White House won’t strip Cuomo of role leading weekly COVID-19 call, Jen Psaki says

WASHINGTON — White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki on Monday said that President Biden won’t strip Gov. Andrew Cuomo of his role leading the nation’s weekly COVID-19 coordinating calls with governors — despite prominent New York Democrats calling on him to resign over allegations of sexual harassment and COVID-19 mismanagement in New York.

A reporter pressed Psaki at her daily press briefing on why the beleaguered Democrat is still leading the weekly White House pandemic calls in his role as chair of the National Governors Association, particularly after reports that New York’s state COVID-19 vaccine czar Larry Schwartz is asking county officials to affirm their loyalty for the beleaguered governor, appearing to tie pandemic help to Cuomo’s unrelated woes.

Former Vice President Mike Pence previously led the national COVID-19 coordinating calls in his role as chairman of the White House Coronavirus Task Force.

“It would be up to the NGA to determine if they were to make a change on that front. It’s also up to the legislature and others in New York to determine if he still has the confidence of the people in the state,” Psaki said.

Gov. Andrew Cuomo is still in his role leading the nation's weekly COVID-19 coordinating calls with governors.
Gov. Andrew Cuomo is still in his role leading the nation’s weekly COVID-19 coordinating calls with governors.
Matthew McDermott for NY Post

Psaki said the Cuomo-led group was put in charge of the calls to break from the approach of the Trump administration.

“One of the reasons that it’s been set up to engage directly with governors is that there were operational aspects of the way the last administration approached COVID and approached… the distribution of vaccines or approached planning and engagement with governors that wasn’t working,” Psaki said.

“They didn’t feel they had the information they needed, they didn’t know when they were getting vaccine supply. And our effort was to work much more directly in a range of means and a range of ways up and down the ranks in these states to ensure that we were addressing the local needs as they came up, so I’m not aware of any plan to shift that approach.”

A reporter pressed Jen Psaki about Gov. Andrew Cuomo's role amid his scandals.
A reporter pressed Jen Psaki about Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s role amid his scandals.
ERIC BARADAT/AFP via Getty Images

Psaki said, however, it was “concerning” that Cuomo deputy Schwartz would be linking loyalty to the governor to vaccine distribution.

“We were concerned, of course, about the reports of this inappropriate behavior, but we also have a number of steps that are already in the system to ensure that the people of New York, he people of any state, are getting — the vaccines are distributed distributed fairly and equitably,” Psaki said.

The presidential spokeswoman said that Biden wants a “quick” review of “troubling” sexual harassment allegations against Cuomo, but that Biden isn’t ready to demand his resignation.

Both of New York’s Democratic senators and nearly all of the state’s 19 Democrats in the House of Representatives called for Cuomo to resign last week as a seventh woman stepped forward — but Cuomo says he won’t do so.

“Like everyone who continues to read stories — new developments seem to happen every day — we find them troubling, the president finds them troubling, hard to read. And every woman who steps forward, needs to be treated with dignity and respect,” Psaki said.

“The New York attorney general is pursuing, of course, an independent investigation against Gov. Cuomo and that is appropriate. And the president believes that’s appropriate as does the vice president. The investigation needs to be both quick and thorough consistent with how serious these allegations are.”

Biden told reporters Sunday on the White House lawn that he won’t call on Cuomo to resign pending a review overseen by New York Attorney General Letitia James.

“I think the investigation is underway and we should see what it brings us,” Biden said as he returned from a weekend trip home to Delaware.

Last week, prominent New York Democrats in Congress and in the state legislature turned against Cuomo as harassment accusations mounted.

New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio has said Cuomo must resign. US Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY) also called on him to step down. The Democrat-led state legislature launched an impeachment investigation.

Cuomo said Friday that he’s the victim of “cancel culture” and won’t leave office voluntarily. “I was not elected by the politicians. I was elected by the people,” he said.

Fellow Democrats began to break with Cuomo last month following a stunning admission from his top aide Melissa DeRosa — first reported by The Post — that Cuomo’s team hid data on COVID-19 nursing home deaths so that it could not “be used against us” by federal prosecutors, which could amount to a crime.

source: nypost.com