They didn't share the stage, but the message was unmistakable from the mayor and the governor: the voters spoke loudly and clearly in last week's primary, and they want Democrats to come together to fight the policies of President Donald Trump.

"I believe in unity. Because the people we serve need our unity. They really do," said Mayor Bill de Blasio. "And it doesn't mean we can't still have righteous discussions and disagreements and defend the positions we believe in. But there is a time for unity, and that time is now."

The governor and the mayor have been feuding for years, and Cynthia Nixon's primary challenge to Cuomo this year was viewed as yet another battle between the two leaders, since Nixon is a de Blasio ally and de Blasio declined to endorse either candidate in the primary. 

But that appeared to be behind everyone, at least for now, as they look toward winning control of the state Senate and Congress in November.

Governor Andrew Cuomo is once again putting the target of Democartic ire right back on Trump, something he did successfully in his primary with Nixon.

"President Lincoln ends the Civil War, President Trump started a Civil War by pitting the red states against the blue states as to who was goiong to be economically sufficicient," Cuomo said.

Cuomo has also used Trump to attack his Republican opponent Marc Molinaro, accusing him of being a "Trump mini-me."

"I'm not spending every day telling you who I am or who I am associated with or not associated with," Molinaro said. "And the Governor wants nothing more than to talk about anything - and thank goodness he has created his own boogeyman - anything other than the fact that we are the highest taxed state in the nation, the most corrupted government in the nation."

If the primary is any guide, Cuomo's anti-Trump message, which is magnified by the millions of dollars he is willing to spend, could prove overwhelming for any opponent in this environment. Molinaro is considered a moderate Republican, but that may not be good enough for the largely Democratic electorate in this cycle.