Drama Queens - Work in Progress: Kathy Hochul

Episode Date: November 21, 2025

New York’s Governor Kathy Hochul leads like a mom who’s had enough — protective, outspoken, and unwilling to watch her people get pushed aside. She opens up about the loving ang...er that drives her, the urgency of defending families, and what it takes to lead with both empathy and backbone. She also has a message for critics of newly-elected NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani, because she believes New York is at its best when we all work together.It's a candid, clear-eyed look at how she’s fighting for New Yorkers when it matters most.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 This is an I-Heart podcast. The best dates happen when someone really gets your vibe, your niche references, your hot takes, even your reality TV obsessions. That's why it's so exciting to be partnering with Bumble. Dating feels easier on Bumble with prompts that show off your personality, shared interests that help you find common ground, and verification that gives you peace of mind that you're meeting someone real. So if you're ready to meet someone who really gets you in your energy, Bumble is the perfect place to start. waiting for download bumble and start your love story hey everyone it's sophia welcome to work in progress welcome back to work in progress welcome back to work in progress friends all eyes seem to be on new york right now and i happen to be in new york and wanted to get to the bottom of that
Starting point is 00:00:59 feeling. We know that what is unfolding here is going to reverberate far beyond state lines. And at the heart of this moment are our New York elected officials. And so who better to talk about this very moment with than New York's very own governor, Kathy Hokel. She's navigating a pivotal juncture where city, state, and federal fault lines converge. We have a freshly elected mayor in New York City who's promising bold change. We've got ongoing federal pressure on state institutions as the White House is weaponizing New York's power. We've got battles over our very social fabric right down to our food security safety nets and the integrity of our democratic processes. And all of that means that Governor Hokel is
Starting point is 00:01:48 really facing intense scrutiny. Her leadership is being measured not just by what she does and all of the incredible things that she has done, but how she chooses to respond. in every moment. It's an awful lot of pressure, and I want to ask her, not just as one of our incredible female governors here in America, but as a human, as a woman, how does she define her role in safeguarding democracy and delivering for the more than 20 million people in the state who count on her? It's a lot of pressure. I want to know how she does it, and I want to know if she's okay. So let's dive in and talk about all things snap and state policy, smartphone banning for schools, and why someone would want to run for public office in the first place. Let's dive in
Starting point is 00:02:39 with Governor Hokele. Governor, we're sitting in New York City together. I'm obviously very geeked. I feel like you can see me blushing. Thank you for your patience and your incredible decorum. Before we jump into all of the things happening as we begin to close 2025, many of them in this city, in your great state, I actually would love to go backwards with you.
Starting point is 00:03:16 Sure, let's do it. Because so many people that I sit with have an incredible job or an incredible track record or promoting some incredible project. Yours is democracy, I think the most important project of all. And I think people forget that you have a story before you were a public figure. And I know you grew up in Western New York.
Starting point is 00:03:38 And I'm curious if you can paint a picture for me about not Governor Kathy Hockel, but just Kathy as a kid, at nine or ten years old, what was your life like, what was your community like? What was your family like? What was New York like? Well, I appreciate that because a lot of people think that we sort of morphed into our jobs right now. We actually aren't real people.
Starting point is 00:04:01 Yeah, they think you were born in a pantsuit. That's right. That's right. I came to the pantsuits later in life. Me too. Yeah, Western New York, Buffalo is kind of always was a gritty steel town. And my dad and grandfather and his brothers, they all worked at the steel plant, making steel. It's difficult work.
Starting point is 00:04:21 You know, dad would come home with the house. end of the day, just kind of like all this soed on them because they were in the ovens, Coke ovens. And my parents, you know, before I was born, before I was born, they lived in a trailer park and they struggled. And then I came along. There was a little tiny apartment. And, you know, through time they progressed to bigger homes. We had bigger family, Irish Catholic family, six kids. I think my mom wanted even more. So we didn't have a lot of money. We really did. We used to buy our clothes at used clothing stores or you could live. lay them away. Like I'd always feel a little funny when my mom would take us shopping for like our
Starting point is 00:04:56 Easter dress and all the other kids are getting in line with their parents at the checkout and we went over to the layway counter because my mom didn't have the money right then to put in, you know, as we could take it home. We had to take it home, you know, months later. Or even, you know, we'd go to the day old bread store and my mom would fill up a freezer with day old bread and, you know, stale Twinkies and things like that. So we thought that was the norm. I just want to say as I look back, that was a struggle. Yeah. But we were never hungry.
Starting point is 00:05:25 You know, we always had clothes to wear. And my parents instilled in us a really strong sense of responsibility to others, even though they didn't have much. They were social justice Catholics. And they took us marching in the anti-war demonstrations. We were at the marches for civil rights when we were early, you know, young children. And, you know, my parents were trying to integrate, you know, a working class white neighborhood and, you know, took a lot of criticism from people for those efforts. And I saw
Starting point is 00:05:56 my parents sort of on the front of civil rights and human rights movements. And that really left an impression on me. And I decided after visiting Washington as a child, I wanted to someday work in the Capitol. But the ambition of women back then was so limited. It was back in that era, like you're going to be a teacher, secretary, or nurse. And how's your typing? know those questions yeah it sucks that's why I couldn't make it as a typist I still like she's still see me trying to type you just had to become the governor I didn't type I love that for you so there was another clear path I just wasn't good enough for that but I wanted to be a staffer to top staffer to a senator someday that was my highest ambition when I was
Starting point is 00:06:41 13 or 14 because I'd seen the Capitol I knew about politics just from eighth grade social studies you know I really love social studies and never dreamed of public office. And that's what I found so limiting when I look back that far. You know, a little, you know, nine or ten-year-old you asked about it. I was just, I was babysitting everybody. I was 10 years old watching all my younger siblings. I babysat. Are you the oldest? Oldest girl. Oldest daughter. Yeah, oldest daughter. And so I was always babysitting. Even in high school, I'd have a job after school to bring home money for the family. I worked at a pizzeria. So I never could do the cool kid stuff. I wasn't, I didn't go out for cheerleading. I wasn't
Starting point is 00:07:21 boards. I wasn't in close because I would leave almost every day after school to go to this P3 where I worked until 11 or 12 at night. And so I could help bring home some cash, which was good, but it kind of stunted my social life. So as a little bit of a nerdy kid, I'd get home very late at night and have to do my homework and shared a bedroom in the attic with two brothers. And it wasn't, in the wintertime, it was cold and the summertime it was hot. We didn't, but that's, you know, I'm close to those brothers. You know, we grew up in that kind of environment. But that's, we get a lot of love. I would just say that.
Starting point is 00:07:54 I grew up in a lot of love in the sense that no matter what we have, somebody else has less than us. Yeah. And I still have that seared in my brain right now as governor. I'm always aware I need to do more to help people that are struggling. Well, it strikes me, you know, the story that you tell, the steel mill that was so central to your family, the trailer park that they were in, what it was like to move up. but still be held back by circumstance in certain ways. That's an every man's story.
Starting point is 00:08:28 You know, I think about my grandfather who was in the Navy and afterwards made mannequins by hand in New Jersey at the Wolf Form Company. And he bent these, you know, beautiful, now they're in like all the chic stores, you know, the vintage linen mannequins with the metal toppers that say Wolf on the neck. And he made those. He'd bend the steel by hand and stretch the line. in by hand and be on this factory line. And I know my mom and her brother's stories. You know, I know about the housing project in the Bronx and about the eventual home in New Jersey that, you know, was the first house my grandfather ever bought in the house that he died in. And everywhere I've ever had the privilege to live, you know, whether it's here in New York or home in
Starting point is 00:09:14 California or small town North Carolina or New Mexico or Texas or Canada, people see. stories of where they come from, how they've struggled, how they've succeeded, what they've built, how they've dreamed, what they still dream of. Those are so central for me to advocacy, to thinking about how we build a better world for all of us. And so much of what I believe in and why I'm so excited you're here is issues that you lead on, you know, whether it's better access to care for people, you know, more affordability, fighting for paid leave, you know, for women and their families, and these things that seem so obvious, but seem like such hard fights, I feel like it would be impossible for you to work as hard for all these people
Starting point is 00:10:10 for as long as you have, if you weren't always walking into rooms with those stories fresh in your mind, right? you've hit on something pretty profound that I can't leave those stories behind me when I'm out there fighting you know in Harlem or in the Bronx as I was last week to have snap benefits restored you know the embarrassment that already exists when you're a kid and you know your parents have to go use food stamps my husband's family used food stamps when he was growing up he had tough circumstances as well because my partners did too his father got very sick when he was young and couldn't bring home the paycheck as a person who used to make cabinets at a factory.
Starting point is 00:10:51 And so families suffer, but I also know that they need a champion. They need someone who has had that lived experience, but also with the heart full of gratitude to know that I broke out of those circumstances. My dad got an education. He could leave the trailer park and get a better job, and eventually the houses got bigger and nicer, but not everybody has that same shot. And so when you take away food from families, and I remember back my mom would try to stretch a can of spam, that's disgusting. You open up a can of spas, all this jelly crap on it.
Starting point is 00:11:25 And I think they used to use it in the military, and they'd slice it up, and she'd fry it and put it between stale bread and call it dinner sometimes. We had a lot of pancakes for dinner because you could feed a family of eight with a lot of pancakes. I'm thinking about that when I'm thinking about, how are families today when that pancake mix costs so much more than it didn't even when my mom had to buy it? Like, they're struggling. So when people think about affordability as just a sort of a branding word, these are real people's lives. It's all about struggle. And they need to know that there's someone who will fight like hell for them, who will stand up to Donald Trump, and the Republicans who unleashed this pain all across America just to score political points. And I believe they lost that war because it looks so cruel and so depraved to say the first time in American history when there's been a government.
Starting point is 00:12:13 shutdown that they didn't keep the nutrition programs flowing. They're sitting on $6 billion in reserves to do that, and they went to court to stop that from happening. That is a new low in our history. We turn our backs on hungry families and senior citizens. And so that just motivates me to get out there and call it out for what it is, stand up for these people, and know that their stories reside within me as well. Yeah. I don't want to glaze over, you know, how your career began serving in local positions and then going to Congress and then being the lieutenant governor and then the governor. But this is exactly the thing that has been the top of mind for me is knowing how you carry your own story, your own family, and all of your
Starting point is 00:13:01 constituents' stories and families into rooms when you advocate. The snap thing is making me crazy because not only, not only is there this really insidious idea. And we all know, you know, my lovely listeners at home care about being engaged and being educated on where we come from. We know what the myth of the welfare queen is. We know that it came from attacking black women, particularly in this country, that the largest beneficiaries of, quote, welfare, snap benefits in America are white families. We also know that nobody who's getting these benefits is like live in large on them. You're not abusing a system by having the difference between a starvation meal and a meal that actually will let you and your kids sleep through the night.
Starting point is 00:13:52 The people abusing the system are the corporations that pay their workers so little that gainfully employed Americans have to get food stamps to make up the difference. You know this, and I'm going to say this for the folks at home who might have missed the statistic, But when you look at the increase in CEO wages, C-suite wages, and then you look at minimum wage stagnating, if minimum wage had kept up with CEO pay and also inflation, it wouldn't be $7.25 an hour, it would be $26 an hour. And then none of these people, all the Walmart and Amazon employees that are on SNAP, wouldn't need it. People need it because they're being paid unlivable wages by incredibly greedy and increasingly greedy corporations. that are bragging about their earnings on their shareholder calls and then turning around and saying they can't afford to pay the people
Starting point is 00:14:44 who've made them all billionaires in the first place. Makes me just a tad infuriated and pissed off. And I'm pissed off as well, but let me just get you even more pissed off. It's not on just the nutrition programs where they have to use stamp benefits. So many of those workers at the big box stores and the Amazon's and the Walmarts, they're only having them work 30 or 35 hours a week instead of 40. so they don't have to pay them full-time health care. So guess who's paying for that?
Starting point is 00:15:12 Many of them are on Medicaid paid for by state taxpayers. Yes. When it's supposed to be paid by the corporation that's benefiting from their sweat and their labor. Yes. And that, to me, is the next fight. And so, oh, I'm just so angry. But, like, in a good way, you know, sometimes I think people look at women who are politically engaged and are like, oh, you're so angry. I'm like, no, I'm sacredly angry.
Starting point is 00:15:35 I'm angry like a mom is angry when her kid gets hurt. What are you talking about? That's right. That's right. And so when I think about this stuff and you know the ins and outs, and I think the more we can give those details to our audiences, to our constituencies, the more informed they can be when they have those dinner table conversations with their families or they walk into a voting booth, how do you, when, to your earlier point,
Starting point is 00:16:02 you see the federal government for the first time in American history, go to court to fight for the right to starve its own citizens. I mean, the GOP is literally on the floor going, let us take away your health care or we'll starve you. This is barbaric. How do you as a state leader fight back? Because, yes, you've got the power of New York, but you're also not the president.
Starting point is 00:16:29 So, like, how do you get on the chess board with moves like this? With a Donald Trump and a Speaker Johnson, how do you defend your state? A lot of it goes right to the courts. We won on SNAP benefits in two courts, right? And we were feeling good. I already, because this had gone on for so long, and the SNAP benefits were literally running out and had been running out. I had to put $100 million into food banks around the state to fortify them. And I had enlist my volunteer corps, my state civic engagement teams, hundreds of young people to come down and work at the food base.
Starting point is 00:17:06 I had to figure out a plan quickly to do this. But at the same time, we're in court. And we won it in court, which is so maddening that to take it all the way to the Supreme Court and how the Supreme Court did not side with us, I will never know and let historians figure that one out. But this was a moment in our history when we turned our backs as a nation on struggling people. So I will use all the tools at my disposal. But part of it is also just doing the press conferences and calling out. So it's in the public's mind, who did this to them? And so they take that with them when they go vote the next time
Starting point is 00:17:40 and who they decide who's on their side. A lot of people fell for Donald Trump talking about affordability in the election just one year ago. And then this week, he says, I don't know why everybody talks about affordability. There's so many other things. Do they not view that as a blatant, betrayal of the trust that the voters put in him, they just don't give a damn. And that's what's so
Starting point is 00:18:02 troubling. So I'm out there using this. I was actually saw a social media post that our mayor elect Sauram Mandani was sitting with a veteran on Veterans Day. And the veteran was saying, I'm also happy Kathy Hochel helped keep the snap benefits and put money out there for us. Because that means it's sinking into the psychology of who is fighting for them against those who we're trying to hurt them. That's what has to happen for the electorate to start shifting their attitudes about who's the best fighter for them.
Starting point is 00:18:33 It's always been the Democrats. There's always will be the Democrats. And we can't lose our way and let Republicans take what is our narrative that we are the ones who actually care about people and to lift them up and help struggling families and seniors and veterans. So we just, and you're messaging here today
Starting point is 00:18:52 and your storytelling and getting here. This is all part of the ecosystem that needs to exist from people who are different than the Republicans that are running everything in Washington. There's actually people who have a heart. Yeah. And now a word from our sponsors that I really enjoy, and I think you will too. No one can resist a rule of culture. So here's one for the dating files. Rule of culture number 72.
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Starting point is 00:20:33 groceries, but we all read Project 2025 and knew that wasn't going to happen. We know they're trying to create a true mass poverty class and an oligarchy for them and their friends. But for some reason, the facts didn't get through. Even the fact that, you know, J.D. Vance is allegedly invested in that company that's buying up bankrupt farms for pennies on the dollar and selling them to international firms. And now our farmers are going bankrupt and we're given $40 billion to Argentina when it would only cost $36 billion to extend the Medicaid subsidies? Like, I feel like I'm in the upside down. And so why do you think the truth of our message doesn't connect in the way their lies do, or did at least during the end?
Starting point is 00:21:22 election. Like, in hindsight, what do you think we need to do differently? And how can I and everyone listening to this? How can we help? A lot of fronts on this. And I give a great deal of thought about, first of all, people talk about messaging. They're better at messaging. Well, what does that mean? What does that mean? Because we've, I've been saying that since I was a young staffer on Capitol Hill for a senator way back. Like, why is their messaging, does it, why is theirs fit on a bumper sticker? And we feel like we have to explain a 20-point plan and walk people, through as if we're professors as opposed to real people ourselves. And in one sense, it's viewed as condescending to people that you think you're no more than me and you're not down here in the
Starting point is 00:22:04 trenches where I am. And that's part of our problem, just in our communication skills. Like, I love walking to a diner any day of the week. I do it in New York City constantly. Me too. I just, I like to just walk and even people at a table. It's like, hey, what's going on? Oh, you're a cute little kid or a senior citizen. and you know, tell you about your family. And that seems more, to me, it's real, but to others, they want that relatability and their elected officials as opposed to someone who's speaking behind a podium
Starting point is 00:22:30 and telling them how it has to be. So we just have to get out there with people and stop being on this, you know, this ivory tower of being know-it-alls. That's a real problem we have. The other part is they are so much better in the social media influencer space. They are just, they have been.
Starting point is 00:22:49 We've got a lot of catch-up to do. I've seen some studies on this where people, your Republicans have far more, you know, programs and sort of the echo chamber where they, you know, keep saying the same thing over and over. It gets out of there and it blast out to the rest of the world. Ours may stay in this chamber where we're sitting here having these smart conversations and we have some really good answers, but how does it then blast out to regular people? And that's when someone figures that out, that'll be enormously helpful in the
Starting point is 00:23:19 2026 elections for our congressional. You know, I have a race, our Senate races. There's a lot on the line in 26. But also, you know, we have new leaders like Zoran Mandani who figured out how to connect with people in a very human, funny way. We got to keep it. You never get up your sense of humor in this business. You just can't because then you're less, you're not human. If you can't talk about this and just, you know, be a little more self-deprecating about life. You know, we're just regular people who have an a different job title than most. I'll never change that perspective. And I think with the new energy that came here in New York City, what I said is, I don't need that for the 2026 elections
Starting point is 00:24:02 for Congress in New York City. Probably going to be a Democrat, I'm pretty sure. Can you go out to Long Island? Can you go up to the Hudson Valley? Can you help me over in Syracuse? How about the North Country, where Lee Stefanik is giving up her seat that she actually gave up a long time ago, just been sitting in it. And can we harness that energy all around the state? Yes. And also not have our people just go around to other states that seem more fun to go to. I know this always happens around election time.
Starting point is 00:24:28 Stay in your own state. Yeah. I lead the Democratic Party. I wanted to be a deep bench. We'd train the young people who are going to be running the next time, but also giving them political experience, you know, help on campaigns, work in an office, do what I did when I was growing up where I was cutting my teeth in politics. the youngest and the only girl in a room in high school,
Starting point is 00:24:49 but I was surrounded by smart older guys, like college age guys and college graduates, who were all running the campaigns for governor and for president and for senator. I was sitting there absorbing it all, and I loved it. And I've never lost that love because that's how you elect people who will be out there fighting for others. And so I think we can harness the energy
Starting point is 00:25:12 that we just saw this past election. here in New York City and spread it all over. Well, I sure hope so. It's a little frustrating. I feel like our balloon was really getting inflated. You know, we had so many great winds that we needed to push back against this authoritarian regime. And then the Democrats caved.
Starting point is 00:25:35 And it really feels like it takes the wind out of our sails. Why do you think, after 45 days of holding the line? eight people defected. Like, what's the deal? And I don't want to be such a cynic to believe some of the things I've seen online, which are like, well, a bunch of them, their biggest donors are the airlines,
Starting point is 00:25:57 and they threatened the airports, and now they're caving. It's got to be, there's got to be a bigger picture, right? Can you help us understand? I can't speak to why eight people, nine people, whatever the number was defected. But you look at their states, their battleground states,
Starting point is 00:26:12 they have to worry about both sides, because, and I will tell you, I'm one Democrat. It's fun and easy to be a purist. Like, it's got to, this is, I believe in all these things. And if you don't believe in every one of them, that I'm not with you. And we do that to ourselves. We have often, too often we are the circular firing squad among other Democrats. And guess what?
Starting point is 00:26:34 That's how Republicans win, because they don't do that. They're more disciplined than that. So I would say if we could find the common ground that, hey, we're Democrats, and they're Republicans, let's stick together. So I don't want to go second-guess what the politics are in their home state, but some of them, some Democrats in some parts of our country, they may have to do things that we might, as purest say, as wrong. But if it's not them, it's going to be a Republican sitting in that seat.
Starting point is 00:27:02 Yeah. And that's when you're in the city, you don't realize that Republicans are, New York State is now a purple state. Yeah. That is hard for me to accept as someone who's been involved in politics my whole life. but the reality is we've lost a lot of ground and Republicans are enrolling people. Why aren't we doing more to enroll Democrats to believe in us
Starting point is 00:27:22 and we have to give them the story, the narrative to tell? So on that issue, I don't have an answer on why they did what they did. But all I know is that Republicans, when they put this up for a vote if they really are on extending the health care premiums because right now someone paying $2,000 a month for health insurance it's just been told it's now 4,000, not a year, a month.
Starting point is 00:27:46 And how is that sustainable? So Republicans are letting that happen, and I'm telling you, as much as I want that to not happen, to the extent it's going to and is, that gets weaponized against every one of them. So there is also a way to turn this bad dynamic into something that can at least change the narrative in the election next year.
Starting point is 00:28:06 And in 2027, which seems like in eternity away, we have Democrats, at least in the House of Representatives, so we can have a firewall to stop what they're doing to the American people. Right. And now for our sponsors. No one can resist a rule of culture. So here's one for the dating files. Rule of culture number 72.
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Starting point is 00:29:34 at the expense of everyone else, you know? And I think for me, you know, my dad's from Canada. He moved here in the 70s to go to college and became a citizen when I was 13. So when people say do it the right way, I'm like, you don't know what that means. Because my dad was like a, you know, doing great middle class white guy from Canada. And it was still hard. And I think a lot about. my exposure to another place and to family in another place. And the fact that, you know, here in America,
Starting point is 00:30:13 we spend more per capita on health care than any other peer nation. And we don't have, we're the only ones with a for-profit health care system instead of health care being seen as a public good. Health care has a human right. And it makes me feel crazy because not only are we talking about, to your point, this Republican Party that chooses the abject suffering of people that aren't in the billionaire class, but also profits from it. And it's like we haven't voted all these people out yet, but here we are. And we're still in the fight. And I know for me and clearly for you and for so many people we spend our time with, we're not going to give it up. We're not giving up the fight. We're not going anywhere. Why do you think then that there has been so much
Starting point is 00:31:04 of a of a fear or a freakout around our mayor elect here in New York? You know, Mamdani's talking about fixing some of the wealth inequity, shoring up the kinds of programs that would allow for access that, you know, not to live in a rom-com, but I remember how New York felt to me as a kid in the 90s. I'm like, I miss that in New York. What if it could come back a little bit? Like, what if more people got to live here
Starting point is 00:31:38 and experience this place in this great diversity that we used to have more of? Do you think maybe some of the rhetoric about him coming from the right is really just because they're scared that we're poking holes in the fact that trickle-down economics doesn't work and a billionaire oligarchy isn't what we want? want in America? I think it's simpler than that. I think they're always looking for
Starting point is 00:32:01 an enemy. They're always looking for someone to demonize, someone to get people to turn on, you know, the other. And that has been the secret of their success from the president on down. Damn. And so he hits the profile, like, oh my gosh, he's born from another country.
Starting point is 00:32:17 And he practices a religion that I don't practice, they're thinking. He has different beliefs. But what he touched was a nerve that was so real and so visceral to people. Like you said, I'm just not getting ahead. And he articulated that sense. And we've been talking about affordability for a number of years, but really focused on it last January. And whether it's every child in the state of New York now gets free breakfast and
Starting point is 00:32:46 lunch in schools. So it's an affordability issue. It puts about $3,200 back in a family's pocket if you have two kids. I mean, that's huge plus time. Yeah. The people come up to me on the streets of New York who say thank God I don't have to pack the lunches and make the breakfast so I'm a mom you know that this it's that's that's like something that was criticized wildly by the Republicans what do you mean you're giving free stuff to kids like because I don't think little kids that had their tummies growling in a classroom because they were too embarrassed to show that they were getting subsidized lunches yeah had to go in a different line or you know people know it's them and so they skipped their lunches this is really skipped their lunches because
Starting point is 00:33:27 They don't want to be stigmatized. I can't live in a state that has that. No. We're feeding our kids. Or the money that we did with the middle class tax cut, the biggest tax rate cut. So the middle class knows we haven't forgotten them to. And for moms with kids or parents with kids under the age of one, a $1,000 check to help you cover the diapers, the formula. The little outfits they keep out growing all the time.
Starting point is 00:33:51 So I've added up as about $5,000. And plus the inflation rebate. which a lot of people just got $400 in their pockets. I had a guy come to me on the street. My God, someone stole my laptop. I could buy a new one with the money you just sent me. That made a difference to him. It's a big deal.
Starting point is 00:34:07 So that's how I'm making a difference by putting money back to people's pockets and focusing on prioritizing families and their needs and even something that didn't cost money but banning cell phones in schools. I'm telling you, why do we even go a decade saying it's okay for children to be sitting there watching TikTok dance videos instead of listening to the math teacher.
Starting point is 00:34:29 And then being surprised that the outcomes aren't, why aren't they showing better results on tests? Because we let them have this toy, this distraction that also can be pretty detrimental to their mental health. And that's why we're seeing a real increase in young, particularly teenage girls having mental health challenges. So we're ending that in New York. And every other state ought to do the same thing.
Starting point is 00:34:51 Never again. That's a huge win. And the kids are making friends again. I know. Oh, they're talking to each other. They're talking to each other. Who knew? They're bringing cards and games to lunch together.
Starting point is 00:35:01 So I love the stories. And we just did this in September. Wow. And I'm going to say this is one of the most nonpartisan, you know, initiatives we ever launched. It didn't cost us any money. And it's had a profound effect on families and individuals. And those are the wins we should be talking about.
Starting point is 00:35:20 Yes. Anybody could have done it before me. Nobody wanted to stand up to all the entrenched interests that told me no. Which is so crazy. And, you know, when you think about it, there's, you know, this was the year of Jonathan Hates, the anxious generation, phenomenal book to explain some of this. I think about how anxious my own phone makes me.
Starting point is 00:35:39 And I'm an adult. You know, I grew up without a cell phone like this. And then in high school had like, you know, a little Nokia, you know, T-9. You're like, one and two, three, T, got it. And to think about what these kids are facing. And then to go a layer deeper, another book I read, which if you haven't read, I will send to you because it's fabulous. Tiny. It's called How to Break Up with Your Phone.
Starting point is 00:36:03 And it actually talks about all the research that went into designing smartphones, and it's the same research they use to design slot machines. They're made to be addicting. Absolutely. And it's wild, right? And so when I think about wins like this, whether it's fiscal policy or social policy, you're talking about prioritizing people's wellness. about ensuring community. You know, when I hear you talk about even those $400 checks that just went out,
Starting point is 00:36:31 the average American is one $400 unexpected medical bill away from bankruptcy. It doesn't have to be like that. And, you know, we've got leadership in Washington that wants billionaires to be able to write off private jets but doesn't think teachers should be able to write off construction paper. It's like, what are we talking about? So when you think about these things, you know,
Starting point is 00:36:54 Even the way you talk about Mamdani's election and how the point is to bring more voices from our party to the table to find solutions for everybody. How do you take what a lot of folks in the city view as a win and what you know some of your more rural voters might be a little afraid of because of what you said, the messaging about the other, oh, you're supposed to be scared. you really, you kind of get to be like the mom of our state. You know, you get to talk to the kids and be like, settle down everybody. It's funny. How do you talk to folks about it? I say that all the time. And there was, you know, I feel like I've been the therapist in chief for a lot of people.
Starting point is 00:37:39 Oh, my God, you know, I'm leaving now. I'm selling my penthouse because, you know, I'm not going to make the invest. I said, everybody just calm down. You know, calm down. We're going to be fine. You know, I will work with him to help him be successful because no one who's smart is ever going to root against New York City. You want our mayors to be successful. And so, you know, we speak regularly, you know, very friendly relationship. And I don't need to
Starting point is 00:38:04 have this epic power struggle that my predecessors and others would have between the governor and the mayor of New York because it's like, it's a clash of tighten egos. Like, who gets more credit? Who did the press conference first on the same topic where I'm like, let's do a press conference together. We're both fighting crime in the subways. We're both dealing with the homelessness crisis. We're both focusing on building more housing, why aren't we doing this together? And I'll give money to help support the mayor's initiatives. I did that under Eric Adams. You know, the city of yes to build more housing, it was dead until I came up with money to get it over the finish line. And so we can do those things. So everybody should just doubt all back, you know. I think to the rural
Starting point is 00:38:45 anywhere else, it's not just rural areas. There's a lot of people in New York City who are very anxious. Let him have a chance to prove he can govern. and surround himself with talented people who know what to do. Also, know it's a four-year term and possibly longer. Everything can't possibly happen in the first six months, even the first year. You start planting the seeds to my cell phone policy. I had to spend a year going around the state persuading people
Starting point is 00:39:13 that this was a good idea, and then we got it done. My housing policy, I started the first year, didn't win. Second year, came back at it. So I just want everybody to think about the fact that there's so many other issues that a mayor has to worry about, too. He's got to focus on public safety, number one. If he keeps Jessica Tisch, I think that'll calm a lot of people down. And I say that he said he would. Let's keep working on homelessness in the subways and the streets.
Starting point is 00:39:38 Let's make sure the garbage gets picked up so they can't blame you for that. You know, let's get rid of the rats. Keep killing rats. Get rid of the scaffolding. I walk around the city. I don't see the sun for 10 blocks. I walk every day. So there's just the nuts and bolts of governing the city.
Starting point is 00:39:53 If he can demonstrate that he's doing all that and people aren't like, oh, my life really hasn't changed. I guess I'm going to be okay. Time will bear that out. And also his major initiatives, we're having conversations about them. What's in the realm of possibility? How we get to yes, what time frame. So, no, we're going to be, like I feel like about, we're going to be fine, everybody. I'm going to be fine.
Starting point is 00:40:17 I'm excited. And I think particularly the grit of New York and the way this place stands as this beacon for the country, but also at current stands up against the administration, you know, whether it's Letitia James refusing to back down. And I mean, this ridiculously bogus charge despite what was in her mortgage contract. Like, what are we doing, Donald Trump? You know, to even you, you know, you're about to go into a battle with Elise Stefaniac, who I just think has betrayed people left, right and center. and I'm excited to see you take her on. You count me in for any campaign events you've got.
Starting point is 00:40:51 Thank you. As you think about these things ahead, you know, the progress you want to make here in the city and around the state and the fights that are coming and also the wins, you know, snap and cell phones and so much more for people who live here in New York. When you look toward 2026, what feels like your work in progress? My work in progress is truly child care.
Starting point is 00:41:14 That is something that I had to leave a job. I loved John Capitol Hill because there was no child care I could afford. When I was a young mom and my kids have grown up, they still struggle with that as well. Yeah. And so that to me, I just sat down with some business leaders today. I said, this used to be a problem for a family. It was viewed as like, well, you chose to have kids. You figured out.
Starting point is 00:41:39 I said, this is a problem for society, but also for our economy. If we don't have everyone functioning at high levels and be able to go to the jobs that are helping make you profitable, you should be concerned about that, Mr. Mrs. Businessperson. This should be a solution we all want to have because every likely woman, but every parent who wants to work can work, then we are more productive as a society. So let's just continue what I've been talking about for years. And I've already invested $7 billion in child care since I've done. And part of it was opening up new spaces, training people, getting the infrastructure in place because you can't promise everybody childcare and then not have a place for them to go. Right.
Starting point is 00:42:27 Or an instructor there to take care of them. So that's the ground building I've been doing for years. I've said I want to get to universal child care. And this is a big priority for the mayor elect. But we also just step back and say, okay, what else is missing? Because if we promise something and someone calls it, I'm ready for my universal child, because I say, oh, we still have to open up, you know, 20 more buildings and have hundreds of more slots to be able to do that.
Starting point is 00:42:54 I don't want to pull the rug out from people. You have to have a realistic path to get there. Yeah, and that kind of infrastructure takes time. But it's thrilling to watch you continue to invest in it, especially in a time in our society where everyone wants the quickest turnover, the quickest win, the quickest own on social media, you are doing the building so that we can look back in 5, 10, 15 years and say, look what we did. I want to get it done tomorrow, just so, you know, I'm impatient.
Starting point is 00:43:24 Oh, of course. But we lost a lot of ground with the pandemic. A lot of child care centers literally closed up, which is why so many parents were staying home. We have people that are finding. that they can make more money because minimum wage in our fast food store is $20 an hour. Yes. And they make less if they're working at a daycare center or child care facility. And so there has to be a resetting of those values, so to speak.
Starting point is 00:43:52 So I just want everybody to know, we'll get there. But the system isn't ready right now. Yeah. But we need to have the grace to be able to work together, figure out what's missing to get us to that place. You're building the plane as you fly it. It's impressive. But it's good. It's a priority.
Starting point is 00:44:08 It makes me think of something that Kamala Harris said, and I think back to the wonderful event you all did with all the female governors at the DNC. It was so special. I was so thrilled to be in the room. And her pushback on this idea that universal child care is somehow a socialist policy. She was like, no, no, it's capitalism with a good R-O-I. Because parents who have child care go and make more money and then their companies make more money.
Starting point is 00:44:35 It actually is a relatively low-cost investment when you look at it against what it creates in profit. And so I love that that is, I love that that's your bone. You're never going to put down because we need it. No, I tell CEOs, one of your big problems is retention. You train someone. They're great.
Starting point is 00:44:58 They're awesome. They're producing. And then they want to have a family. If you don't support them during that time, Again, the time from when, before they hit, you know, if it's three-year-old pre-K or four-year-old pre-year-old pre, it's just a few years. If you help them through that, you know, have a child care center on site. Yes. And that's what we're doing, you know, this big micron company that's where we brought,
Starting point is 00:45:20 it's the largest private sector investment in American history, building semiconductors in Syracuse. Casual. They had to build a child care center as a condition of getting our money. Yes. So the bigger guys have the space, build a child care center. Smaller ones can have consortiums. I think while we're working on our piece of it, let the private sector realize you should do this too. It's in your interest.
Starting point is 00:45:44 And that employee will stay with you for life if you get them through those early years. That's it. So we can help solve some problems. And it's how you build community and a great economy. Thank you so much, Governor. I know you've got to run. I see everybody's starting to look at their watches. is. I just so appreciate you being here today. And yeah, you tell us where to be for this next
Starting point is 00:46:05 election. We're ready. I appreciate it very much. Thank you for having your voice help lead the fight. Thank you. Thank you.

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