ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) - A top county official from New York City’s northern suburbs announced Wednesday that he will run for governor, launching an uphill fight to unseat heavily favored incumbent Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo.
The video announcement makes official what has become increasing apparent this year as the Republican, Westchester County Executive Rob Astorino, crisscrossed the state and lobbed criticisms at the governor on the state’s taxes, business climate and sluggish population growth.
“I’m tired of listening to the fairy tale that everything is just great when it’s just the opposite. I’m tired of watching New York’s decline,” Astorino said in the video posted on his campaign website.
New York Republicans will hold their nominating convention in May. Celebrity businessman Donald Trump has said he would consider a run if the state party unifies behind him. A Trump spokesman said Wednesday that Astorino’s announcement does not change that.
Though Astorino easily won a second term last November, the former radio executive is little known beyond his suburban stronghold of Westchester, north of New York City, and faces daunting odds if he becomes the Republican nominee. There are twice as many Democrats in New York state than Republicans, and polls have shown Cuomo with commanding leads over potential GOP candidates. A Siena College poll released last week found Cuomo, a possible 2016 presidential candidate, leading Astorino by 42 points and Trump by 44 points.
That same poll found 73 percent of respondents either didn’t know Astorino or had no opinion about him.
“Goliath, meet David,” state GOP chairman Ed Cox said in a statement.
Astorino points out that he is a Republican who has won twice as head of the executive branch in a Democratic county, the first time in 2009 as a relative unknown.
Still, the lack of name recognition could make Astorino particularly vulnerable against Cuomo, who reported $33 million this year in available campaign cash. Astorino, who reported $1 million on hand, has said he is confident he could raise enough money to win.
“We look forward to an entertaining Republican primary process and are ready to run against whomever their nominee is in September,” said state Democratic Committee spokesman Peter Kauffmann.
Astorino’s announcement video, posted in both English and Spanish, continued his aggressive strategy of attacks on New York’s taxes, out-migration patterns and the business climate under Cuomo. He posed what has already become the campaign’s signature question: Is New York winning or is New York losing?
“If New York is winning, re-elect Andrew Cuomo. But if New York is losing - and the evidence says it is - we need to make a change,” he said.
Astorino, 46, lives in the town of Mount Pleasant, where he was raised. One oddity of a Cuomo-Astorino matchup is that, because Cuomo lives in Westchester County, they are each other’s constituents.
Astorino worked as an airborne traffic reporter in New York City after graduating from Fordham University and launched ESPN’s New York radio station in 2001. He later helped start the Catholic Channel on Sirius XM satellite radio and hosted weekly shows with Cardinals Edward Egan and Timothy Dolan.
He is married with three children, ages 10, 9 and 4.
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