearances that most Americans see -- and unlike *****, he’s able to actually put his plans into action.
It’s created a moment in the spotlight for a politician who ruled out running for president in November 2018, and who’s endorsed *****.
Cuomo was U.S. housing secretary in the Clinton administration and is the oldest son of beloved ********ic New York Governor Mario Cuomo, who dallied with running for president in the 1980s and 1990s. As if that wasn’t enough of a ********ic political dynasty, Cuomo, 62, was once married to a Kennedy.
Trending on Twitter
The hashtag #PresidentCuomo trended on Twitter last week. Musings about Cuomo as a wild-card nominee have come from everywhere on the left, including New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd, MSNBC host Rachel Maddow, who called him “president of the coronavirus response,?and a writer at the feminist website Jezebel, Rebecca Fishbein, who headlined her piece, “Help, I think I’m in love with Andrew Cuomo????She wrote another piece after Cuomo called to thank her.
Cuomo has also softened his public image by ribbing his brother, CNN anchor Chris Cuomo, during recent interviews.
In what seemed like a metaphor for the times, cable news networks last week even skipped a speech by ***** and aired one of Cuomo’s briefings instead. ***** still ended up with a few million views of his briefing on his website over several days.
Jim Larocca, a longtime political player in New York who worked with the younger Cuomo when Mario Cuomo was governor, recently wrote a column in the Long Island newspaper Newsday calling for ********s to swap him for *****.
‘Measure of Passion?br />
Cuomo has provided a “stark contrast?to ***** with his response to the coronavirus pandemic -- something ***** hasn’t yet accomplished, Larocca said.
“The governor is displaying a real measure of passion about the subject, compassion for the victims, and humanity about the impacts,?he said. “The contrast with the president’s behavior could not be more pronounced.?/i>
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