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Cuomo does not like to say the words 'Donald Trump'

While a new poll finds New Yorkers would like Gov. Andrew Cuomo to be a “national leader” challenging the policies of President Donald Trump’s administration, Cuomo seldom actually mentions the president by name.

Cuomo has railed against the Republican plans in Washington to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act, singling out two New York GOP congressmen, Chris Collins and John Faso, who have proposed an amendment to charge the state $2.3 billion to pay for county Medicaid costs.

“Faso- Collins is a shell game,” Cuomo said.

And he has not minced words in expressing his opposition to the Trump administration’s restrictions on immigration, saying officials should deport him first, since his grandparents were immigrants.

But Cuomo avoids actually calling out Trump by name, even though the president is highly unpopular in New York.

The governor also refuses to get drawn into the many controversies surrounding the Trump White House.

Reporters asked Cuomo this week about the travails of the president’s son, Donald Trump Jr., and emails that led to a meeting with a politically connected Russian who might have had dirt on Hillary Clinton. It was the top news story in the nation, but Cuomo said he hadn’t seen Trump Jr.’s emails. 

“I don’t know the facts,” Cuomo said. “I just haven’t heard any. I’ve been working.”

The governor apparently is not often on Twitter, either.

Cuomo never publicly comments on Trump’s tweets. The governor was asked in late June about a Trump tweet that criticized MSNBC cable news host Mika Brzezinski, questioning her intelligence and claiming that she had turned up at Mar-a-Lago “bleeding from a facelift.” Cuomo said he had not seen them.

“Let me read them first,” Cuomo said. “Sometimes I like to read the information before I comment.”

The governor denied that he was dodging the question.

Cuomo did reference Trump directly in a speech in Schenectady on Tuesday. But his complaint against the current president also included the Democrats who came before Trump. Cuomo said they were all just talk when it comes to building infrastructure.

“We are doing in this state what all the great national leaders have talked about. President Obama, Vice President Biden, new President Trump. They all say the same thing, infrastructure, build, everything is collapsing, invest in infrastructure,” Cuomo said. “Except nobody is doing it, except us.”

Mickey Carroll with Quinnipiac University polls said Cuomo is smart to avoid directly criticizing Trump.

“There’s not much plus for Cuomo in going out of his way to pick fights with Trump now,” said Carroll.

He said his advice to the governor is: “Don’t make a big thing of it; you’ve got plenty of time.”

A number of news articles recently have focused on Cuomo potentially running for president against Trump. The governor often gives speeches touting his successes as though he is addressing a national audience, and he’s hired some key staff with experience running national presidential campaigns.

The Quinnipiac poll finds that most New Yorkers, — though they say they like the idea of the governor serving as a national foil against Trump’s policies — don’t want Cuomo to run for president.

“Should he run for president? No, New Yorkers tell Quinnipiac,” said Carroll, who added the majority of state residents also don’t think Cuomo would make a good president.

But he said it’s also quite early in the race.

“Remember this, we’re in 2017, we’re talking about a 2020 election year,” Carroll said.

Carroll said the survey is already “tepid” for Cuomo, who, with a 46 percent approval rating, is near a record low.

Cuomo said his only focus now is on being a good governor and seeking re-election in 2018.

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.