Buffalo native Kathy Hochul will become the next governor of New York State.
'She is acutely ready for this': Hochul prepared for call to become governor
Kathy Hochul has been traveling the state since 2015 as New York's lieutenant governor without a lot of attention, as happens with lieutenant governors everywhere.
But now intense scrutiny focuses upon Albany's second-in-command as she assumes the new and unofficial title of governor-in-waiting.
Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo could be ousted “in a matter of weeks, not months” if a committee charged with investigating the Democratic governor recommends the legal articles of impeachment to the full Assembly, Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie said Monday.
The list of Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul's biggest campaign donors includes a Rockefeller. There's also lots of money from big labor and business – and far more money from downstate than from Hochul's hometown of Buffalo.
A 'survivor:' Kathy Hochul has a history of surprising political victories
More often than not, the stars, moons and planets of New York's political heavens have aligned perfectly for Kathy Hochul.
From rising through former Chairman Joseph F. Crangle's Democratic organization, to her appointment and subsequent election as county clerk, to the three-way race allowing victory in a Republican congressional district, to her selection as Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo's running mate, opportunity has always followed Hochul.
Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul has some laughs with Estoria Dent, left, and Willie Milds, right, as she campaigns at the Park Slope Center for Successful Aging in Brooklyn on Aug. 30, 2018.
Representative Kathy Hochul checks out plans for renovation of an old water treatment plant on Lake Shore Road in September 1993.
Buffalo News file photo
Hochul at home, 2001
Kathy Hochul watches as her children Katie, 11, and Billy, 13, bounce on the trampoline at their home in Hamburg.
James P. McCoy / News file photo
Seaway Trail, 2006
Lake Erie Seaway Trail board members William McKeever and Kathy Hochul are seen taking in a new display board that will be mounted at the Town of Hamburg facility in July 2006.
Buffalo News file photo
Sept. 11 ceremony, 2007
Kathy Hochul, Erie County Clerk, speaks outside Amherst Town Hall during a ceremony dedicated to those lost during the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, in 2007.
Buffalo News file photo
Election night, 2007
Kathy Hochul is joined by her husband, William Jr., right, and son, William III, as she gives her victory speech Nov. 6, 2007, at the Ellicott Square Building.
Harry Scull Jr. / News file photo
Jimmy Griffin funeral, 2008
Inside the church at the funeral for Jimmy Griffin, from left locking hands are County Clerk Kathy Hochul, County Leg. Chairman Lynn Marinelli and County Legislator Kathy Konst.
Robert Kirkham/News file photo
Enhanced license promotion, 2008
Erie County Clerk Kathy Hochul at the Erie County Auto Bureau in Cheektowaga.
Sharon Cantillon/News file photo
Real estate closings, 2009
Erie County Clerk Kathy Hochul chats with customers in the packed room used for real estate closings at the Erie County Clerk's Office in 2009.
Buffalo News file photo
New passport office, 2010
Erie County Clerk Kathy Hochul unveils a new passport office inside the Northtown Auto Bureau in 2010.
Derek Gee/ News file photo
Re-election night, 2010
Erie County Clerk Kathy Hochul speaks in the Ellicott Square Building after being re-elected on Nov. 2, 2010.
Harry Scull Jr. / News file photo
26th Congressional debate, 2011
Candidates for New York's 26th Congressional District, Republican Jane Corwin, left, and Democrat Kathy Hochul participate in a debate at the WGRZ studios on May 12, 2011.
Derek Gee/ News file photo
Congressional candidate, 2011
Congressional candidate Kathy Hochul speaks at the United Auto Workers Hall in Amherst on May 21, 2011.
Buffalo News file photo
26th Congressional win, 2011
Kathy Hochul speaks at the UAW Hall after winning the 26th Congressional District seat on May 24, 2011.
Harry Scull Jr. / News file photo
Congresswoman-elect, 2011
Congresswoman-elect Kathy Hochul is surrounded by media as she thanks supporters at Hillview Restaurant in Depew on May 25, 2011.
Derek Gee/News file photo
Thanking staff, 2011
Congresswoman-elect Kathy Hochul sits down with a table of campaign workers at Hillview Restaurant in Depew on May 25, 2011.
Derek Gee/News file photo
General Pulaski unveiling, 2011
Colonel John Kubisty, Congresswoman Kathy Hochul, Leader of Polish Vets Stanley Blake and Congressman Brian Higgins unveil a portrait of General Pulaski on July 9, 2011.
Buffalo News file photo
Parade walk, 2011
Kathy Hochul walks in the Clarence Center Labor Day Parade on Sept. 5, 2011.
Harry Scull Jr./News file photo
On the job, 2011
Kathy Hochul walks to a meeting at the Capitol in Washington, D.C., on Oct. 12, 2011.
Harry Scull Jr./News file photo
Capitol Hill, 2011
Kathy Hochul on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., getting ready for a committee meeting.
Harry Scull Jr./News file photo
Flight 3407 families, 2011
Representatives Brian Higgins and Kathy Hochul share hugs with the family members of Flight 3407 after a press conference at the Larkin Building on Dec. 21, 2011.
Sharon Cantillon/News file photo
Air base support, 2012
Rep. Kathy Hochul talks with Col. Jim S. McCready, left, commander of the 107th Airlift Wing and Col. Allan L. Swartzmiller, right, commander of the 914th Airlift Wing while standing in front of a C-130 Hercules aircraft in a hangar at the Niagara Falls Air Reserve Station on Jan. 31, 2012.
Derek Gee/News file photo
Health care reform, 2012
Angelia Long looks on as Congresswoman Kathy Hochul speaks with seniors about her efforts to protect and strengthen Medicare on April 3, 2012.
John Hickey/News file photo
Niagara air base tour, 2012
State Sen. George Maziarz, Federal Aviation Administration Acting Administrator Michael Huerta, Niagara Falls Mayor Paul Dyster and Rep. Kathy Hochul tour the Niagara Falls Airport on April 13, 2012.
Derek Gee/News file photo
Medicaid, 2012
Rep. Kathy Hochul hands out donut holes, a symbolic snack, after discussing Medicaid with seniors at Oak Senior Housing in Clarence on Sept. 18, 2012.
Derek Gee/News file photo
Debate with Chris Collins, 2012
Chris Collins and Kathy Hochul debate on a set at WIVB studios on Oct. 17, 2012.
Robert Kirkham/News file photo
Early voting, 2012
U.S. Representative Kathy Hochul was off to an early start voting at Grace Lutheran Church in Hamburg on Nov. 6, 2012.
Robert Kirkham/News file photo
Headquarters on election night, 2012
Kathy Hochul speaks at her headquarters on Nov. 7, 2012.
Harry Scull Jr./News file photo
990 dedication, 2013
William Wilson, left, greets former Congresswoman Kathy Hochul before the start of a ceremony dedicating the 990 highway in Amherst as Staff Sgt. William R. Wilson III Memorial Highway in honor of his late son on Oct. 14, 2013.
Buffalo News file photo
United Auto Workers event, 2014
Kathy Hochul, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo and Erie County Executive Mark Poloncarz look on during an event at the United Auto Workers hall in Amherst on May 23, 2014.
Derek Gee/News file photo
Parade walk, 2014
Lieutenant governor candidate Kathy Hochul walks along Harlem Road in Cheektowaga during the Pulaski Parade on July 20, 2014.
Buffalo News file photo
Politicians on parade, 2014
Politicians including Kathy Hochul walk in the annual Labor Day Parade along Abbott Road on Sept. 1, 2014.
Buffalo News file photo
Voting, 2014
Kathy Hochul, center, signs in to vote as her husband William looks on at Marine Drive Apartments in Buffalo on Sept. 9, 2014.
John Hickey/News file photo
Victory stop, 2014
New York Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo, Buffalo Mayor Byron Brown, and then-Lt. Gov. candidate Kathy Hochul at a 2014 appearance. A new book by former top Cuomo aide Melissa DeRosa says that Cuomo wanted to pick Brown as his lieutenant governor running mate in 2014, but chose Hochul after hearing that federal investigators were eyeing Brown.
Buffalo News file photo
Bills tailgate, 2014
Gov. Andrew Cuomo, left, chats with Erie County Executive Mark Poloncarz, second from left, Bills President Russ Brandon, center, Lt. Gov. candidate Kathy Hochul and John Koelmel during a private tailgate party before the game against the New England Patriots on Oct. 12, 2014.
Mark Mulville/News file photo
Gubernatorial debate, 2014
New York Lt. Gov. candidate Kathy Hochul, left, and Buffalo Mayor Byron Brown talk prior to the start of a gubernatorial debate sponsored by The Buffalo News and WNED-WBFO at WNED Studios on Oct. 22, 2014.
Derek Gee/News file photo
Going to vote, 2014
Candidate for Lt. Governor Kathy Hochul addresses supporters as she and her husband William went to vote at Marine Drive Apartments in Buffalo on Nov. 4, 2014.
John Hickey/News file photo
Sexual violence forum, 2015
Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, center, Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul, left, and Mary Murphy, executive director of the Family Justice Center, right, speak with students and local officials as they work to combat sexual violence on college campuses on March 2, 2015.
Mark Mulville/News file photo
UB medical campus, 2016
New York Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul, Gov. Andrew Cuomo and UB President Satish Tripathi chat as they walk across High Street during a "topping out" ceremony to mark the completion of the steel frame of the new UB medical school on the Buffalo Niagara Medical Campus on March 22, 2016.
Derek Gee/News file photo
Hillary Clinton campaign, 2016
New York Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul speaks at a rally for presidential candidate Hillary Clinton at the Buffalo Transportation Pierce Arrow Museum on April 8, 2016.
Derek Gee/News file photo
Opioid event, 2016
Flanked by state and local officials, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo signs new legislation to combat the opioid epidemic during a ceremonial bill signing at Evergreen Commons on June 22, 2016. From left are Patrick Seche, Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul, Erie County Executive Mark Poloncarz, Cuomo, Buffalo Mayor Byron Brown, Assemblyman Sean Ryan, State Senator Michael Ranzenhoffer and Anne Constantino.
Derek Gee/News file photo
Confer Plastics, 2017
Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul stops to chat with assistant foreman Dwayne Cragle during a tour of the company's facility in North Tonawanda on Feb. 2, 2017.
Derek Gee/News file photo
Lake Ontario flooding, 2017
Then-Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul was briefed on flooding and high water levels in Olcott by Dean E. Lapp II, Niagara County highway chief, as workers built up the Lake Ontario shoreline on May 12, 2017.
John Hickey/News file photo
43North event, 2017
Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul addresses the crowd at the finals of the 43North competition at Shea's Performing Arts Center on Oct. 5, 2017.
Sharon Cantillon/News file photo
UB medical school, 2017
Dignitaries cut the ribbon for the new UB Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences on Dec. 12, 2017. From left are Buffalo Mayor Byron Brown, Delaware North Chairman Jeremy Jacobs, Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul, UB President Satish Tripathi, medical school Dean Michael Caine and a student.
Derek Gee/News file photo
Birthday greeting, 2018
Russell J. Salvatore, left, greets Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul, attending with husband William J. Hochul, right, at his 85th birthday gala on the main gaming floor of the Seneca Niagara Casino and Hotel in Niagara Falls on April 8, 2018.
Robert Kirkham/News file photo
Canalside anniversary, 2018
Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul and Buffalo Mayor Byron Brown pick up pails of New York City water to pour into the Central Wharf to rec-reate the "Wedding of the Waters" during an event to mark the 10-year anniversary of Canalside at the Central Wharf, July 2, 2018.
Derek Gee/Buffalo News
Primary night, 2018
Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul arrives on primary night Thursday, Sept. 13, 2018, at Democratic headquarters at 671 Seneca St., in Buffalo.
John Hickey/Buffalo News
Albright-Knox expansion, 2019
Albright-Knox Art Gallery Director Janne Sirén, left, speaks as New York Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul and benefactor Jeffrey Gundlach look on during an event to announce additional funding for the AK360 campus expansion and development project, Friday, Jan. 11, 2019.
Derek Gee/Buffalo News
Conservation Partnership Grants, 2019
From left, State Sen. Tim Kennedy, Nancy Smith, executive director of Western New York Land Conservancy, and then-Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul, walk a trail at Red Jacket River Front Park in Buffalo in 2019.
John Hickey/Buffalo News
Autoworkers strike, 2019
DNC Chairman Tom Perez, along with Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul in Tonawanda, Wednesday, Sept. 18, 2019.
Robert Kirkham/Buffalo News
Veterans Thanksgiving, 2019
Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul serves desserts during the annual veterans and families Thanksgiving dinner in the cafeteria of the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Buffalo on Sunday, Nov. 24, 2019.
Robert Kirkham/Buffalo News
Masks matter, 2020
Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul held a news conference explaining the importance of wearing a mask at the University at Buffalo Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences on Monday, June 29, 2020.
James P. McCoy/Buffalo News
Seneca One development, 2020
Kathy Hochul toured construction with developer Douglas Jemal, owner of Seneca One in Buffalo, Wednesday, July 8, 2020.
John Hickey / Buffalo News
Bethlehem Steel site cleanup, 2020
Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul held a news conference announcing a comprehensive cleanup of the former Bethlehem Steel site in Lackawanna on Tuesday, Oct. 13, 2020.
James P. McCoy / Buffalo News
ECMC vaccinations, 2021
Pharmacist Ashley Halloran shows Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul the freezer where vaccines are stored on Friday, Jan. 8, 2021.
Sharon Cantillon / Buffalo News
Sworn in as governor, 2021
New York Chief Judge Janet DiFiore swears in Kathy Hochul, left, as the first woman to be New York's governor as her husband, Bill, holds a Bible during a ceremonial swearing-in in the Red Room at the State Capitol on Tuesday, Aug. 24, 2021.
Harry Scull Jr./News file photo
Cheering on the Bills, 2021
New York Gov. Kathy Hochul watches the Bills season opener with Highmark Health with CEO David Anderson at Highmark Stadium in Orchard Park, Sunday, Sept. 12, 2021.
Harry Scull Jr./News file photo
Buffalo mass shooting response, 2022
Gov. Kathy Hochul speaks at a news conference on May, 14, 2022, about the mass shooting at a Tops supermarket.
Buffalo News file photo
Honoring victims and survivors of Tops shooting, 2022
Gov. Kathy Hochul hugs Charles Everhart Sr., whose grandson Zaire Goodman was injured in the Tops shooting. Hochul attended service at True Bethel Baptist Church on Sunday, May 15, 2022.
Buffalo News file photo
Visiting Tops, 2022
President Biden and first lady Jill Biden visit with local officials including Buffalo Mayor Byron Brown, Sen. Charles Schumer, Gov. Kathy Hochul, Erie County Executive Mark Poloncarz and Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand during a visit Tuesday, May 17, 2022, to the Tops on Jefferson Avenue.
Buffalo News file photo
Election night celebration, 2022
New York Gov. Kathy Hochul speaks to supporters during her election night party, Tuesday, Nov. 8, 2022, in New York. Hochul won a four-year term, defeating Republican Lee Zeldin.
Associated Press
Honoring first responders, community heroes, 2023
Felicia Williams of AMR Ambulances stands for a photograph with Erie County Executive Mark Poloncarz, Mayor Byron Brown, and Gov. Kathy Hochul after accepting a medal for public service during a program to honor first responders and community heroes for their actions during the December 2022 blizzard at Buffalo State University on Jan. 21, 2023.
Libby March/News file photo
Bills stadium groundbreaking, 2023
Gov. Kathy Hochul takes her place for the ceremonial groundbreaking for the new Bills stadium, Monday, June 5, 2023.
Derek Gee/News file photo
Buffalo AKG Art Museum opening, 2023
Director Janne Siren and Gov. Kathy Hochul chat during a tour of the new Gundlach Building at the grand opening of the new Buffalo AKG Art Museum on Monday, June 12, 2023.
Derek Gee/News file photo
Route 33 announcement, 2024
Gov. Kathy Hochul speaks during the announcement that the project to cover a portion of Route 33 has been officially approved, Friday, Feb. 16, 2024.
Derek Gee/News file photo
Buffalo police station visit, 2025
Gov. Kathy Hochul listens as Police Commissioner Joseph Gramaglia makes a presentation on the Buffalo Police Department’s strategies for reducing gun violence at the District C police station in Buffalo, Jan. 11, 2025.
Libby March/News file photo
Hochul berates Cuomo's 'repulsive and unlawful behavior' – while she plots her future
Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul handled the attorney general's report on sexual harassment in the governor's office just the same way she's handled such allegations against Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo from the start: with caution.
Kathy Hochul out front addressing pandemic, but not at center of decision-making
Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul has been a public face for the state's response to the coronavirus pandemic in Western New York. She helped drive home Gov. Andrew Cuomo's messaging when the region was shut down last spring and was ostensibly responsible for assessing the reopening of Western New York as the weather warmed.
She's a named leader of the Western New York vaccine hub. She held news conferences and showed up at pizza joints, hospitals, shops and churches to help explain the state's position on the Covid-19 response, state reopening guidance and pop-up vaccination clinics.
Long a #MeToo movement champion, Hochul stays largely silent on Cuomo
Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul of Buffalo has had very little to say about the sexual harassment allegations against Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo – which could, in a worst-case scenario for Cuomo, make the former congresswoman from Buffalo the state's first female governor.
But Hochul has had plenty to say about sexual harassment and assault over the years, with most of it revolving around the theme: "Enough is enough."
Democratic leaders, under pressure from Republicans in the political minority as well as a growing number of Democratic members of the Assembly and Senate, pushed up a change to diminish the governor’s existing authority.
If Cuomo resigns, could Kathy Hochul thrive as governor?
This story, about Kathy Hochul's six years as lieutenant governor, was originally published in March after the allegations against Cuomo were raised.
Kathy Hochul hasn't made many headlines in her six years as lieutenant governor – but she's made unlikely friends in unlikely places, from the Town of Arcade to the borough of Brooklyn.
Democratic New York Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo, right, celebrates with Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul after defeating Republican challenger Rob Astorino at Democratic election headquarters in New York on Nov. 4, 2014.
Albany is rife with speculation that if Kathy Hochul were to succeed Gov. Andrew Cuomo, downstate Democratic leaders would push her to not run for reelection.
Visits to all 62 New York counties at least once, and sometimes many times. Some 524 media interviews. More than 120 calls with Western New York officials and medical professionals about the Covid-19 pandemic.
It was all in a year's work for Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul of Buffalo – in a year when a pandemic made all of that work more challenging. Hochul has long seen herself as Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo's eyes and ears in the state's far reaches, and she said she wasn't going to let that role lapse even though the springtime coronavirus shutdown hampered her travels for a while.
Hochul raises actual profile at virtual Dem convention – and vows to stick around
WASHINGTON – Virtual schmoozing isn't really a thing, but you'd never really know it by the pace Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul kept during this week's virtual Democratic National Convention.
On Monday, Hochul – who chairs the Democratic Lieutenant Governors Association – took part in an online panel with colleagues from Illinois and Nevada. The next morning, she made statewide headlines – and drew a rebuke from Fox News host Sean Hannity's website – with a tweet demanding that President Trump rescind his pardon of Susan B. Anthony. Hours later, she appeared on the convention's national broadcast, standing on the Brooklyn waterfront with Manhattan's nighttime skyline behind her as part of the New York contingent in the roll call of states that nominated Joe Biden for President.
National political conventions, even virtual affairs, always feature myriad side attractions that focus attention on favorite party topics. Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul joined the effort Monday on a panel on Zoom titled: “Women in Leadership in the States: A Conversation.”
New York State Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul toured the Jacobs School of Medicine at UB. While there, she explained the importance of wearing a mask a…
Hochul defends go-slow approach to reopening malls, theaters and gyms
As Western New York enters phase four of its reopening on Tuesday, it's not clear how soon the businesses that have been left out will get the green light.
Movie theaters, gyms and malls are frustrated at their exclusion. Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul said Monday the state is adopting a cautious approach, wary of backsliding in its progress combating Covid-19 infections.
Some discussion topics for your next virtual cocktail party:
• Since so many viewers of the daily “Lunchtime with Andrew Show” have inquired about Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul during Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s Covid-19 briefings, the Politics Column posed the question last week during a telephone interview.
Lt. Gov. Hochul says yes to legalizing pot, but no to ever partaking herself
New York is ready to say yes to recreational marijuana, but Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul says she'll still just say no.
The Buffalo resident, a former member of Congress and Erie County clerk, told the Daily News this week that she's never tried pot and she doesn't plan to do so if it's legalized in the state.
New York City becomes battleground in Hochul's latest tough race
NEW YORK – There was a time when Kathy Hochul worried only about Hamburg, the small town where she grew up and first entered politics.
But everything changed after she rose to lieutenant governor of New York. Now the one-time Town Council member finds herself in bustling places like Brooklyn, working overtime to convince big city voters that someone from a suburb on the other side of the state can address homelessness, fair housing, income inequality and deteriorating subways.
Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul, an Erie County Democrat, had not raised a penny for her campaign since the fall of 2014. That all changed on May 2, and she’s been on a blistering fundraising pace ever since.
Driving it: the serious Democratic primary challenge she is facing for her job from Jumaane Williams, a New York City Council member from Brooklyn.
Albany – Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul said – again – today that she is running for re-election with Gov. Andrew Cuomo in the fall campaigns.
“The governor and I are running together,’’ Hochul said this afternoon on the Senate floor after presiding over a swearing-in ceremony of two Democrats elected in last week’s special elections.
Amid political chatter, Democratic women push Hochul's re-election bid
ALBANY – Kathy Hochul, the state lieutenant governor who has logged tens of thousands of miles promoting Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo and his policies, again is facing questions about her political future after the governor recently promoted her as an ideal candidate to run for Congress.
That’s not sitting well with some who, like Hochul, are female and members of the Democratic Party who have fought to ascend the male-dominated political clubhouse in New York.
ALBANY – It’s semi-official: Gov. Andrew Cuomo and Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul want to stay together.
A few weeks after Hochul, a Democrat from Buffalo, said she fully intends to run again this November with Cuomo at the top of the ticket, Cuomo on Thursday said he hopes that happens again.
Hochul makes it clear: She will run for re-election
ALBANY — Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul dismisses talk that she will not run as Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo’s running mate and instead challenge Republican U.S. Rep. Chris Collins this fall as “political fodder of the chattering class.”
"My choice is to continue on as lieutenant governor and to run for re-election with the governor and not be distracted by individuals who would like me to consider beating Chris Collins this year,’’ Hochul said in an interview with The Buffalo News.
Robert McCarthy: Hochul and Collins rekindle 2012 battle
These are good days for Buffalo’s Kathy Hochul.
On Wednesday, the lieutenant governor presided over groundbreaking ceremonies for the new Explore & More Children’s Museum at Canalside before returning to Albany. Then on Thursday, she traveled back to Syracuse to promote Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s opioid abuse and college affordability programs.
If there were any questions about the close relationship between Kathy Hochul and Hillary Clinton, they were settled last month at the Hyatt Regency Buffalo.
That’s when the lieutenant governor introduced the presidential candidate at the big fundraiser that gained about $400,000 for the Democrats’ leading presidential contender. After a relationship dating from Clinton’s Senate efforts and Hochul’s days as a member of the Hamburg Town Board, Hochul is now assuming another significant role as surrogate campaigner in the key early contests of Iowa and New Hampshire.
Kathy Hochul leads new effort against campus sexual assault
ALBANY – In her first major assignment of the Cuomo administration, Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul will lead an intensive effort to pass legislation in this session requiring private colleges to go beyond the campus and engage with law enforcement in cases of alleged sexual assault.
The lieutenant governor, a Buffalo resident, headed to Long Island on Wednesday afternoon after Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo announced earlier in the day his full-court press to gain the same level of protection for women at private colleges as he obtained for State University of New York students last year.
Can Hochul become a Gillibrand? Only if the governor lets her
It sounds like Kathy Hochul will be busy.
Nine regional economic development councils need managing. She wants to help the state’s veterans and promote Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo’s women’s equality agenda. And then there’s the lieutenant governor’s one constitutional responsibility: presiding over the State Senate, a time-consuming task with all the daily excitement of watching a broken clock.
Hochul makes history for herself and for Western New York
NEW YORK – Kathy Hochul will become the first lieutenant governor from Buffalo in 120 years thanks to Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo’s Election Day win in his bid for a second term.
And she seemed very happy about it all, embracing her daughter, Katie, in their hotel room upon hearing of Cuomo’s victory shortly after 9 p.m. Tuesday, and taking the stage at a ballroom at the Sheraton New York about an hour later to declare victory and look forward.
Gov. Andrew Cuomo and running mate Kathy Hochul celebrate their election victory with democrats at the Sheraton New York Times Square in New Y…
An upstate-downstate clash for lieutenant governor
NEW YORK – In the eyes of Tim Wu, there are two Kathy Hochuls: the pro-gun, anti-immigrant conservative who served as a Democratic member of Congress from Western New York, and the conservative who’s masquerading as a progressive gun control advocate and champion of immigrants in hopes of becoming Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo’s lieutenant governor.
ALBANY – When it comes to promoting his running mate, Republican gubernatorial candidate Rob Astorino makes sure media outlets around the state regularly know the whereabouts of Chris Moss.
But Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo has taken a different approach with Kathy Hochul, the former U.S. congresswoman from Erie County tapped in May by Cuomo his lieutenant governor candidate.
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Former Rep. Kathleen C. Hochul is joining M&T Bank as vice president of government relations. She says her new job is all about what her old one was: bringing jobs to Western New York.
Hochul, who lost her House re-election bid in November in a close race against former Erie County Executive Chris Collins, will represent M&T in building relationships with local, state and federal officials, the bank said Wednesday. She will work out of M&T’s headquarters in downtown Buffalo.
A year after bitter defeat in county executive race, Chris Collins closes win over Hochul
One year ago today, Chris Collins found himself wallowing in a self-described "funk" – his promising political career in tatters.
The Republican county executive had just lost his re-election bid to Democrat Mark C. Poloncarz. A return to politics, he acknowledged, appeared unlikely.
First-term Democratic Congresswoman Kathleen C. Hochul conceded to Republican challenger Chris Collins early this morning after their torrid race for the 27th District ended in one of the closest congressional finishes in Western New York history.
“Early this morning I called Chris Collins and congratulated him on being elected to Congress,” Hochul said in a statement emailed about 2 a.m. to The Buffalo News.
Incumbent Congresswoman Kathleen C. Hochul showed up early to cast her vote at Grace Lutheran Church on McKinley Parkway in Hamburg this morning. Elections inspector Nancy McCarthy, above, helped sign her in. Polls have shown Hochul to be in a virtual tie with Republican challenger Chris Collins in the 27th District race, and voters in the farflung district, which includes parts of eight Western New York counties, may face a long wait for results. (Photos by Robert Kirkham/Buffalo News)
Aglow in a stellar start Kathy Hochul has been a bright light since her election six months ago, but she's not distracted by talk of her as a party leader because 'I know who put me here'
When Kathleen C. Hochul won a special House election six months ago, she stood for a moment at the center of the political universe.
And it's a place she has kept walking back into ever since.
WASHINGTON -- If you believe the 10-second-long video being shopped by Republicans Tuesday, Democratic congressional candidate Kathy Hochul thinks former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has "done a great job for this country." Period.
But in the real-life, fully-in-context version of the quote, taken from Hochul's appearance on MSNBC's Hardball with Chris Matthews on Tuesday, Hochul said of Pelosi, "You know, she's done a great job for this country, but I want people to know that I'm a very independent Democrat." Later in the interview, Hochul spelled out how she disagrees with Democratic leaders on tax increases for people making less than $500,000 a year.
People who have worked with Hochul over the years tend to say the same things about her – that she's hard-working, competent and unusually kind for someone in a profession never really known for kindness.
Here are just a few matters that will take up her time and define her abilities to govern under fire in a geographically and politically diverse state that will still be reeling from the scandals that led to the resignation of Andrew M. Cuomo.