New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced his resignation on Tuesday following a searing report from the state’s attorney general, which alleges he sexually harassed almost a dozen women, including employees in his office, and violated state and federal laws.
Gov. Cuomo stated his resignation would take effect in 14 days, whereby Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul will replace him – and make history as the first woman to assume the state’s highest office.
This week, Republican strategist Susan Del Percio — a former special advisor to Cuomo from 2014 to 2015 who is now an MSNBC and NBC political analyst — spoke to Know Your Value founder Mika Brzezinski about what she encountered while working for the disgraced governor.
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“When I went to the governor’s office, I was a little more high-profile, so I was more shielded,” she recalled. “But the abuse, the bullying — everything I saw there — I still accepted it as business as normal. That was so unacceptable because as I read the [state attorney general’s report], while I had never been sexually harassed or witnessed it, I saw what those women were going through.”
Del Percio pointed to a culture of fear and complacency that surrounded the administration. “There are a lot of Democrats in Albany, who work with Gov. Cuomo — elected officials, appointed officials — that all knew this behavior existed, and they didn’t call it out either. I think that’s the most important thing,” she reflected. “That our workplace should be civil and respectful. It’s not just that we get paid equally, it’s that we get treated equally.”









