Cuomo refuses to resign even as the wreckage around him grows


AndrewCuomo Democrats NewYork SexualHarassment

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo is not the sort of person to resign just because he did horrible things and everybody now knows about it. He’s the sort of person who believes that he can bully his way through anything, whether it be pandemic scandals or harassment scandals. That means we’re all in for weeks of having to hear him attack anyone and everyone in an attempt to scurry out from an investigation that called 179 witnesses (!) as it documented years of sexual harassment from a man whose defense has centered around a claim that he’s just a hugging, groping sort of guy and it’s too bad that nearly a dozen different women couldn’t understand that reaching under a woman’s blouse to grope her breast is just something he does to “put people at ease.“

Cuomo is, as his most cynical critics presumed he would, attempting to dig in despite the New York legislature now moving swiftly to begin impeachment proceedings against him.

On Sunday, top Cuomo aide Melissa DeRosa resigned her post. The state attorney general’s report had identified DeRosa as a main player in the effort to discredit and retaliate against one of Cuomo’s accusers.

Also on Sunday, a CBS interview with the woman who last week filed a criminal complaint over Cuomo’s sexual assault made any possible Cuomo defense even more difficult. Cuomo cannot plausibly claim that the assault, which included groping the woman, meets any definition of appropriate behavior.

On Monday, Time’s Up Chairwoman Roberta Kaplan resigned from that organization after the investigation’s report identified her, too, as someone who worked to discredit one of Cuomo’s accusers.

There is little more to say about this. From President Joe Biden to most of New York’s top Democratic elected officials, demands that Cuomo resign have been immediate and near-unanimous. New York lawmakers are moving to close out their impeachment investigation within a month. Party and union leaders have abandoned him.

He should resign. Probably won’t, but should. The allegations against him are too detailed for him to claim that it was all a misunderstanding. If he could muster the barest minimum of grace, he might be able to keep his legacy from hemorrhaging into nothingness, but only if he were to leave before New York lawmakers boot him of their own accord.