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Hochul Defends Bills Stadium Deal, Gun Positions in Debate

governor debate
New York Public Advocate Jumaane Williams, left, New York Governor Kathy Hochul, center, Congressman Tom Suozzi (D-NY), face off during New York’s governor primary debate at the studios of WCBS2-TV, June 7, 2022, in New York. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)

The two Democrats challenging New York Gov. Kathy Hochul’s bid to keep her job criticized her Tuesday for her past backing from the National Rifle Association and the deal she reached to spend hundreds of millions of taxpayer money on a new stadium for the Buffalo Bills.

Hochul, appearing in her first gubernatorial debate Tuesday night, defended the stadium deal and said her positions on guns had evolved in the 10 years since she got a favorable rating from the NRA while running for reelection in a Republican-heavy New York district.

“That was a decade ago. Judge me by what I’ve done because a lot of people have evolved since I took that position,” she said. “You know what we need? More people to evolve.”

Hochul became governor in August when then-Gov. Andrew Cuomo resigned amid allegations he sexually harassed several women, which he denied. She is seeking to become the first woman elected to New York’s highest office, but first she has to win her party’s June 28 primary contest against U.S. Rep. Tom Suozzi of Long Island and New York City’s elected Public Advocate Jumaane Williams.

Hochul is considered the frontrunner in the race, not only because she can claim incumbency but also because she has dominated campaign fundraising and has stacked up endorsements, including the backing of the state Democratic party.

Suozzi, like Hochul, has stuck to mostly centrist positions. Williams is a progressive who in 2018 mounted a strong challenge against Hochul in the lieutenant governor’s race.

Williams, a former city councilman who serves as a public ombudsman, said he had been working to stop gun violence 10 years ago and said he wished Hochul had been supportive then.

“We are 10 years behind because people in Congress were doing the bidding of the NRA,” he said.

Hochul, trying to show she acted quickly amid rising gun violence and a mass shooting in Buffalo last month, highlighted a package of gun bills she signed this week that prohibited anyone under 21 from buying a semiautomatic rifle and required microstamping on new firearms, which would leave individual identifiers on bullet casings fired by those guns.

“I’ve been the governor for nine months. I got it done in record time,” she said.

Suozzi boasted of having an “F” rating from the NRA and said that while all the candidates on the stage supported the state’s new gun laws, “only one of us standing up here has ever been endorsed by the NRA, taken money from the NRA.”

Hochul also defended her plan to spend an eventual $850 million in taxpayer money toward a new stadium for her hometown Buffalo Bills.

The deal has been criticized by Republicans and Democrats for giving so much public money to a private business — in this case, the Buffalo Bills, which are owned by billionaires Terry and Kim Pegula. Good government groups and other critics have also noted there could be a conflict of interest as Hochul’s husband works as a senior vice president and general counsel for the Bills’ concession vendor Delaware North.

Suozzi and Williams both repeated those criticisms early in the debate.

“We need to have someone that’s going to stop the budget and say we need more money for gun violence prevention, not a billionaire to get a stadium to be built outside Buffalo,” Williams said.

Hochul, a Buffalo native and Bills fan, said the stadium deal will create jobs and economically benefit New York. She also said there is no connection between her husband’s company and the deal.

“They literally sell beer and hotdogs at the games. They had nothing to do with negotiations,” she said. Hochul added: “I’m proud of his work. His ethics are second to none, as are mine.”

When it came to ethics, Suozzi was questioned about an ongoing U.S. House Ethics committee investigation over his failure to file reports on some of his stock transactions as required under federal law.

He described it during the debate as a misunderstanding.

“It’s a paperwork error. And the reality is, we’ve corrected it,” he said.

He then said it was nothing compared to Hochul’s handpicked lieutenant governor, Brian Benjamin, being arrested on federal corruption charges in April.

Benjamin had been a state senator from Harlem before Hochul brought him into her days-old administration in August.

He is accused of participating in a scheme to receive campaign contributions from a real estate developer in exchange for using his influence as a lawmaker to send a grant of state funds to a nonprofit controlled by the developer. Benjamin has denied there was anything inappropriate about the grant and pleaded not guilty, but he resigned from the lieutenant governor role. A trial has been scheduled for next year.

Though concerns had been raised about Benjamin’s fundraising in early 2021 — before Hochul made him her second-in-command — the governor has said she was surprised at his arrest and had been told questions about his fundraising had been resolved.

“It was very very disappointing to me that those charges were brought because we worked with the information that we had at the time,” Hochul said. She called his arrest “a setback” and said her new lieutenant governor, former U.S. Rep. Antonio Delgado, “is going to be an amazing partner.”

Williams and Suozzi participated in a debate last week in which they criticized Hochul for not participating. Her campaign said she was instead focused on the end of the legislative session.

The trio is scheduled to meet in another debate on June 16 sponsored by WNBC-TV, Telemundo and the Albany Times Union.

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