Skip to Content
Streetsblog Empire State home
Streetsblog Empire State home
Log In
Andrew Cuomo

Last Night’s Gov Debate: Cuomo Piles on in MTA Bash-a-Thon

2:32 PM EDT on October 19, 2010

    cuomo_on_tv

    Try this little experiment. Click over to the video of last night's seven-candidate gubernatorial debate. Start at the 55:30 mark, then close your eyes and listen to seven solid minutes of MTA bashing. Which of those candidates is the presumptive governor-in-waiting with a 35-point lead in the latest poll and, presumably, some political leeway to tell voters the truth about what's happening to their transit system?

    Even with a helpful introduction from the moderator, it's tough to pluck that guy out of the crowd. On transit and the MTA, Andrew Cuomo sounds almost indistinguishable from "Manhattan Madam" Kristin Davis.

    In his allotted MTA minute, Cuomo falls back on the "two sets of books" line (a standby dismissed in court years ago but revived by shameless pols ever since), singles out overtime costs for scorn, and claims that "no one is in charge" of the agency. Those would be the same overtime costs that MTA chair Jay Walder -- the person in charge -- has started to rein in.

    Strangely, Cuomo doesn't even acknowledge the existence of Walder, who's made good on early promises like improving the MTA's delivery of information to transit riders. (Ride the train these days, and all the new countdown clocks are hard to miss.) Even Richard Brodsky says good things about the guy.

    If Cuomo was trying to say that there's no political accountability for the MTA, he failed. And his diagnosis -- make the MTA a state agency -- is off-base. Putting the governor in charge of the MTA won't make the state legislature less obstinate about funding transit. Until someone with a big bully pulpit, like New York's next governor, starts describing the threat to transit riders accurately, elected officials will still be able to duck blame for fare hikes and service cuts.

    This anti-incumbent election season is as good a time as any for a statewide candidate to turn Albany into the punching bag for transit woes instead of the MTA. It shouldn't be hard to get some of these points across:

    Someone in public office has got to start telling voters what's actually dragging the transit system down. Otherwise legislators will just have thicker cover the next time transit gets shortchanged in Albany.

    Stay in touch

    Sign up for our free newsletter

    More from Streetsblog Empire State

    Friday Headlines: Meet You In The Lobby Edition

    The governor is over lobbyists. And more news.

    March 20, 2026

    Thursday Headlines: A Team Effort Edition

    One mustn't underestimate the Albany press, and more news.

    March 19, 2026

    ‘How Do You Do That to People?’ Crash Victims Speak Out Against Hochul’s Car Insurance Agenda

    "Her supposition that, 'There’s a lot of fraud and people are faking these injuries in order to get million-dollar payouts' is preposterous," said one crash victim.

    March 19, 2026

    Nassau County Police Are Enforcing an E-Bike Ban That Doesn’t Actually Exist

    With no clear legal rationale for the ban, Nassau County e-bike riders are left in a tough spot.

    March 18, 2026

    Why Some Congresspeople Want to Go Big on Greenways

    A new bill in Congress would multiply federal funding for walking and biking paths in states like New York — even as some powerful congresspeople threaten to take away what we've already got.

    March 18, 2026

    Wednesday Headlines: Keeping Up The Pressure Edition

    Things happen during budget negotiations, and advocates and lawmakers aren't letting their foot off the gas just yet. Plus more news.

    March 18, 2026
    See all posts