Andrew Cuomo’s bid to becomeNew York City’s mayor received a surprising boost on Friday when one of his rivals, Queens state senator Jessica Ramos, endorsed the former governor after having previously questioned his mental acuity and describing him as a bully with a record of sexual misconduct allegations.
Ramos punctuated her stunning U-turn with a surprise appearance at a campaign rally in Manhattan, where she hugged Cuomo and said she believed he was “the one best positioned right now to protect this city”.
“We need someone in City Hall who knows how to hold the line and deliver under pressure,” Ramos said in astatementshared on Cuomo’s campaign website, justweeks after she claimedhis “mental acuity is in decline”.
Ramos also said she had worked with Cuomo “to raise wages, protect immigrant workers, and pass major labor reforms”, and she added that she believed he could “go toe-to-toe” with the Donald Trump administration “when it counts”.
The endorsement from Ramos comes days after the first the New York City Democratic mayoralprimary debate, during which Cuomo faced attacks over his gubernatorial administration’s handling ofnursing home deathsduring the Covid-19 pandemic andsexual harassment allegationsagainst him that prompted his resignation.
In 2021, Ramos was one of the first Democratic lawmakers to call for Cuomo to resign over those sexual harassment allegations, which he has denied.An investigationby the state attorney general found he sexually harassed nearly a dozen women – most of whom worked for him – and also retaliated after some made complaints.
Ramos in March accused Cuomo’s mayoral run of being a “vanity comeback tour”. She said Cuomo “brings nothing to this race but baggage”.
“Hard pass on Andrew,” shewrote.Also in March, she called Cuomo “a corrupt bully with a record of alleged sexual misconduct”.
As recently as Wednesday, Ramos said she wished she “lived in a city where voters cared about women getting harassed.
“We talk about it all the time, but I’m not running about Andrew Cuomo’s record,” shetoldPolitico. “I’m running on my own record.”
Ramos’s allies on the progressive left greeted her endorsement of Cuomo with dismay – including several organizations that had backed her mayoral candidacy. The Working Families party said it was “sad and disappointed” by Ramos’s “desperate” decision.
TheNew YorkCity council member Chi Ossé said he was “hurt” by Ramos’s announcement.
“I’ve always respected her for the work she’s done for our city and state,” Osséwroteon X. “To see her throw of all her values away and betray the [New Yorkers] she’s been fighting for is heartbreaking and disgusting.”
The actor Cynthia Nixon, who ran and lost to Cuomo in the 2018 Democratic primary,saidon X that she was “choosing to remember the Jessica Ramos” who “supported the women who were sexually harassed, remembered the people Cuomo sent to die in nursing homes [and] always called out Cuomo’s corruption, mismanagement [and] lies”.
“I’ll miss that Ramos,” Nixon added. “Where did she go?”
Ramos said her decision to back Cuomo is what is known as a cross-endorsement, for she does not intend to drop out of the race.
Cuomo, meanwhile, told reporters on Friday he would not be returning the favor and endorsing Ramos.
However, in a statement, Cuomo said: “Senator Ramos is a fighter for working New Yorkers, and we are all better off for her leadership.
“Senator Ramos and I are both … tough and protective of our families and neighbors, and by extension we are protective of all New Yorkers.”
The closely watched mayoral race in heavily Democratic New York City has largely settled into a two-way fight between Cuomo, the current frontrunner, and the democratic socialist candidate Zohran Mamdani.
The incumbentEric Adamsis running as an independent.
On Thursday, Mamdani received the prominent endorsement of US congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, whotoldNew York Times that Mamdani “demonstrated a real ability on the ground to put together a coalition of working-class New Yorkers that is strongest to lead the pack”.
Ocasio-Cortez ranked five candidates – but left Ramos off her slate.