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Cuomo not first NY governor to face impeachment inquiry 

Former Governor William Sulzer's portrait hangs in the Hall of Governors at the State Capitol. He was impeached in 1913.
NYS State Museum
Former Governor William Sulzer's portrait hangs in the Hall of Governors at the State Capitol. He was impeached in 1913.

When Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie began an impeachment investigation of Governor Andrew Cuomo over sexual harassment and other allegations earlier this month, he was the first speaker to do so in 108 years.

Heastie authorized the Judiciary Committee to begin an impeachment inquiry, and he chose an outside law firm to help with interviewing witnesses and perhaps drafting articles of impeachment, a document similar to a criminal complaint that would be presented to the Senate during a trial.  

The speaker, when pressed for more details about how exactly the impeachment might proceed, admitted that he and the rest of the Assembly are, essentially, winging it.

“This hasn’t been done in almost 100 years,” Heastie said. “So none of us were here when that happened.”

There is at least one person who does know the details of what happened the last time, when in 1913 former Gov. William Sulzer became the first -- and, so far, only -- governor in New York’s history to be removed from office by the State Legislature.

Jack O’Donnell, a Buffalo- and New York City-based public affairs consultant, wrote a book on the topic, called “Bitten by the Tiger.” O’Donnell is deeply embedded in New York politics. He’s worked for Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, Bill and Hillary Clinton and former Gov. Eliot Spitzer.

“Who then got in some trouble and they said he’d be the first governor impeached since William Sulzer,” O’Donnell said of Spitzer, who ultimately resigned over a prostitution scandal.  

O’Donnell also worked for former State Comptroller Alan Hevesi, who eventually went to prison on a corruption conviction. 

“And when he got in trouble, they said he’d be the first state officer to be impeached since William Sulzer,” he said. “So I thought, ‘I really should find out a little about this guy.' ” 

O’Donnell discovered that most of the present-day recollections of the impeachment are wrong. 

According to legend, Sulzer was a product of the powerful Tammany Hall, and they helped him get elected in November 1912. But he got in trouble with the political bosses shortly after taking office for trying to enact reform and was punished by them. 

O’Donnell said it’s true that Sulzer tried to buck the powerful political machine. 

“Sulzer decides he’s bigger than Tammany Hall and decides to create his own party, his own following, his own machine,” O’Donnell said. “And then he and Tammany get into a fight." 

But Sulzer wasn’t completely innocent of wrongdoing. He had likely embezzled $10,000 out of his own campaign funds -- a lot of money in those days. 

“When you read the trial transcripts, there was evidence after evidence that he took money from the campaign fund and put it in the stock market,” said O’Donnell, who added Sulzer also falsified campaign documents that omitted contributions from other politicians and brewery magnates, among others. 

“I don’t think there’s any doubt in most observers’ minds that he was guilty,” O’Donnell said. “Even if it was politics that brought on the fight.” 

Sulzer was removed from office on Oct. 17, 1913. He’d been governor just 9½ months.  

A photo of Sulzer hangs in the LCA Press Room at the State Capitol.
Credit NYS Museum
A photo of Sulzer hangs in the LCA Press Room at the State Capitol.

There’s still a long way to go before Cuomo could become the second governor in state history to face impeachment.

If the Assembly inquiry leads to a vote, a majority of 76 votes are required to impeach. The case would then be heard by state senators, along with the seven members of the state Court of Appeals. All of the judges were appointed by Cuomo.

Senate Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins would not be allowed to participate, since she's second in the line of succession for governor, after Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul. In a Senate trial, a two-thirds vote, or 46 of the senators and judges, is required to convict.

Karen DeWitt is Capitol Bureau chief for the New York Public News Network, composed of a dozen newsrooms across the state. She has covered state government and politics for the network since 1990.
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