Democratic leaders in Albany questioned the impartiality of Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s choice to lead the inquiry, while others called for his immediate resignation.
Hours after a second woman came forward to accuse Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo of sexually harassing her, a torrent of New York politicians from Mr. Cuomo’s own Democratic Party demanded an independent investigation into the matter.
Many of those elected officials — including the leaders of the State Senate and Assembly — seemed skeptical of Mr. Cuomo’s decision to appoint a former federal judge with close ties to one of Mr. Cuomo’s longtime allies to conduct a “full and thorough outside review.”
“I believe the Attorney General should make an appointment to ensure that it is a truly independent investigation,” Carl E. Heastie, the Assembly speaker, wrote on Twitter, referring to the state attorney general, Letitia James.
A small handful of lawmakers from the Democratic Party’s leftmost flank joined with some Republicans to demand that Mr. Cuomo immediately resign.
“The harassment experienced by these former staffers is part of a clear pattern of abuse and manipulation by the governor, and that pattern makes him unworthy of holding the highest office in New York,” State Senator Alessandra Biaggi wrote in a statement posted on Twitter.
The tumult arose on Saturday evening, shortly after The New York Times published an article detailing the accusations of a 25-year-old former aide to the governor, Charlotte Bennett. She said Mr. Cuomo had asked her about her sex life, including whether she practiced monogamy and had any interest in older men.
Mr. Cuomo, she said, told her that he was open to dating women in their 20s and spoke to her in discomfiting ways about her own experience with sexual assault. She said she later realized he had been grooming her. It was the second such allegation against the governor in a week.
Mr. Cuomo said that he believed he had been acting as a mentor and had “never made advances toward Ms. Bennett, nor did I ever intend to act in any way that was inappropriate.”
“This situation cannot and should not be resolved in the press,” he said in a statement issued on Saturday. “I believe the best way to get to the truth is through a full and thorough outside review, and I am directing all state employees to comply with that effort.”
The governor’s office said that the investigation would be led by Barbara S. Jones, a former federal judge who worked with Mr. Cuomo’s longtime adviser, Steven M. Cohen, after leaving the bench.
Questions immediately arose about the integrity of Mr. Cuomo’s outside review.
“With all due respect, you can’t pick a federal judge who works with your good friend and decide that that’s going to be the investigator,” said Liz Krueger, a Democratic state senator from Manhattan.
Kathleen Rice, a Long Island congresswoman and a former Nassau County district attorney, put it even more bluntly.
“The accused CANNOT appoint the investigator,” Ms. Rice wrote on Twitter. “PERIOD.”
The criticism prompted the Cuomo administration to respond on Saturday night. “There are no limits on the scope of Judge Jones’s review,” Beth Garvey, a special counsel to the governor, said in a statement that also included a synopsis of the judge’s career biography.
The turbulent weekend capped perhaps the worst month of Mr. Cuomo’s decade-long tenure as governor of New York and pointed to a sharp turnabout in his fortunes.
Last week, Lindsey Boylan, a former state economic development official, detailed her earlier accusation that Mr. Cuomo had harassed her on several occasions from 2016 to 2018, giving her at one point an unsolicited kiss on the lips at his Manhattan office. Mr. Cuomo has denied the claims.
Erica Vladimer, a co-founder of the Sexual Harassment Working Group, a collective of former state workers, said the sexual harassment and bullying accusations fit the same theme.
“It’s not two separate sets of allegations,” she said. “It is two examples of longstanding abuse, harassment, retaliation and the culture of a hostile work environment.”
Less than a year after Mr. Cuomo’s pandemic-era news briefings prompted discussion about his presidential ambitions and caused #cuomosexual to trend on Twitter, Democrats openly wondered whether the governor could survive this latest crisis, which comes on the heels of several others.
Ms. James, the state’s attorney general, in late January reported that Mr. Cuomo’s administration had significantly undercounted nursing home deaths in New York State.
A New York Times report found that Mr. Cuomo had all but declared war on his own Health Department over coronavirus policies, apparently prompting the departure of at least nine high-level executives. Then his top aide, Melissa DeRosa, was recorded admitting that the state had withheld nursing home fatality data from the state legislature because it feared a politically motivated investigation by the Trump administration’s Justice Department, prompting allegations of a cover-up and demands for Mr. Cuomo’s impeachment.
Federal prosecutors have opened an inquiry into Mr. Cuomo’s handling of nursing homes; legislators rallied to strip Mr. Cuomo of his unilateral emergency powers, which they granted him at the start of the pandemic; and possible competitors began to more seriously consider challenging him in next year’s elections.
“Lying about nursing home deaths and lying about the treatment of a young woman and a married woman who work for him is bad, very bad,” said Karen Hinton, who worked as Mr. Cuomo’s press secretary when he ran the federal housing department.
It was not immediately clear whether Ms. James, a longtime ally of Mr. Cuomo’s, would insert herself into the matter. She was the governor’s preferred candidate after Eric T. Schneiderman suddenly resigned as attorney general in 2018 amid scrutiny of his treatment of women, and she readily embraced Mr. Cuomo’s political backing.
But Ms. James, the first Black woman to hold statewide office, has led a number of progressive campaigns in office, and her critical review of Mr. Cuomo’s handling of the nursing home crisis has put her in unusual conflict with the governor — even generating speculation among liberal leaders and strategists that she could challenge him next year when he seeks his fourth term.
Ms. James’s office did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
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