Mr. Cuomo has denied the allegations.
As he has before, he portrayed his conduct toward women as a result of shifting generational norms, saying he may have been “old-fashioned and out of touch” and adding that, “I’ve learned a powerful lesson, and I paid a very high price for learning that lesson.”
The claims that the former governor engaged in inappropriate behavior were documented in a damning report in August following an investigation conducted by outside investigators and overseen by Letitia James, the state attorney general. Mr. Cuomo did not mention Ms. James by name on Sunday — he referred to her as “they” — but his camp has repeatedly attacked her since he resigned. A second investigation led by the State Assembly largely corroborated the report’s conclusions.
He accused CNN of firing his younger brother, Chris Cuomo, one of the network’s top anchors, who came under fire for privately advising his older brother on how to respond to the allegations, because “they were in the middle of a merger and afraid of the cancel-culture mob.”
“I resigned as governor, the press roasted me, my colleagues were ridiculed, my brother was fired,” Mr. Cuomo said during the half-hour speech. “It was probably the toughest time of my life.”
Mr. Cuomo stepped down as the entirety of the New York political class clamored for his resignation and he faced the threat of impeachment. But on Sunday, he sought to blame politics for his resignation.
He repeatedly noted how five district attorneys had not pressed charges against him after investigating some of the claims. He did not mention that some prosecutors said they had found the women credible, but concluded there were insufficient legal grounds to bring criminal charges. He pointed to the dismissal of those cases to argue that the entirety of the attorney general’s 168-page report was a sham, an argument that critics have said is misleading.
“The political sharks in Albany smelled blood,” he said, charging that they exploited the situation “to overturn an election.”