New York 's lieutenant governor is already making preparations to take over the Empire State's top job.Kathy Hochul would be the first woman to serve as New York governor ifAndrew Cuomo were to resign.- She would also step in if a majority of the Assembly votes to impeach him.
New York Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul has reportedly begun preparations to staff up in the governor's office if and when she needs to replace Gov. Andrew Cuomo.
Hochul has "sought advice on potential first steps in office, as well as whom to hire and which members of Gov. Andrew Cuomo's administration might stay on if he resigned or was removed from office," according to Jimmy Vielkind of the Wall Street Journal.
Hochul is gearing up for what happens if Cuomo is impeached or resigns after bombshell revelations in New York State Attorney General Letitia James' report of the three-term governor sexually harassing 11 women and creating a "hostile work environment."
As a former staffer for the late Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, Hochul has connections across New York
If Cuomo resigns or gets removed through impeachment, Hochul would take office and serve out the rest of his term until 2023. If either scenario plays out, Hochul would be New York's first female governor.
Hochul spent the last several months holding limited public events with minimal press availability, a stark departure from her reputation as an omnipresent state official who has been to all 62 counties in the Empire State.
That changed last week, when she released a statement condemning her boss in the how the report "documented repulsive and unlawful behavior by the governor."
-Jon Campbell (@JonCampbellGAN) August 3, 2021
She stopped short of calling on him to resign, and cited her duty in the line of succession.
Hochul's statement came on the heels of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi calling on Cuomo to resign, joining the entire New York congressional delegation in making the same plea.
Despite the turmoil in the governor's office last week, Hochul and Cuomo did not speak to each other even once, according to the Wall Street Journal.
"Not only does she know all the players in the Democratic Party and the government, she's respected by them," New York State Democratic Committee Chairman Jay Jacobs told the Journal.
"I don't think it's going to take much for her to step up," he added.