Politics
New York governor should resign if sexual misconduct allegation confirmed – Biden
U.S. President Joe Biden told ABC News that New York Governor Andrew Cuomo should resign if allegations that he sexually harassed and assaulted women were confirmed by an ongoing investigation.
When asked if he thought Cuomo should resign if the investigation confirms sexual misconduct, Biden briefly said “yes.”
“I think he’ll probably end up being prosecuted, too,” the president added.
At the same time, Biden noted that there should be an investigation to determine whether the allegations put by several women were true.
At least seven women have accused Cuomo, 63, of harassment, with one claiming that he forcibly tried to kiss her, and another saying that he effectively propositioned another for sex.
The most explosive allegation is that he put his hand uninvitingly under the shirt of a female colleague and groped her.
Cuomo vowed last week not to bow to political pressure and step down over allegations that he sexually harassed and assaulted women who worked under him, saying he was confident a state investigation would clear him.
New York Attorney General Letitia James has opened an independent investigation into the allegations.
Dozens of U.S. politicians have called on Cuomo to step down over the sex scandal.
-
Latest1 week agoHigh Court opens hearing on Goodluck Jonathan’s 2027 presidential eligibility
-
Latest1 day agoMakinde declares 2027 presidential bid under PDP–APM alliance
-
Business2 days agoAnger, debate trail proposed $1.25bn loan amid concerns over Nigeria’s debt surge
-
Featured2 days agoWike dismisses political speculation over meeting with APC Chairman Yilwatda
-
Featured2 days agoObasanjo faults Tinubu’s economic reforms, calls them necessary but poorly designed
-
Latest5 days agoWike loyalists dominate As APC clears 33 aspirants for Rivers Assembly primaries, 65 disqualified
-
Business2 days agoNigeria’s 2026 debt servicing hits $11.6bn as Tinubu decries global financial inequity
-
Latest7 days agoNigerian Senate reverses standing orders amendment over constitutional concerns

