Cynthia Nixon casts herself as latest Democratic insurgent in NY governor race
NEW YORK (Reuters) - In the final days of actress Cynthia Nixon’s insurgent campaign against incumbent New York State Governor Andrew Cuomo, she and her supporters have taken to repeating three names as if an incantation: Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Andrew Gillum and Ayanna Pressley.
Cynthia Nixon speaks during the Democratic gubernatorial primary debate with Cynthia Nixon at Hofstra University in Hempstead, New York August 29, 2018. J. Conrad Williams Jr./Pool via REUTERS
All three were candidates from the party’s emboldened left wing who seemed doomed in opinion polls before pulling off upset victories. Ocasio-Cortez, a Latina woman, and Pressley, a black woman, both defeated long-time incumbents of U.S. Congress seats in New York and Massachusetts; Gillum, a black man, won the open primary in Florida’s governor race.
Nixon, a first-time candidate without governing experience, is known for her years starring on HBO’s “Sex and the City,” set in New York. She is hoping to repeat the success of other less-heralded names in Thursday’s nominating contest against Cuomo, who is seeking a third term.
“People keep underestimating insurgent candidates, particularly first-time candidates,” said Nixon, who is running antagonistically to Cuomo’s left.
Nixon’s opposition mirrors those of others who argue Democrats nationwide have been far too cautious in embracing progressive proposals, wary of alienating more moderate voters.
Ocasio-Cortez’s victory in June’s nominating race over 10-term U.S. Representative Joe Crowley sent shockwaves through the Democratic Party. The Republican Party controls both the House of Representatives and the Senate and the Nov. 6 congressional elections will determine whether they keep their majorities.
FILE PHOTO: Governor Andrew M. Cuomo speaks at the Democratic gubernatorial primary debate with Cynthia Nixon at Hofstra University in Hempstead, New York August 29, 2018. Craig Ruttle/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo
Nominating contests are hard to poll, and while those other races went against incumbents, lower-profile candidates do not always succeed: Joe Manchin and Tom Carper, incumbent U.S. Democratic senators in West Virginia and Delaware, both defeated challengers from the left.
Nixon, 52, has lagged more than 30 points behind Cuomo in opinion polls, and he has outraised her nearly 50 times over, though far more of Nixon’s support comes from small donors.
She says Cuomo, 60, the son of a former governor, is out of touch with the party’s diverse ranks, and too aligned with conservative Republicans and moneyed corporations to be running one of the country’s most liberal states. Cuomo is one of 16 Democratic governors nationwide. There are 33 Republicans and one independent.
Cuomo has talked more about U.S. President Donald Trump on the campaign and his aides have derided Nixon as a talented but unqualified actress.
Cuomo has drawn the ire of some voters, angered that he for years allowed several Democratic members of the state’s senate to caucus with Republicans to give that party the advantage in the statehouse.
Cuomo counters that he has a record of passing same-sex marriage and paid family leave in New York state. The winner on Thursday faces Republican Marc Molinaro, the Dutchess County executive, in November.
Nixon’s distrust is shared by supporters such as Zakiyah Ansari, who stood by Nixon as she canvassed outside her childhood elementary school on Manhattan’s Upper West Side on Friday morning, hyping her up to passersby.
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“They don’t poll people like me,” said Ansari, a director at New York’s Alliance for Quality Education, a public school advocacy group where Nixon has been a spokeswoman for 17 years. “I don’t believe they call us, black and brown folks, poor people.”
Both Cuomo and newspaper editorial boards have criticized Nixon’s lack of management experience and cast her proposals, particularly her plan for state universal health care, as fantastically expensive. Nixon has been vague on funding beyond saying there are plenty of rich people in New York to tax.
At the school, Nixon stood on the sidewalk where parents and children were filing by, her right hand floating out before her, sometimes ignored by passersby but more often shaken as people recognized her face.
“‘Sex and the City’ got me through college!” Brittany James, a 34-year-old teacher, told Nixon. “You’ve got my vote.”
Shabd Simon-Alexander, a 37-year-old political organizer from Brooklyn, said Nixon had proved her worth as a political activist, and her platform could turn out new voters.
“All you need is people in the street, knocking on doors, going to vote,” Simon-Alexander said.
Nixon acknowledged her celebrity has drawn more attention than most first-time candidates, but, she said, “What gets them on board is the issues that I’m talking about.”
Later at a fundraiser in a dark, expensive bar in the Meatpacking District, a neighborhood used as a backdrop on “Sex and the City,” Nixon said: “We are taking the Democratic Party back,” the crowd cheering at just the mention of three names: Ocasio-Cortez, Gillum, Pressley. “It’s happening,” she said.
Reporting by Jonathan Allen; editing by David Geffen and Grant McCool
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