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Bill Clinton Endorses Andrew Cuomo for NYC Mayor

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The former president’s endorsement came as Letitia James, the state attorney general who supports Andrew M. Cuomo’s mayoral rivals, criticized the former governor over harassment allegations.

Andrew Cuomo and Bill Clinton lean their heads toward each other in apparent conversation at the funeral of Ed Koch, a former New York City mayor.
Before Andrew Cuomo, left, was governor of New York, he served under President Bill Clinton as the federal housing secretary. Credit...Emmanuel Dunand/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Emma G. FitzsimmonsNicholas Fandos

Published June 22, 2025Updated June 23, 2025, 12:42 a.m. ET

Former President Bill Clinton endorsed former Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo in the New York City mayor’s race on Sunday, giving a last-minute boost of support to Mr. Cuomo, as he urged supporters to head to the polls for the last day of early voting.

Mr. Cuomo worked in the Clinton administration as the housing secretary. The backing of the former president, as well as a taped robocall providing his support, could help turn out older voters in the tightening Democratic mayoral primary on Tuesday.

Mr. Clinton said in the robocall that he had hired Mr. Cuomo “because he knows how to get things done” and that he believed he would “stand up and protect the people of this city” from President Trump.

Mr. Clinton, 78, who lives in a Westchester County suburb north of New York, has not often weighed in on city primary races. His endorsement is another indication that some establishment Democrats prefer Mr. Cuomo to Zohran Mamdani, a state lawmaker and Democratic Socialist who is second in the polls.

The endorsement came as Mr. Cuomo and his rivals attended campaign events across the city, trying to convert undecided voters and to ensure that their supporters showed up at the polls. The push appeared more urgent this weekend, with a forecast heat wave potentially depressing turnout on Primary Day.

By the end of the early voting period on Sunday, 384,000 Democrats had voted in the primary. That was nearly twice as many people as voted during the same period four years ago, when the coronavirus pandemic was still raging and many New Yorkers voters cast ballots by mail.


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