Why New Yorkers booed Governor Hochul at the Ryder Cup

Gov. Hochul while getting booed at the Ryder Cup. | News feed.

It may not be considered polite to boo an elected official, but when Governor Kathy Hochul was introduced at the Ryder Cup, she had it coming. Her record of destructive policies has left New Yorkers frustrated, unsafe, and taxed beyond reason.

Take her support of cashless bail. By removing accountability for repeat offenders and blocking judges from detaining the worst of the worst, she has unleashed a crime wave across the state. Residents in suburban and urban communities alike are seeing their neighborhoods under assault with law-abiding citizens paying the price.

Her Sanctuary State stance on illegal immigration has welcomed thousands of migrants at enormous cost to taxpayers—billions of dollars that could have funded schools, infrastructure, or public safety. Meanwhile, her support of defunding the police has weakened the very institutions meant to protect citizens, all the while she does nothing as fentanyl and other deadly drugs take lives and ruin families.

Hochul’s priorities are revealing. She pushed for a new football stadium in Buffalo, funneling billions in taxpayer dollars to a project from which her husband stands to gain. She endorsed radical candidates like Communist Zohran Mamdani for New York City Mayor and attempted to override local zoning laws to force multi-family housing on suburban communities without regard for resident concerns.

These decisions are not abstract policy—they affect real people: parents worried about their children’s safety, taxpayers stretched to the limit, friends and neighbors overdosing left and right. New Yorkers notice, and they speak their minds. The boos at the Ryder Cup were less about etiquette and more about frustration with leadership that has repeatedly failed to protect the public interest.

While civility matters, so does accountability. Governor Hochul’s policies have consequences, and the people of New York are letting her know, loudly and clearly, that enough is enough.

Organizations Included in this History


Daily Feed

Local

The King is Back in the South Shore Press

The legendary Long Island journalist Karl Grossman’s latest column.


Sports

Don't Expect Bregman to Pay Off

This week, one of the bigger names in the free agency cycle signed with the Chicago Cubs, and fantasy managers everywhere sighed. Usually, anyone heading to Wrigley Field is viewed as a positive, but for Alex Bregman, more information has emerged suggesting this move could spell trouble for his fantasy outlook. Bregman is a right-handed pull hitter who previously played in two of the more favorable home parks for that profile in Houston and Boston. Both parks feature short left-field dimensions that reward pulled fly balls and help inflate power numbers.


Sports

Futures Bettors Will Be Smiling

The College Football Championship is set, and it pits two of the more unlikely teams against each other. Indiana may have the largest living alumni base in the country, with more than 800,000 graduates, but few expected the Hoosiers to reach this stage. They feature zero five-star recruits and have instead relied on depth, discipline, and consistency while dominating all season long.