On November 12, the New York Daily News published the following open letter to the people of the State of New York from Governor Andrew Cuomo following Tuesday's election.
Those of us who have spent time in politics
know that losing is part of the experience. Still, Secretary Hillary
Clinton’s defeat on Tuesday was a particularly difficult experience, heartbreaking and bewildering
and indeed frightening all at once. I wanted to share some thoughts on
how we must acquit ourselves in the days ahead.
As Clinton said, when Donald Trump takes
office, we will owe him an open mind and a chance to lead. The fate of
the ship always takes precedence over the identity of the captain, and
we must loyally do our part to protect the ship.
The night he became commander-in-chief,
Donald Trump said he wanted to be President of all Americans. Despite
the divisiveness of the campaign, he has an opportunity to live up to
that promise by acting first on issues where there is common ground with
his opponents. He said he wants to govern on behalf of forgotten
Americans, and any time he does that, he can count on both Democrats and
Republicans to help him achieve success.
Trump also said that he wants to rebuild
America’s infrastructure. In that effort, he will find New York a
willing partner as the Tappan Zee Bridge, a new La Guardia Airport, a
new cross-Hudson Tunnel, and a revitalized Penn Station continue to
rise.
But while we honor America by honoring the
results of the election, we will fight as fiercely as we can, at every
opportunity that presents itself, to reject the hateful attitudes that
pervaded throughout the 2016 campaign. We cannot unhear what we have
heard. The voices of the Ku Klux Klan, white nationalism,
authoritarianism, misogyny and xenophobia. A generally disdainful view
of American ideals.
We all hoped that when we woke up on Nov. 9
the ugliness of this campaign season would finally be gone. But on the
day after Election Day, a swastika and the words “make America white
again” appeared, spray painted on a softball dugout in Wellsville — in
our state of New York.
I cannot and will not pretend that these
things are normal even if millions of Americans voted for a campaign
either because of these values or in spite of them. I know there are
millions more people like me — both Democrats and Republicans who reject
them. As I said on other occasions, this election was for the soul of
America, and that is why today so many of us feel as we do today; we are
soul sick. But as we accept the results of the election, we do not
accept these positions.
Americans fought these attitudes before the
2016 election, and we will fight them for as long as it takes to
vanquish them. That is our mission, and our dedication to its success
does not depend on the occupant of the White House. Americans pledge
themselves to “one nation, indivisible, with liberty and justice for
all.” One election does not erase that commitment.
We Democrats are not without resources. In
Chuck Schumer and Nancy Pelosi, Democrats in Congress have leaders who
are brilliant parliamentarians, and who will advance our causes even as
they will provide a bulwark for our values. But let us also look to our
state governments as places where progress can be made. One of the
reasons why so many of the programs of President Roosevelt’s New Deal
proved effective is that he had tried them out while he was governor of
New York. Initiatives like Marriage Equality were enacted in New York
and other states before they became the law of the land. Congress has
refused to act on gun control, but we enacted a tough law in New York,
and California, Nevada, and Washington strengthened their gun laws on Tuesday.
While the world struggles to come to
consensus on how to combat climate change, we in New York have banned
fracking and set a renewable energy standard requiring 50% of our
electricity to come from renewable energy sources like wind and solar by
2030. This year in New York State, we enacted a $15-an-hour minimum
wage, the nation’s best Paid Family Leave program, and dedicated more
funding to education than ever before. And in this state, we
accomplished these successes with a divided legislature: Democrats and
Republicans coming together, proving you can be progressive and
bipartisan. Indeed, there is more than one path to progress.
Soon enough we will see what proposals will
find their way into the President-elect’s agenda. Already it seems
almost every far-right Republican under the sun is seeing Trump’s
electoral college victory a mandate to enact sweeping ideas and radical
proposals, regardless of the pain that is inflicted and the turmoil that
is caused. I have great faith that common sense will eventually
prevail, and that our traditional American values of justice, liberty
and equality will eventually rule the day. In the end, they always have.
Both Democrats and Republicans have fought
for these values throughout our nation’s history — from the time when
Abraham Lincoln declared we were a nation with malice toward none and
charity for all, to when a young Senator from the State of Illinois
said: There’s not a black America and white America and Latino America
and Asian America; there’s the United States of America. The way has not
always been easy, nor has the cost been cheap; but for whatever this
moment demands of us, we are ready.
My father Mario Cuomo spent his entire life
fighting against the death penalty, even when it wasn’t popular, even
when it cost him the governorship, because he knew it was right. I will
fight against the targeting of Muslims, immigrants, the LGBTQ community,
and for the rights of all Americans every day I hold office and every
day after that.
For our values, for our rights, for our
vision of America, for the people who depend on us, we will fight. And
for that, we are unwilling to compromise.
Source: Press Office, Governor Andrew M. Cuomo
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