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Trump has now been in office for six months, for the second time. Here are the highlights

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President Trump has been in office for six months, delivering on campaign promises, securing his «big beautiful bill» by his self-imposed deadline and taking decisive action on the world stage.
The president was sworn into office Jan. 20, and the Trump administration has operated at warp speed since Day One.
Key tenets of Trump’s first 100 days included imposing harsh tariffs on Chinese imports, starting and continuing peace negotiations between Russia and Ukraine, and cracking down on border security amid a mass deportation initiative.
CONGRESS SENDS $9B SPENDING CUTS PACKAGE TO TRUMP’S DESK AFTER LATE-NIGHT HOUSE VOTE
The next chapter of the second Trump administration began, with the House of Representatives, as promised, passing Trump’s «One Big Beautiful Bill,» before Memorial Day, sending it to the Senate for weeks of negotiations.
The president was sworn into office Jan. 20, and the Trump administration has operated at warp speed since Day One. (Getty Images)
The Senate made its changes, approved the legislation and kicked it back to the House just in time for the lower chamber to pass the bill before Trump’s self-imposed Fourth of July deadline.
The president welcomed House and Senate Republican leadership to the White House July 4 for a signing ceremony on his landmark legislation, which included key provisions that would permanently establish individual and business tax breaks included in his 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, and incorporate new tax deductions to cut duties on tips and overtime pay.
Trump’s second administration has also focused on the new Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), which was run by Elon Musk. DOGE proposed cuts to programs that the Trump administration chalked up to wasteful and excessive government spending.

President Trump has been in office for six months, delivering on campaign promises, securing his «big beautiful bill» by his self-imposed deadline and taking decisive action on the world stage. (Ken Cedeno/Reuters)
Congressional lawmakers prepped a rescissions package — a bill to codify those DOGE cuts into law. Congress passed that package by its deadline.
TRUMP JUGGLES CHINA FRAMEWORK TRADE DEAL, LA’S ANTI-ICE RIOTS AND ISRAEL’S IRAN STRIKE IN 21ST WEEK IN OFFICE
Trump signed the package Friday, which blocks $8 billion in funding to the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) and $1 billion to the Corporation for Public Broadcasting for the remainder of the fiscal year. The dollars had been allocated by Congress for the duration of fiscal year 2025.
As for Musk, his «special government employee» window expired, and he returned to the private sector. Shortly after, Musk started a short-lived feud with the president, who chose not to prolong the tensions. Trump only hit his former ally briefly, and carried on with business as usual, leaving Musk to a lonely rant on social media.

DOGE leader Elon Musk’s «special government employee» window expired, and he returned to the private sector. (Brendan Smialowski/AFP via Getty Images)
Meanwhile, on the world stage, the president ordered strikes on Iran’s nuclear facilities.
Trump’s historic precision strikes on Iran’s nuclear sites in June hit their targets and «destroyed» and «badly damaged» the facilities’ critical infrastructure — an assessment agreed upon by Iran’s Foreign Ministry, Israel and the United States.
But Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei recently issued his latest threat against the U.S. and «its dog on a leash, the Zionist regime (Israel),» saying that Iran’s attack on U.S. Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar was just the beginning of what Tehran could throw at Washington. He warned that «an even bigger blow could be inflicted on the U.S. and others.»
Iran has until the end of August to agree to a nuclear deal with the United States and its allies, Fox News has learned.

U.S. Special Envoy Steve Witkoff discusses strikes on Iran’s nuclear facilities on ‘The Ingraham Angle.’ (Fox News / The Ingraham Angle)
Secretary of State Marco Rubio and the foreign ministers of France, Germany and the United Kingdom set the de facto deadline, according to three sources with knowledge of a call Wednesday among the officials.
If Iran fails to agree to a deal, it would trigger the «snapback» mechanism that automatically reimposes all sanctions previously imposed by the United Nations Security Council.
The sanctions were lifted under the 2015 Iran deal.
IRAN FACES AUGUST DEADLINE TO ACCEPT COMPREHENSIVE NUCLEAR DEAL OR FACE RENEWED UN SANCTIONS
In his first six months as president, Trump also signed a sweeping order blocking travel to the U.S. from nearly 20 countries identified as high-risk for terrorism, visa abuse and failure to share security information.
The travel restrictions — announced under executive order 14161 — apply to nationals from 12 countries, including Afghanistan, Iran, Somalia, Libya and Yemen, all deemed «very high risk» due to terrorist activity, weak or hostile governments, and high visa overstay rates.
Domestically, the president has focused efforts on securing the border, with border crossings at a record low.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection reported the lowest number of border crossings in recorded history in June. Nationwide, there were 25,228 CBP encounters, the lowest monthly number the agency has recorded, including a «historical low» of 8,024 apprehensions. Encounters include legal ports of entry, whereas apprehensions are arrests of those coming into the United States illegally.
As for tariffs, the Trump administration had leveled tariffs as high as 145% on Chinese goods following the president’s reciprocal tariff plans in April, when China retaliated against the U.S. with tariffs of its own. China and the U.S. reached a preliminary trade agreement in May, which Trump said China violated in a Truth Social post at the end of May.
An agreement was reached between the U.S. and China in June, which includes China supplying rare earth materials to the U.S., and that Trump will «work closely» with Chinese President Xi Jinping «to open up China to American Trade.»
«Full magnets, and any necessary rare earths, will be supplied, up front, by China,» Trump said in June. «Likewise, we will provide to China what was agreed to, including Chinese students using our colleges and universities (which has always been good with me!). We are getting a total of 55% tariffs, China is getting 10%. Relationship is excellent!»

Outside the White House, Trump administration agencies have delivered on promises. (Mark Schiefelbein/The Associated Press)
The president also celebrated the U.S. Army’s 250th birthday with a massive parade in Washington June 14 — kicking off a yearlong extravaganza leading up to America’s 250th birthday.
Outside the White House, Trump administration agencies have delivered on promises.
OBAMA ADMIN ‘MANUFACTURED’ INTELLIGENCE TO CREATE 2016 RUSSIAN ELECTION INTERFERENCE NARRATIVE, DOCUMENTS SHOW
The Department of Education unveiled plans to scale down its workforce, terminating nearly 1,400 Education Department employees. The Supreme Court upheld Trump’s move.
The Justice Department released the audio of former President Joe Biden’s interview with former Special Counsel Robert Hur. Hur was investigating Biden for alleged improper retention of classified records.
Congressional lawmakers had been demanding the audio of that interview be released since 2024, after the transcript of Biden’s interview was littered with mistakes and revealed significant memory lapses.
The Department of Justice also has started an investigation into Biden’s pardons his final days in office to determine whether they are valid. Fox News Digital has learned the pardons, in his final weeks in office, were signed by autopen, with just one signed by hand — the pardon for his son Hunter.
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Trump has also directed Attorney General Pam Bondi to make public any relevant grand jury testimony relating to the Jeffrey Epstein case.
Over at the FBI, CIA and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, intelligence officials and political appointees are in the process of declassifying all records related to the Trump–Russia investigation, also known as «Crossfire Hurricane.»
Fox News Digital also exclusively reported that former FBI Director James Comey and former CIA Director John Brennan are under criminal investigation relating to their actions tied to the Trump–Russia probe.
Fox News’ Emma Colton, Diana Stancy, Elizabeth Elkind and Louis Casiano contributed to this report.
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North Korea launches ballistic missiles days before Trump’s visit to the peninsula

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North Korea test fired multiple short-range ballistic missiles on Wednesday, just days before President Donald Trump is expected to meet with Chinese President Xi Jinping and other leaders in South Korea.
South Korea’s military said the missiles, which were the first launched by its neighbor in five months, originated from an area south of Pyongyang and flew about 220 miles toward the northeast. The missiles did not land in the sea, the military added.
Trump is set to leave for Asia at the end of the week in what will be his first trip to the region during his second term. He plans to go to Malaysia first for a regional summit, and then head to Japan before traveling on to South Korea for an Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation meeting.
The president is expected to visit the South Korean city of Gyeongju ahead of the summit for bilateral meetings with leaders including Xi and South Korean President Lee Jae Myung.
TRUMP CLAIMS PUTIN, XI, KIM ARE CONSPIRING AGAINST THE US AFTER MILITARY PARADE IN CHINA
North Korea, whose leader Kim Jong Un is shown left, conducted missile launches just days ahead of a visit by President Donald Trump to South Korea. (China Daily via Reuters/Korea News Service via AP; Ahn Young-joon/AP; Alex Brandon/AP)
South Korea’s military said Wednesday that it remains ready to repel any provocations by North Korea based on its alliance with the United States.
Japan’s Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi also told reporters that Tokyo was closely communicating with Washington and Seoul, including by sharing real-time missile warning data.
Wednesday’s ballistic missile launches by North Korea were the first of their kind since the country tested short-range systems on May 8 that simulated nuclear counterstrikes against U.S. and South Korean forces.
NUCLEAR THREATS FROM NORTH KOREA LOOM QUIETLY BEHIND WARS IN GAZA AND UKRAINE AT UNGA

A North Korean government photo shows what it says is a new intercontinental ballistic missile called the Hwasong-20 during a military parade on Oct. 10, 2025, in Pyongyang, North Korea. (Korean Central News Agency/Korea News Service via AP)
Earlier this month, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un displayed a new long-range intercontinental ballistic missile at a military parade in Pyongyang that included foreign leaders.
The yet-to-be-tested Hwasong-20 was described by the state-owned Korean Central News Agency as having the «most powerful nuclear strategic weapons system.»
The government also displayed shorter-range ballistic, cruise and supersonic missiles at the military parade, which marked 80 years since the founding of the Worker’s Party.
Kim said at the parade that the military «must continue to evolve into an invincible force that eliminates all threats.»

A TV screen shows North Korea’s missile launch during a news program at Seoul Railway Station in Seoul, South Korea, on Wednesday, Oct. 22, 2025. (Ahn Young-joon/AP)
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The foreign dignitaries at the parade included Chinese Premier Li Qiang, former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev and Vietnam’s Communist Party chief To Lam.
Fox News Digital’s Brie Stimson and The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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INTERNACIONAL
Bruce Springsteen tiene su película película biográfica, pero no es la que se podía esperar

Durante meses del año pasado, Jeremy Allen White tuvo a Bruce Springsteen hablándole constantemente al oído.
White escuchó una y otra vez la narración en audio de 18 horas de las memorias de Springsteen, Born to Run, como parte de una intensa preparación para interpretarlo en la próxima película Springsteen: música de ninguna parte, que narra las dificultades del ícono del rock para crear su álbum Nebraska en 1982.
“Eso sonaba en casa todo el tiempo”, recordó White, conocido por ser el protagonista de la serie The Bear, en una reciente entrevista por video. “Cuando salía a correr, cuando caminaba, cuando preparaba la cena. Me ayudaba mucho tener su voz conmigo todo el tiempo”.
Springsteen: música de ninguna parte, escrita y dirigida por Scott Cooper (Crazy Heart), ofrece algunos momentos propios de la épica biográfica del rock, como un White empapado en sudor cantando “Born to Run” ante una multitud o improvisando para un público devoto en el club Stone Pony de la costa de Nueva Jersey.
Pero al centrarse en Nebraska —una galería de personajes frágiles en clave acústica— y el colapso depresivo que Springsteen atravesó tras su grabación, la película se convierte en una exploración sobre la fragilidad de la salud mental y los límites del arte como sostén vital. En una escena tomada directamente de las memorias del músico, el hombre generalmente visto como el ideal del rock entra en la consulta de un terapeuta y rompe a llorar en silencio.
El objetivo de Cooper, dijo, “nunca fue contar la historia completa de Bruce Springsteen”. “Me esforzaba por hacer algo más tranquilo y más interior, sobre este momento muy específico en la vida de Bruce”, añadió el director, “sobre un hombre que enfrenta algunos de los traumas que arrastra desde su infancia”.
Springsteen: música de ninguna parte marca la primera vez que “El jefe” permite que su historia sea dramatizada en una película, y no es casualidad que Nebraska sea el núcleo. Springsteen ha dicho que considera este álbum quizás el mejor, aunque siempre ha sido una rareza y un misterio en su obra.
Compuesto mientras comenzaba a trabajar las canciones que dos años después integrarían Born in the USA, Springsteen grabó Nebraska en solitario, con una grabadora simple de cuatro pistas, en una casa alquilada en Colts Neck, cerca de Freehold, en Nueva Jersey. El músico trabajó en ella durante los meses posteriores a la exitosa gira de The River, su primer álbum número uno, bajo la presión de sostener su popularidad.

Las grabaciones de temas como “Atlantic City”, “Johnny 99″ y “Nebraska” —relatos de crimen, soledad y personajes en busca de esperanza— fueron concebidas como maquetas a desarrollar junto a la E Street Band. Pero Springsteen quedó cautivado por el sonido crudo y fantasmal de las cintas, y tras intentos frustrados de rehacerlas en el estudio, decidió que la versión original saldría tal cual, a pesar de la escasa fidelidad. En la película, los productores lidian con la dificultad de convertir el casete en un master comercialmente viable.
Para la discográfica y su entorno, fue una decisión desconcertante y arriesgada para un artista en ascenso; una jugada que, bajo la mentalidad común de la industria, podía suponer un freno a su carrera. Springsteen incluso insistió en que Nebraska no fuese promocionado con sencillos, giras ni entrevistas.
Warren Zanes, músico y académico que conoció Nebraska siendo un adolescente en la banda Del Fuegos en los años 80, afirmó que, aunque ama el disco, siempre le costó entenderlo como cambio de rumbo:“Fue, para mí, uno de los mayores giros a la izquierda en la historia de la música popular”.
Tras leer la descripción de Nebraska en las memorias de Springsteen, seguida de un relato profundo de una crisis emocional, Zanes comenzó a escribir un libro sobre el álbum, entrevistando a Springsteen y a su mánager de toda la vida, Jon Landau. Ese libro, titulado Deliver Me From Nowhere (Líbrame de la nada, título original en inglés de la película también) se publicó en 2023 y Cooper lo utilizó como base para el guion.

La película retrata a Springsteen en este periodo como un personaje solitario y atribulado, pero productivo, inspirado en el filme Badlands (Malas tierras) de Terrence Malick (1973), el dúo punk Suicide y su propia biografía. Springsteen compone las canciones de Nebraska mientras revive recuerdos de infancia ligados a su padre, melancólico y bebedor, que aparece en un flashback en blanco y negro. Surge una relación con Faye, una madre soltera de Nueva Jersey, pero el músico no logra comprometerse con ella. (Faye, figura compuesta, es el único personaje principal que no está basado en una persona real).
“Bruce estaba obsesionado, no en lo gótico, sino en lo espiritual”, explicó Cooper, usando una gorra de Stone Pony. “Creo que lo obsesionaba su padre, emocionalmente distante, ese mito estadounidense de quienes persiguen el sueño americano y no lo logran”.
Cooper indicó que tanto él como Springsteen decidieron no construir una hagiografía, sino mostrar las luchas y fracasos del artista, además de sus logros. “No me interesaba mitificarlo”, declaró el director. “No estaba persiguiendo al Jefe. Busco al hombre solo en una habitación en Colts Neck con una grabadora tratando de darle sentido a su vida y a sus traumas”.
Las vivencias de Springsteen con la depresión, antes poco conocidas, se hicieron públicas en sus memorias de 2016. La relación con su padre ocupó un lugar central en Springsteen on Broadway, su espectáculo de 2017.

“Hace mucho tiempo, las defensas que construí para soportar el estrés de mi infancia, para salvar lo que tenía de mí mismo, dejaron de ser útiles”, escribió Springsteen en ese libro. “Me basé en ellas para aislarme, sellar mi alienación, aislarme de la vida, controlar a los demás y contener mis emociones hasta un punto perjudicial. Ahora el cobrador llama a la puerta, y su pago será en lágrimas”.
Cooper aseguró que White fue la única opción para el papel principal. “Pensaron que podía expresar una historia compleja con calma y mucha intensidad física”, dijo el protagonista.
El actor dudó. El papel exigía interpretación musical, pero White no era cantante ni había tocado guitarra. “Le dije: ‘Me gustaría hacer esto contigo, adoro a Bruce, ¿pero no prefieres a alguien que ya sepa hacerlo?’”.
Hasta que Cooper le transmitió que Springsteen mismo quería que lo interpretara. “En ese punto pensé: ‘No voy a interponerme en su camino’”.
Durante seis meses, White estudió guitarra y tomó clases diarias de canto con Eric Vetro, entrenador vocal de celebridades, responsable de la preparación de Austin Butler en Elvis y de Timothée Chalamet para Un completo desconocido.
En la película, la voz de White se escucha cuando canta en pantalla; en otras escenas es la voz de Springsteen.

Se ve a White con cabello desordenado, hombros musculosos encorvados en una campera de cuero negro, conduciendo un Camaro Z28 por las carreteras de Nueva Jersey, una imagen del Jefe de unos 30 años que sorprendió a sus compañeros de elenco.
“Se concentró por completo”, dijo Odessa Young, quien encarna a Faye. “Está muy presente y concentrado, y verlo interpretar a Bruce resultó casi inquietante”.
Gran parte del filme gira en torno a la relación casi fraternal de Springsteen con Landau, inicialmente crítico musical que luego se convirtió en su mánager y productor. Su colaboración histórica, desde 1975, es una de las más largas y exitosas del rock.
Jeremy Strong (Succession, El Aprendiz) interpreta a Landau como un artista empático y pragmático. Al oír Nebraska por primera vez, el representante intenta comprender la música y el dolor de su cliente. “Tiene una sensibilidad magistral”, señaló Strong sobre Landau.
Pero Landau sabe que hay un límite a su ayuda. En un momento crucial, Springsteen llega a una casa vacía en Los Ángeles y llama a Landau, quien le dice: “Necesitas ayuda, ayuda profesional”. El músico inicia terapia, a la que atribuye un cambio vital.
Persisten ciertas tensiones, sobre todo con la presión de la discográfica CBS respecto al lanzamiento de Nebraska. Finalmente, Landau y Springsteen salieron fortalecidos. Nebraska alcanzó el número 3 y fue celebrada por la crítica. Su álbum siguiente, Born in the USA, consagró a Bruce Springsteen como superestrella mundial.

Cooper optó por no dramatizar la negociación con CBS, evitando el cliché del conflicto entre artista y sello discográfico y enfocándose en la relación entre Springsteen y Landau. “Es una historia de amor entre estos dos hombres”, afirmó.
“La experiencia de Jon en la película pone a prueba su fe y determinación respecto a la visión de Bruce”, opinó Strong. “Aparecen imperativos comerciales versus imperativos artísticos y espirituales. En la vida real, Jon Landau jamás hubiera elegido lo primero”.
Springsteen y Landau aprobaron la realización de la película y Cooper dijo que ninguno de los dos pidió cambios. “Dejamos claro que era su historia”, afirmó Landau. “No solicitamos ni recibimos control sobre la filmación, el guion, la edición, el reparto, la música ni otro aspecto”. Agregó: “A mi juicio, es una de las mejores decisiones que hemos tomado”.
El rodaje comenzó en septiembre de 2024 y siguió hasta enero de 2025, mientras Springsteen realizaba su última gira. Él y Landau fueron presencias habituales en el set. “Casi todas las noches”, contó White, “recibía mensajes de texto de Bruce acerca de algún momento del rodaje que él sentía fiel a las emociones que vivió de joven”.
“Esos mensajes”, añadió, “me marcaron”.
Fuente: The New York Times
[Fotos: prensa The Walt Disney Company]
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Sparks fly as Cuomo, Mamdani tear into each other during fiery debate: ‘Toxic energy’

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Front-runners for New York City mayor, Zohran Mamdani and Andrew Cuomo, wasted little time attacking each other on alleged personal scandals they have been involved in during a Wednesday night debate between the pair and GOP candidate Curtis Sliwa.
Mamdani and Sliwa took the opportunity during Wednesday’s debate to drill down on past sexual harassment allegations against Cuomo, the former governor of New York, ahead of an impeachment inquiry that preceded Cuomo’s 2021 resignation. Cuomo was also hit by Mamdani over accusations he has – while in public office – failed to meet with Muslim constituents and only began doing so amid pressure from his mayoral campaign, and over his alleged poor handling of the COVID-19 virus in New York after Cuomo was party to issuing guidance forcing nursing homes and long-term care facilities to admit COVID-19 positive patients.
Meanwhile, Cuomo did not hold back on targeting Mamdani over alleged controversies that have embattled his campaign. Cuomo blasted the self-proclaimed socialist over his lack of experience, ties to radical politics, and past radical comments about law enforcement, Israel and the situation in Gaza.
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All three candidates for NEw York City governor debated Wednesday night. From left to right: Andrew Cuomo, Curtis Sliwa and Zohran Mamdani. (Photo by Angelina Katsanis-Pool/Getty Images)
«My main opponent has no new ideas. He has no new plan. … He’s never run anything, managed anything. He’s never had a real job,» Cuomo said of Mamdani during the debate. Cuomo also branded Mamdani as someone who has proven to be «a divisive force in New York,» pointing to past incidents that have garnered Mamdani heat from critics.
One of those incidents included a picture he took with a hard-lined Ugandan lawmaker who has pushed policies of imprisoning people for being gay, which Mamdani took while taking a break from the campaign trail to visit his home country of Uganda for a wedding. Cuomo also hit the controversy over whether Mamdani supports Jewish New Yorkers, as his critics have claimed he is anti-Israel pointing to statements he has made, like «globalize the intifada.»
Cuomo also accused Mamdani of disrespecting Italian-Americans after a video of him surfaced giving the middle finger to a statue of Christopher Columbus, while also pointing to criticism the self-proclaimed socialist candidate has garnered from 9/11 first-responders after posting a photo with a Muslim cleric who served as a character witness for the mastermind behind the September 11, 2001 attacks.
TOP 5 MOMENTS FROM FIERY NYC MAYORAL DEBATE: ‘HE LITERALLY HAS NEVER HAD A JOB’

Former New York Governor Andrew Cuomo (left) shakes hands on the debate stage with Democratic Party candidate for New York City mayor (right) Zohran Mamdani. Cuomo is running as an Independent after lsoing to Mamdani in the primary election. (Photographer: Angelina Katsanis/AP)
«You have been a divisive force in New York, and I believe that’s toxic energy for New York. It’s with the Jewish community. It’s with the Italian-American community – when you give the Columbus statue the finger. It’s with the Sunni Muslims when you say decriminalize prostitution, which is Haram. It’s the Hindus,» Cuomo continued. «Then, you take a picture with Rebecca Kadaga, deputy Prime Minister of Uganda. … She’s known as Rebecca ‘Gay Killer.’ … You’re a citizen of Uganda. You took the picture. You said you didn’t know who she was. It turns out you did. How do you not renounce your citizenship or demand BDS against Uganda for imprisoning people who are gay just by their sexual orientation? Isn’t that a basic violation of human rights?»
Mamdani shot back that his politics have remained «consistent» and that they are built on a belief in human rights for all people, including LGBTQ+ folks. Had he known Kadga’s role in drafting legislation to imprison gay folks, Mamdani said, he never would have taken the picture.
«This constant attempt to smear and slander me is an attempt to also distract from the fact that, unlike myself, you do not actually have a platform or a set of policies,» Mamdani shot back at Cuomo before introducing his own claims about the former governor regarding past accusations of sexual harassment.
MAMDANI RIPPED BY RIVALS FOR UNPOPULAR STANCE DURING FIERY NYC DEBATE: ‘YOU WON’T SUPPORT ISRAEL’

New York City mayoral candidate Andrew Cuomo slammed his democratic socialist opponent Zohran Mamdani during Wednesday’s debate for a variety of alleged scandals he has been involved in. (Angelina Katsanis/Getty; Angelina Katsanis/Getty)
«Mr. Cuomo. In 2021, 13 different women who worked in your administration credibly accused you of sexual harassment. Since then, you have spent more than $20 million in taxpayer funds to defend yourself, all while describing these allegations as entirely political,» Mamdani said while attacking Cuomo Wednesday night.
«You have even gone so far as to legally go after these women. One of those women, Charlotte Bennett, is here in the audience this evening. You sought to access her private gynecological records. She cannot speak up for herself because you lodged a defamation case against her. I, however, can speak. What do you say to the 13 women that you sexually harassed?»
Cuomo, in 2021, was accused of multiple incidents of sexual harassment that preceded his resignation as governor that year. A subsequent report from New York Attorney General Letitia James confirmed Cuomo «sexually harassed multiple women from 2013 through 2020,» while in January 2024, the U.S. Department of Justice announced it had reached a nearly $500,000 settlement with Cuomo’s executive office over one of the claims. However, no criminal charges were ever filed against Cuomo, with some district attorneys citing insufficient evidence.
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Cuomo defended himself against Mamdani’s accusations, noting the cases were eventually dropped, before returning to questions about Mamdani’s alleged past.
Meanwhile, Sliwa didn’t skip an opportunity to slam Cuomo over the sexual assault allegations either, saying early in the debate during a discussion about homelessness that Cuomo «fled» the governor’s office amid an impeachment inquiry that was investigating him.
«Andrew, you didn’t ‘leave.’ You fled from being impeached by the Democrats in the state legislature,» Sliwa began before getting into the homelessness issue, earning him a round-of-applause from the audience.
«‘Leave?’ You fled!» Sliwa continued to applause. «But let’s get back on topic.»
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