Andrew Cuomo doesn't dally. If he deems something important, he pounces on it. Last week he did that with gun control, signing sweeping new legislation.
He's also ambitious. A 2016 presidential bid may be in the offing, especially if Hillary Clinton doesn't jump in. And the national profile that he's forging -- trailblazer on gay marriage, guardian of public safety -- almost surely reflects his sense of where the country is heading and what voters will and won't reward.
How, then, are we supposed to read his romantic situation?
He's unmarried, but has been living with the irrepressible food celebrity Sandra Lee for years now, most recently in her Westchester house. "Public concubinage" is what one Catholic official once called their cohabitation, generating a flurry of articles that mentioned "living in sin." The couple made no apologies. And they've never signaled any plans to wed.
That wasn't a factor in Cuomo's successful New York gubernatorial campaign, but whether it would be a liability in a national race is hard to say. Political strategists told me yes, no, maybe. I'm rooting for no, because that would be an affirmation that we, as a voting public, have wised up to the frequent lack of any correlation between a tableau of traditional family life and the values, character and skills it takes to govern effectively. And I'm intrigued by politicians who are writing fresh scripts and handling their personal situations in surprising ways.
Recently I visited Colorado, whose governor, John Hickenlooper, is another prominent Democrat sometimes mentioned in connection with 2016. I met up with him just a few hours after his State of the State address. Its distinctions included this: When he thanked his wife, Helen Thorpe, for coming to hear it, he was reminding Coloradans that the two had separated midway through 2012, less than two years into his first term.
"I greatly appreciate Helen being here today," he told the gathered lawmakers. Then, mentioning their 10-year-old son, he added, "Even with the changes in our life, she remains a beacon of light to me and Teddy."
Hickenlooper has handled the separation not with terse acknowledgments and speedy pivots to the next topic but with a transparent emotionalism. It's arresting -- and refreshing. The couple announced that he was moving out of their Denver house and into the governor's mansion in a joint statement that the governor's office emailed to their friends and to journalists last July. Half news release, half personal letter, it was unlike any political document I'd seen.