The Dictatorship
Andrew Cuomo is doubling down on a losing strategy against Zohran Mamdani
With less than a week to go in New York City’s mayoral race, Andrew Cuomo appeared on Fox News with host Maria Bartiromo to deliver his closing pitch to New Yorkers heading to the ballot box. And it was foreboding.
The former Democratic governor referred to the fact that his opponent Zohran Mamdani, who would be the first Muslim and South Asian mayor of the city, was born in Uganda. Cuomo said Mamdani — a state assemblyman whose family moved to the city when he was 7 — “doesn’t understand the New York culture, the New York values, what 9/11 meant.”
In his final moments on the show Wednesday, Cuomo concluded: “If Mamdani wins, the city will not survive that as we know it, and it will not recover for a long time.”
It was a stark warning emblematic of a campaign marked by fear and grievance, coming just days after Cuomo faced criticism for chuckling on a radio show when the host, Sid Rosenberg, made Islamophobic comments that Mamdani would cheer on a Sept. 11-style attack.
It’s the same approach that contributed to Cuomo’s surprise double-digit defeat by Mamdani in the Democratic primary in June, in what Cuomo’s backers had hoped would mark his triumphant return to politics.
And now, in the final days of a historic race, with turnout surging citywide and some polls tightening, Cuomo is continuing to count on fear to carry him over the finish line.
The race has become a battle over the identity and values of New York and the broader Democratic Party. And while Cuomo has successfully tapped into some voters’ anxieties and differences, many New Yorkers appear unwilling to follow him down a dark path.

Outside an early voting site at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, fear was equal parts motivator and repellent. Julie Kopel and Jeanne Peldman told BLN they took time away from their jobs to canvas for Cuomo. They said that, as Jewish New Yorkers, they’re concerned about Mamdani’s criticisms of Israel, including his belief that Israel has committed genocide in Gaza.
“Andrew Cuomo is not the perfect candidate,” Kopel told BLN. “But this is one of those situations where you have to vote for the better candidate, and Mamdani would be absolutely horrible for our city.”
Mamdani has picked up endorsements from prominent Jewish politicians in New York, including U.S. Rep. Jerry Nadler and city Comptroller Brad Lander. That hasn’t been enough to quell all the concerns that Cuomo and others have drummed up.
Mamdani, Peldman said, “hasn’t aligned with us, and it’s terrifying. I’m scared if he becomes mayor of the city.”
But Ben Wilson, a 26-year-old resident who described himself as Jewish but not religious, said he was drawn to Mamdani’s focus on making the city affordable for lower-income New Yorkers and did not buy claims that he is antisemitic.
Alyssa Cass, a Democratic strategist and partner with Slingshot Strategies, told BLN she doubted Cuomo’s negative messaging would change the fundamentals of the race.
“I am highly skeptical that [Mamdani] is somehow scarier after months of being mainstream and on the tip of everyone’s tongue,” she said.
Cass also pointed to high turnout in Brooklyn as good news for Mamdani, while noting that turnout on the Upper East and Upper West sides was more positive for Cuomo.
Two-time Republican nominee Curtis Sliwa is back on the ballot as well, mounting another long-shot bid to run the heavily Democratic city.
Beyond disparaging Mamdani, Cuomo’s scare tactics come off to some voters as an attempt to keep the conversation away from his resignation in 2021, after investigators commissioned by Attorney General Letitia James determined that the governor had sexually harassed 11 women, including several state employees. (Cuomo has denied the allegations.)
In fact, several Democratic women told BLN this week that their primary fears in this race were about Cuomo himself. Rebecca Perry, an Upper East Side mom of two, said Cuomo’s history of allegations of sexual harassment meant she had “zero interest in supporting him in any way, shape or form.”

Cuomo’s warnings about rampant crime under a Mamdani-led city seemed to resonate with some older voters, despite the fact that city data shows that major crimes are down and the New York Police Department recorded record-low transit crime numbers on the subway this fall.
At a polling location in West Harlem, Joann Goodson, a Black woman and lifelong New Yorker, said she had trouble believing Mamdani would be able to tackle the city’s affordability crisis as promised. She also described a fear of crime on the subway system as a reason to vote for an experienced politician like Cuomo. “I’ve got to keep my eyes open and make sure I’m looking around me all the time,” she said.
Another Black retiree, Vincent Fortune, said he didn’t like Mamdani’s past criticism of Democratic figures like Vice President Kamala Harris and was voting for Cuomo because “he was the less of all of the evil.”
It’s the older, more moderate Democrats that Basil Smikle, Columbia University professor, BLN political analyst and Democratic strategist, believes could help Cuomo. He called Cuomo’s campaign tactics racist and Islamophobic, but also cautioned that fear can be the strongest political motivator.
“In many instances, it even overshadows aspiration,” he told BLN. “I don’t think a lot of moderate to establishment Democrats and moderate Democrats loved [current Mayor] Eric Adams, but they saw him as a firewall against progressive politics. I don’t think that that’s changed with Andrew Cuomo. I think he tried to actually take the torch from Adams in that regard.”
Still other Harlem voters expressed excitement at the possibility of the first Muslim mayor — welcome representation for a neighborhood with a significant Black Muslim population. Boubakar Diallo, a Senegalese American, was so proud to vote for Mamdani he ran back inside the polling site when he realized he forgot his voting sticker.
The Dictatorship
Karen Bass advances to general election in Los Angeles mayoral contest
Incumbent mayor Karen Bass will proceed to the Nov. 3 general election in the Los Angeles mayoral race, the Associated Press projected early Wednesday morning.
Bass emerged as the leader of the crowded field of more than a dozen candidates after a feisty battle the past few months that led to former reality TV star Spencer Pratt and Los Angeles City Councilwoman Nithya Raman polling neck-and-neck less than a week before primary day.
As of early Wednesday morning, the Associated Press had yet to project a second candidate who would advance to the general election in the all-party primary in which the top two vote-getters move on.
Bass, the 72-year-old incumbent, has a long record in politics: Before being elected LA mayor in 2022, she represented Los Angeles in the California State Assembly, eventually becoming speaker, and served six terms in the U.S. House of Representatives. She entered the mayor’s race facing extensive criticism from Angelenos for both her handling of last year’s deadly LA wildfires — she was in Ghana when the blazes broke out — and her failure to achieve her goal of ending homelessness by the end of her first term.
Bass has campaigned on her experience, which includes standing up to the Trump administration when the president deployed Immigration and Customs Enforcement to the city last year, and a pledge to deliver on her promise to end homelessness.
Pratt, 42, was a surprise candidate when he announced his intention to run for mayor in January. The registered Republican and former reality TV villainbest known from the MTV show “The Hills,” has no political experience, but became a vocal critic of Bass and Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom after his family home burned down in the Pacific Palisades fire last year. Since launching his populist campaign centered on critiquing the city’s Democratic leadership and cracking down on homelessness and crime, Pratt has earned the backing of MAGA leadersand even President Donald Trump himself, though Pratt rejects any affiliation with the MAGA movement.
After a strong televised debate performance last month, Pratt’s fundraising surged. All in all, he has raised $3.7 million since January, compared to the $3.2 million Bass has raised over the past two years, according to the latest campaign finance filings.
Raman, a member of the Democratic Socialists of America who has represented LA’s 4th council district since 2020, launched her surprise mayoral campaign in February — less than two weeks after she endorsed Bass’ campaign for re-election.
Raman, 44, earned comparisons early on to New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani due to her DSA roots and her pledge to bring generational change to the city if elected. But as the race progressed, she walked back some of her more left-wing policy stances — such as defunding the police and opposing anti-camping zones for homeless people — and polling suggested Raman and Pratt would be fighting for second place on primary day.
This is a developing story. Check back for updates.
Julianne McShane is a breaking news reporter for MS NOW who also covers the politics of abortion and reproductive rights. You can send her tips from a non-work device on Signal at jmcshane.19 or follow her on X or Bluesky.
The Dictatorship
Republican infighting in Iowa points to GOP peril after Feenstra loses governor’s race
Republicans have not lost a gubernatorial race in Iowa since George W. Bush was president.
So the anxiety within the GOP as voters went to the polls Tuesday was, on its face, hard to explain. But the projected defeat of Rep. Randy FeenstraTrump’s endorsed candidate, in the GOP primary for governor was an early sign of just how unpredictable voters may be in Iowa this year.
In the two decades since a Democrat last won the governorship, in 2006, Iowa has gone from presidential battleground to reliably red-state terrain, carried three times by Donald Trump. In most election cycles, that record would all but guarantee a comfortable race for Republicans this fall — even in a year when momentum is building on the left.
Not this year.
What happened in Iowa on Tuesday was a clear test case of just how far the president’s blessing and the sway of partisan identity can carry a candidate over the finish line. Trump’s endorsement has essentially been the gold standard in Republican politics, often making the difference between a candidate being a contender or becoming a has-been. Sometimes, though, Trump simply sides with the candidate who seemed to be the most likely to be the primary winner.
What happened in Iowa on Tuesday was a clear test case of just how far the president’s blessing and the sway of partisan identity can carry a candidate over the finish line.
His nod to Feenstra days before Iowa’s gubernatorial primary, however, carried the marks of a late-breaking rescue mission — especially given that other rivals were well positioned as Iowans headed to vote. Democrats have had to deal with none of those worries on their end: State Auditor Rob Sand has run effectively unopposed for months, free to focus on the general election and that alone.
“Rob Sand is, he’s a very dangerous candidate, he’s running against both parties,” said Bob Vander Plaats, a conservative evangelical leader in the state. While he backed GOP candidate Adam Steen, Vander Plaats had concerns about Feenstra. “I really believe Randy gives us our biggest, biggest risk of having Rob Sand be governor,” he said ahead of Tuesday’s primary.
Even with Trump’s endorsement, Feenstra fell short in the GOP primary. The Republican congressman conceded the race Tuesday night to opponent Zach Lahn, making for one of the few times this year that Trump’s endorsed candidate has been rejected by Republican voters.
Feenstra entered the race as the front-runner. Back in 2020, he helped both national and Iowa Republicans when he defeated deeply controversial Rep. Steve King in a Republican primary — a victory that catapulted him to Washington. With a low-key approach and national connections forged in Congress, he appeared primed to help his party hold the state and continue its gubernatorial-race dominance; federal filings show that earlier in his campaign he moved more than $1 million from his congressional campaign to boost his statewide ambitions.
But the primary bruised him. While Sand glided toward November, Feenstra spent the spring fending off a crowded field.
“I feel pretty comfortable saying that we can beat anybody that they put against us,” Sand told reporters Tuesday. “I think most Iowans recognize that the state’s going in the wrong direction.”
In a five-way Republican race, Feenstra’s most formidable challenge came from Lahn, who tried to claim the “outsider” lane. Lahn lent his campaign more than $2 million and drew support from the late Charlie Kirk’s Turning Point Action organization and an arm of the Make America Healthy Again movement — the kind of backing that can scramble expectations in Republican circles.
Trump noticeably sat out the race until late last week, when he posted an endorsement on social media touting Feenstra. Despite all that, even after Trump endorsed the congressman, Lahn said last weekend he did not believe Feenstra could beat Sand this fall.
“Rob Sand has run a campaign that he’s been out with the people for a very long time, the complete opposite of what Randy Feenstra’s done,” Lahn said in an interview. “This is what’s at stake. If Randy Feenstra’s the nominee on June 3, it affects every other race for Republicans in the state. That’s how important this is. It affects the U.S. Senate race, the House races, some of which will be in razor-thin margins.”
Ahead of polls closing Tuesday night, Feenstra campaign spokesman Billy Fuerst claimed in a message that “Randy Feenstra earned President Trump’s complete and total endorsement to be the next Governor of Iowa because President Trump knows that Randy is the only proven conservative who can defeat Extreme Liberal Rob Sand and keep Iowa red.”
Electability is often a concern in competitive primaries. But the aftermath in Iowa may prove especially difficult for Republicans. While the Iowa governor’s race is important to the state, it also could have an outsize influence on congressional control as well. A strong performance by Sand could prove pivotal in also helping Democrats as they try to win the state’s open U.S. Senate this fall, as well as to potentially flip as many as three congressional districts.
Given the narrow control Republicans have in the House, those seats could become incredibly important. And while winning the Senate race is more of a long shot, it is one of just a few that Democrats realistically have a chance of winning in the fall as they try to overcome a difficult picture to take back the Senate.
All of this means that after a few cycles where its national importance has faded, Iowa could become a tipping point for either Republicans maintaining sway for the final two years of Trump’s time in power or seeing it slip away.
Either outcome may depend on just how much Sand stresses Republicans in Iowa as he runs on a message that picks at partisan politics generally and that tries to bring back some relatability back to a Democratic Party whose reputation as caring about ideology over economic woes has become alienating in pockets of the Midwest and in key battleground states.
“[Sand’s] got the wind at his back right now, because he’s not being attacked relentlessly like he will be after the primary,” said David Kochel, an Iowa Republican strategist. “I think once this race defines and once you kind of can show that he is part of a national Democratic brand, I think it gets a lot tougher for him to win a state like Iowa.”
Hunter Woodall covers politics for MS NOW. He’s reported on politics and presidential campaigns for The Associated Press and CBS News and reported on Congress for The Minnesota Star Tribune.
Alex Tabet is a reporter for MS NOW.
The Dictatorship
Scott Pelley fired from CBS News after tense ‘60 Minutes’ meeting
Veteran “60 Minutes” correspondent Scott Pelley has been fired from CBS News a day after he excoriated the show’s new executive producer and editor-in-chief Bari Weiss in a staff meeting.
The venerated show’s newly named executive producer, Nick Bilton, announced the network “parted ways” with Pelley in a Tuesday note to staff obtained by MS NOW.
“I know how much Scott meant to many of you, and I don’t say this lightly,” Bilton wrote. “I made repeated attempts to have direct conversations with him over the weekend, and this afternoon I tried to find common ground. That was not the path Scott chose.”
Pelley’s firing deepens a seismic shift for the network, which has seen an exodus of journalists since David Ellison, CEO of Paramount Skydance, appointed Weiss as editor-in-chief last year. Last week, correspondent Sharyn Alfonsi’s contract expired after she criticized Weiss for pulling her segment on torture in Salvadoran prisons from the air. (Weiss maintained that the story was not ready. A revised version aired a month later.)
Pelley has worked for the show since 2004 and has won more than 50 Emmy Awards, according to his bio on the network’s website, which also notes he won half of all major awards earned by “60 Minutes” during his tenure.
In a staff meeting Monday, Pelley told Bilton — a journalist and filmmaker who has no prior experience in broadcast television — he had “slender” qualifications for the job, and that Weiss was “murdering” “60 Minutes,” according to The New York Times, which obtained a recording of the meeting.
“She does not love this place,” Pelley reportedly said of Weiss, according to the Times. “She was brought in to kill it, and she’s been doing exactly that.”
The news of Pelley’s firing was first reported by journalist Oliver Darcy, author of the newsletter Status.
In the termination letter Bilton sent Pelley, which was also obtained by MS NOW, the new executive producer said the veteran correspondent “hijacked my first meeting with staff to disparage me, my qualifications, and my intentions with remarkable incivility and contempt.”
“Yesterday’s performative display of hostility — enacted in front of the staff instead of in a civil, private conversation — demonstrated that you have no interest in contributing to the future success of the show, or approaching my new tenure with a mind open to collaboration and progress,” Bilton wrote.
In a phone interview with the Times after news of his firing broke, Pelley said he devoted decades of his life to the network.
“I have been in combat in Afghanistan. I have been in combat in Iraq. I have been in the war zone in Ukraine multiple times, risking my life and the happiness of my family because of my devotion to the broadcast,” he told the newspaper.
Weiss herself praised Pelley’s career even as she condemned his conduct in recent days.
“Despite our attempts to engage with Scott Pelley and to find a way back, unfortunately we weren’t able to do so, and so
we had to part ways,” Weiss said Wednesday morning at the top of the CBS News editorial call, according to remarks obtained by MS NOW.
“That unfortunate outcome does not discount from the amazing contributions and work that Scott Pelley
has done for CBS and for ‘60 Minutes’ over the course of his career,” Weiss added, listing several major things Pelley covered in the show’s most recent season.
“Those are unforgettable stories,” she said.
Julianne McShane is a breaking news reporter for MS NOW who also covers the politics of abortion and reproductive rights. You can send her tips from a non-work device on Signal at jmcshane.19 or follow her on X or Bluesky.
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