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Working Families Party urges reluctant members to vote on its line for Cuomo

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If Gov. Andrew Cuomo wins reelection, he’s likely to continue having tensions with the left-leaning members of his party.

Cuomo was endorsed by the progressive Working Families Party after he promised to work for a Democratic state Senate, among other things. But in recent weeks the alliance has frayed, with Cuomo pushing voters to cast ballots on a new line he created called the Women’s Equality Party, known on the ballot as WEP, instead of the Working Families Party line.

During an interview on WNYC’s The Brian Lehrer Show, Cuomo also referred to Working Families as a fringe party, though he later walked back the remark.

The governor also said that public schools are the last public monopoly, and that he intends to take them on if he’s reelected, angering the teachers unions and others.   

WFP Co-Director Karen Scharff acknowledges that many of her own party members might be too annoyed to vote for Cuomo, but she urges voters to choose the line anyway, saying the party needs to survive to challenge the state’s top Democrat, when necessary.

“It allows us to stand with him when we agree, and stand up to him when we disagree,” Scharff said. “And that’s the important thing about having a separate party.”

If the Working Families Party fails to garner 50,000 votes, the group will lose it’s right to be automatically on the ballot, and will have to petition for a place instead.

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.
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