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Hochul, in a debate, takes on her two Democratic primary opponents

New York Public Advocate Jumaane Williams, left, New York Governor Kathy Hochul, center, listen as Congressman Tom Suozzi (D-NY), speak during New York's governor primary debate at the studios of WCBS2-TV, June 7, 2022, in New York. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)
New York Public Advocate Jumaane Williams, left, New York Governor Kathy Hochul, center, listen as Congressman Tom Suozzi (D-NY), speak during New York's governor primary debate at the studios of WCBS2-TV, June 7, 2022, in New York. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)

Governor Kathy Hochul defended her record against her two primary opponents in a debate held on WCBS-TV, and CBS Newsradio 880 Tuesday night, where topics ranged from abortion rights to cryptocurrency mining.

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New York City Public Advocate Jumaane Williams, who is running to the left of Hochul, and Long Island Congressman Tom Suozzi, a moderate Democrat to the right of the governor, ganged up to attack Hochul on the rising crime rates, and a deal she struck to keep the Buffalo Bills playing in western New York.

Both brought up Hochul’s "A" rating from the NRA a decade ago when she was in Congress.

“Ten years ago, I wrote my first report on how to deal with gun violence while the governor was touting her 'A' rating from the NRA,” Williams said. “I wish we’d had her support so that during that decade of death, we could have gotten farther than where we are today.”

Hochul has said her views on gun control have evolved. She signed 10 gun safety measures into law on Monday, including raising the legal age for buying a semi-automatic rifle from 18 to 21.

“We got so much done that had been hampered and unfulfilled for a decade, to protect New Yorkers, whether it is from gun violence in grocery stores or on the streets of Brooklyn or the Bronx or Harlem,” Hochul said.

Suozzi, who said he has an "F" rating from the NRA, criticized Hochul for supporting the state’s bail reform laws, which the governor and Legislature revised in April to make more crimes more bail eligible. Suozzi said he wants to allow judges to apply a dangerousness standard when deciding whether or not to hold defendants pre-trial.

Suozzi also attacked Hochul’s deal to keep the Buffalo Bills in western New York, saying she authorized over a billion dollars in taxpayer funds to subsidize the NFL team.

“That’s the biggest taxpayer giveaway in the history of the NFL,” Suozzi said. “And even worse, it was announced four days before the budget was due.”

Williams also criticized the stadium plan, which will be built in the suburbs, as not doing enough for people in Black and brown communities.

Both raised questions about a potential conflict of interest between Hochul and her husband, William Hochul, who is the general counsel at the hospitality company Delaware North. It runs the concession stands at the current Bills stadium.

Hochul said the new stadium’s revenues will more than pay for the state and local government subsidies. And she said she and her husband, who was the former U.S. attorney for western New York during President Barack Obama’s tenure, keep their business and political interests separate.

“We’ve had to always have a separation between our responsibilities,” said Hochul. “I’m proud of his work. His ethics are second to none, as our mine.”

There were some areas of agreement. All believe that a pregnant person’s right to choose abortion needs to be strongly protected, in an era where the U.S. Supreme Court may overturn Roe v Wade. And, in a lightening round of questions, all three said they believe in some form of ghosts and the existence of the spirit world.