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Andrew Cuomo: The rise and the reckoning

It’s like a slow-motion car crash where the unthinkable becomes the inevitable. Welcome to the saga of New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, scion of street-seasoned champion Mario Cuomo, a Democratic icon long known for ground-breaking achievements and heart-moving prose. Instead of following his dad’s rise to the top, Andrew is now hurtling for a reckoning he can neither control nor stop. 

This is no random accident — but rather one long in the making, with devastating collateral impact. 

As the allegations against Cuomo escalate, we’re left feeling as if this is not accidental misfortune but personal and purposeful.

The core allegations:

Threatening. Deceiving. Harassing. Bullying. This is a Greek tragedy with an Italian surname. So where did this all come from? How could COVID’s “briefer in chief,” one of the “sexiest men” alive, and three-term governor, fall so quickly — and so publicly?

The answers may lie as much in a centuries-old classic about war, as they do the Cuomo family picture album.

Start with family. Raised in a gritty middle class Italian family who owned a small neighborhood grocery store, Andrew Cuomo’s ambition soared in parallel to his father’s. In short order, Andrew became Mario Cuomo’s chief enforcer, and became obsessed with settling scores. It required hurting others’ feelings as much as soothing them.

Yet for someone once described as a misanthrope (one who dislikes humankind), Cuomo never allowed the burden of regret to slow him down. Instead, he was empowered by it, convinced that winning always necessitates some level of collateral damage.

In this regard, New York’s three-term Governor is a living embodiment of Sun Tzu’s 5th Century B.C. paean to leadership, “The Art of War,”  making the allegations against him fully predictable. As one who liked to “crunch his enemies,” Cuomo has taken nearly every Tzu lesson to heart by ignoring his own. Here are four:

So can Andrew Cuomo survive all this, his past, his present, and invariably his future? Can a leader driven to win at all costs, who’s creating enemies at a clip eclipsing Richard Nixon, who has a “prove it if you can” attitude about the allegations — a la Gary Hart — weather this storm to ascend again, win again, lead again?

Given the lives he’s ruined and the damage he’s caused, why would anyone be rooting for that?

Adam Goodman, a national Republican media strategist and columnist, is the first Edward R. Murrow senior fellow at Tufts University’s Fletcher School. Follow him on Twitter @adamgoodman3