Quantcast
Channel: Central NY News: Top News
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 44833

"Mad" candidate crashes governor's race

$
0
0

ALBANY (AP) — Rick Lazio, a former congressman, has the backing of just about every county Republican leader in his run to be New York’s next governor. He’s got the essential Conservative Party endorsement and already fended off two better-financed challengers at the Republican convention, one of whom was backed by the state chairman. So why is he looking over...

ALBANY (AP) — Rick Lazio, a former congressman, has the backing of just about every county Republican leader in his run to be New York’s next governor. He’s got the essential Conservative Party endorsement and already fended off two better-financed challengers at the Republican convention, one of whom was backed by the state chairman.

So why is he looking over his shoulder, when Democratic candidate Andrew Cuomo is already plenty to worry about in front of him?

Carl Paladino.

The unconventional and politically uncouth Buffalo millionaire last week forced a Republican primary in September through the difficult petition route. Now it’s Paladino who is flooding talk radio with ads, saying he’s “mad as hell.” He says what many New Yorkers think: That the only promises politicians keep are those to special interests.

In a year in which all candidates want to look as mad as hell, it’s Paladino who is firing up the rhetoric and making the other comments seem tepid by comparison.

Last week, while Lazio tried to force Cuomo, the attorney general, to investigate how a $100 million mosque planned for a couple blocks from ground zero will be funded and Cuomo defended freedom of religion, Paladino said: “It’s no different than Japan asking to build a memorial to kamikaze pilots next to the USS Arizona in Pearl Harbor.”

When viewed through the lens of traditional politics, Paladino shouldn’t stand a chance to get the Republican nomination. He’s not as experienced or polished as Lazio. The real estate developer has no experience in government or politics or in a major state campaign like Lazio, who ran unsuccessfully for the U.S. Senate seat won by Hillary Rodham Clinton in 2000. Even the $10 million Paladino pledged to use from his own fortune isn’t much in a New York governor’s race, although Paladino is close to billionaire B. Thomas Golisano, who spends freely on campaigns and likes to back mavericks.

But Paladino might have timing on his side. An electorate angry at politics as usual blames politicians for the long recession. New York taxes are higher than ever while deficits are deeper. Unemployment is either a looming fear or devastating reality. Meanwhile, Albany’s powerful special interests fought off layoffs and deep funding cuts.

A Siena College poll this month found Lazio remained the Republicans’ favorite, 40 percent to 20 percent, but 40 percent of Republican voters were undecided. That survey was done before Paladino forced a primary with his petition of more than 25,000 Republican voters statewide. A primary will likely draw more conservative Republicans with a drum beat by the fed-up members of the tea party movement, each of whom are Paladino’s strongest constituencies.

Yet former Rep. Sherwood Boehlert, a moderate New York Republican who served 24 years in Congress representing Central New York, sees electoral weaknesses in what Paladino considers his strengths.

“I think there’s a sort of inherent resentment of the big-bucks guy,” Boehlert said in an interview. “Rick Lazio has the advantage of having been inside, but on the outside for many years. He knows how the inside works. ... Most people figure this is a place for pros. We don’t want a consummate insider, but we want someone who knows how it works.”
———


Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 44833

Trending Articles



<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>