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Former Gov. Mario Cuomo laid to rest, after son Gov. Andrew Cuomo delivers eulogy

governorandrewcuomo
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Flickr
Gov. Andrew Cuomo delivers the eulogy at the funeral of his father, former Gov. Mario Cuomo

Former Gov. Mario Cuomo was laid to rest in New York today after a funeral and wake that was attended by prominent politicians, including former President Bill Clinton and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, and Vice President Joe Biden.

But the ceremony and the eulogy by his son, Gov. Andrew Cuomo, focused on the personal as well as the political. Cuomo called his father “the keynote speaker for our better angels.”

In a moving and at times emotional speech, Andrew Cuomo portrayed his father as a political outsider from the “outer borough” of Queens, who always cared for those who were overlooked in life. He said his father viewed a hard-fought game of basketball as his “liberation” from the decorum he felt he had to present as a three-term governor, and he hated the “tedium and absurdity of the bureaucracy.” 

Andrew Cuomo says his father called himself a “progressive pragmatist” whose soaring rhetoric was inspired not by what people wanted to hear, but what he needed to say.

“And that, my friends was the essence of Mario Cuomo,” said Andrew Cuomo. “He was not interested in pleasing the audience.”  

Andrew Cuomo addressed his sometimes complicated relationship with his father, saying those who try to “psychoanalyze” it have got it all wrong. He says he was devoted to his father -- who he called his hero, best friend, confidante and mentor -- and that they reveled in each other’s political victories.

The younger Cuomo said he regretted that he decided to remain in Washington, D.C., where he was Housing and Urban Development secretary in 1994, and did not come home to New York to run his father’s final campaign, which Mario Cuomo ultimately lost. Andrew Cuomo, after one failed attempt, became governor 16 years later.  

“I loved winning the governorship more for him than for myself,” said Andrew Cuomo. “It was redemption for my father.”

Election night 2014, Andrew Cuomo's second win as governor , was to be Mario Cuomo’s last public appearance. He died at age 82 on New Year’s Day, just after his son gave two inaugural speeches in New York City and in Buffalo to begin his second term. Andrew Cuomo says he had hoped that his father could have attended the inaugural and held the bible for the swearing in, but it was not to be. The elder Cuomo was by then too sick. The Buffalo speech began at 4 p.m. Mario Cuomo died at 5:15 p.m.

“He waited,” said Andrew Cuomo, his voice breaking. “And then he quietly slipped out of the event and he went home, just like he always did, because his job was done.”

The funeral was held at St Ignatius Loyola Church on Park Avenue, near where Mario Cuomo and his wife Matilda have lived on Manhattan’s Upper East Side since the elder Cuomo left office 20 years ago.

Parish priest George Witt, who called Cuomo “fundamentally a humble man,” says the former governor wanted a simple, local ceremony.

“In the end, it was not so much the eloquence of his words that spoke to us, but the eloquence of his life,” said Witt.  

Credit governorandrewcuomo / Flickr
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Flickr

Outside, a phalanx of New York State Police stood at attention on the gray and snowy day, as the former governor’s coffin, draped in the New York state flag, was born by pallbearers, including his youngest child, CNN anchor Chris Cuomo.

Mario Cuomo leaves behind his wife of 60 years, Matilda; sons Andrew and Chris; three daughters; and 14 grandchildren.

Karen DeWitt is Capitol Bureau Chief for New York State Public Radio, a network of 10 public radio stations in New York State. She has covered state government and politics for the network since 1990.