Editorial 
 Fully probe Cuomo’s nursing home fiasco 
 What a fi ne mess the Cuomo administration  
 got itself into on  
 the reporting of nursing home  
 deaths during the COVID-19 pandemic. 
 Last week,  another New York newspaper  
 published  a  bombshell  report on  
 Melissa DeRosa, secretary to the governor,  
 apologizing to New York lawmakers for  
 withholding from them the actual number  
 of nursing home fatalities related to  
 COVID-19.  
 DeRosa  told  the  legislators  that  the  
 administration was concerned the vindictive  
 Trump regime would use the statistics  
 as part of their ongoing political vendetta  
 against  Cuomo.  She  later  claimed  that  
 the state had been “comprehensive and  
 transparent”  with  the  federal  Department  
 of Justice in providing nursing home  
 death data, but that the regime became  
 sidetracked from providing full disclosure  
 to state lawmakers after the second wave  
 of the pandemic hit last fall. 
 We don’t blame you if this explanation  
 doesn’t make very much sense. We feel the  
 same way. 
 The report came weeks after state Attorney  
 General Letitia James released a  
 report acknowledging that the Cuomo  
 administration undercounted COVID-19  
 deaths in the state’s nursing homes. Since  
 then,  the  state  Health  Department,  
 trickle by trickle, has updated the death  
 toll from 8,711 to more than 15,000, as  
 of Feb. 10. 
 Cuomo  acknowledged  Monday  that  
 mistakes were made. The question now is  
 whether those mistakes violated the law.  
 The attorney general should appoint a  
 special prosecutor to investigate the nursing  
 home fi asco. Governor Cuomo should  
 publicly welcome it and cooperate with the  
 probe. 
 Depending on the special prosecutor’s  
 fi ndings,  offi cials  who  made  egregious  
 errors  of  judgment  should  step  down  
 immediately — and the state legislature  
 should then seek censure or impeachment  
 proceedings, if necessary. 
 Rather, it’s up to the Democrats themselves  
 to demonstrate that, unlike many  
 Republicans, they can hold their own accountable. 
   That  means  following  due  
 process of law. 
 And Democrats are not nearly as servile  
 to Cuomo as Republicans are to Trump. 
 Op-ed 
 PHOTO VIA GETTY IMAGES 
 Voting is an act  
 of choice and an  
 exercise of voice  
 BY ROBERT A. SCOTT 
 Many people seem to confuse democracy  
 and capitalism. Some  
 seem to think that capitalism defi  
 nes our system of government. However,  
 our  governance  is  based on democratic  
 principles,  including  the  importance  of  
 voting. Capitalism is about economics, not  
 governing. 
 Two central characteristics of capitalism  
 are competition in the marketplace and the  
 availability of information. Competition supports  
 “choice” and freely available information  
 supports informed choice. Wander supermarkets  
 aisles and look upon the shelves.  
 In each rack there are abundant choices of  
 toothpaste, laundry soaps, and paper products  
 with descriptions  of  ingredients  and  
 safety labels. Nevertheless, we as consumers  
 must be aware; we must determine the truth  
 in advertising. 
 Democracy as a governing system also has  
 informed choice as a foundational characteristic. 
  We can choose which political party  
 to prefer, which candidate to support, and  
 which policy proposals meet our criteria.  
 However, we must seek the truth and become  
 informed with facts. Given such choices, why  
 do so many fail to vote? 
 The 2020 Presidential election campaigns  
 spent almost $14 billion and turnout was  
 higher  than  any  other  in  120  years  –  yet  
 one-third  of  eligible  voters  stayed  away.  
 Some were deemed ineligible, others had a  
 lack of access or were afraid of the unoffi  
 cial “marshals” monitoring voting sites, and  
 still others were dissuaded from voting by  
 disinformation spread through social media. 
 We need to do more to control efforts at  
 disinformation, reduce limitations to voting,  
 help voters learn the truth, and ensure the  
 integrity of elections. We can choose to do  
 more to ensure informed choices at the ballot  
 box. But not choosing to do so is itself a  
 choice, a choice that can lead to the demise  
 of democracy. 
 The insurrection at the U.S. Capitol on  
 January 6 resulted from a disinformation  
 campaign of falsehoods that persists to this  
 day. For democracy to survive, for there to be  
 “a more perfect union,” we need an informed  
 citizenry that understands and appreciates  
 critical thinking, information literacy, and  
 the  instruments  of  democracy. We  need  
 objective journalism as the source of news. 
 We also need more fl exibility in voting to  
 meet the needs of our modern world. Voting  
 by mail and early voting are steps forward  
 but not the only steps we could take. Why  
 is general election voting limited to the fi rst  
 Tuesday in November? Wouldn’t it make  
 sense to allow voting over several days, as  
 in some other countries? Our vote is our  
 voice. Voting is an act of choice and the exercise  
 of our voice in expressing our values  
 and priorities. We should make it easier to  
 learn about candidates and issues, and vote.  
 After all, our choice of leaders and policies  
 is even more important than our brand of  
 toothpaste. 
 Robert  A.  Scott  of  Seniors  Take  Action  
 is the President Emeritus at Adelphi  
 University and author of “How University  
 Boards Work,” Johns Hopkins University  
 Press, 2018. 
 Publisher of The Villager, Villager Express, Chelsea Now, 
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