Ex-governor Andrew Cuomo in running for New York City mayor

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Mr Cuomo called for a permanent increase in police numbers and the construction of thousands of affordable homes.

Mr Andrew Cuomo had resigned in disgrace as New York governor after being accused of sexually harassing a number of women and misleading the public about Covid-19 deaths.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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NEW YORK - Mr Andrew Cuomo announced on March 1 that he is running to become mayor of New York City, more than three years after he resigned in disgrace as governor of New York after being accused of sexually harassing a number of women who worked for him and misleading the public about Covid-19 deaths.

Mr Cuomo, 67, denies the allegations. He is among the most well known of a number of candidates challenging embattled Mayor Eric Adams to become the Democratic Party’s nominee in the primary election in June.

“I know what needs to be done, and I know how to do it,” Mr Cuomo said in a video message, saying the city needs a bold plan to address crime, mental illness and other concerns, and calling for a permanent increase in police numbers and the construction of thousands of affordable homes.

Adams is seeking a second term, even as he faces calls to resign by senior Democrats after

he was indicted in 2024 on corruption charges

and then courted US President Donald Trump, a Republican, as he seeks to have the indictment dismissed.

Adams, 64, has pleaded not guilty.

Mr Cuomo entered politics in the 1980s, helping his father Mario Cuomo win three terms as New York governor, an office he himself won in 2010.

He also served in US President Bill Clinton’s Cabinet as housing secretary, and, before becoming governor, served a term as New York’s attorney-general.

As governor, Mr Cuomo signed Bills legalising same-sex marriage and recreational marijuana, and in New York City, he oversaw an expansion of Pennsylvania Station and an overhaul of LaGuardia Airport.

He was known for making daily public briefings in the early days of the Covid-19 pandemic, which killed thousands of New Yorkers, but his response to the crisis became the beginning of his political downfall.

In an audit, New York state’s comptroller found Mr Cuomo’s administration had pressured the Health Department to deliberately undercount Covid-19 deaths of state nursing home residents.

Mr Cuomo had signed a US$5.1 million (S$6.89 million) deal for a book about his leadership during the pandemic, but the state ethics board revoked its approval after saying Mr Cuomo wrongly used state employees and resources to write it.

He has said he did nothing wrong or unethical, and has sued the ethics board, which has sought the US$5.1 million from him, in litigation that continues.

In August 2021,

Mr Cuomo resigned

a week after New York Attorney-General Letitia James released the results of an investigation which concluded that he had sexually harassed 11 women.

He said he had done nothing wrong, but apologised to anyone he had made uncomfortable by what he described as clumsy attempts to be affectionate or funny. REUTERS

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