ALBANY, N.Y. — Ahead of a tough reelection fight, New York Gov. Kathy Hochul unveiled an agenda aimed at bridging the divides in the Democratic Party — moving to fight President Donald Trump and capture progressive excitement surrounding Mayor Zohran Mamdani, while also tending to anxiety among moderates about public safety and protests outside synagogues.
In most states, governors use their annual State of the State addresses to detail their upcoming legislative plans for the year, boosting their own records while charting a path ahead.
For Hochul, however, her speech this year carried additional significance, as the centrist from Buffalo faces challenges from both her political left and right in a heavily contested election cycle.
Her own second-in-command, Lt. Gov. Antonio Delgado, has assailed her for months and launched an unusual primary challenge against his boss, casting Hochul as a reactive executive unable to meet the political moment during Trump's second term. Republican Bruce Blakeman, a Trump-aligned county official in New York's City's suburbs, has also announced a run for governor, bashing Hochul over the state's high taxes and cost of living.
At the same time, the governor is under mounting pressure from the progressive wing of the Democratic Party to help steward Mamdani's ambitious agenda at the state Capitol and raise taxes on the state's richest residents.
Hochul appeared aware of the rocky political terrain during her State of the State, announcing a slate of affordability proposals, pledging additional public safety programs as well as a raft of proposals meant to counter the Republican president's agenda.
''If there's one thing I know, it's that when New Yorkers move forward with strength and compassion side by side there is no challenge we cannot meet, no tyrant we cannot beat and no future we cannot build,'' she told a packed crowd at The Egg, a striking domed theater near the state's ornate Capitol building.
Child care — a signature priority for Mamdani — was also at the top of Hochul's list, with the governor reiterating plans to set up a child care program for 2-year-olds in New York City, along with a wider plan to establish a universal pre-K program throughout the state by 2028.