Gov. Andrew Cuomo will meet with President-elect Donald Trump on Wednesday to discuss, among other issues, infrastructure and the Affordable Care Act, a Cuomo spokesman said Tuesday evening.

The meeting will take place at Trump Tower in Manhattan. It was not clear what time the meeting would take place.

Of immediate concern for state officials is how the Republican-controlled Congress and White House will seek to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act. Cuomo’s administration projects that a repeal of that law would blow a $3.7 billion hole in the state budget. Some 2.7 million New Yorkers are projected to be are at risk of losing health care coverage if the ACA is eliminated.

Though as of 6:45 p.m. the governor had yet to publicly unveil his executive budget, Senate Majority Leader John Flanagan told reporters after an afternoon briefing on the budget with the governor that Cuomo is operating under the assumption that federal aid for the state will not increase or decrease if the ACA is scrapped.

Politically, Cuomo has attempted to position himself as a progressive beacon that Democrats and, more broadly, middle class Americans can look to for a rebuttal to Trump’s rhetoric and policies.

“I believe these measures will help alleviate the middle class anger,” Cuomo said last week of his 2017 agenda, which includes a free state college tuition plan and provisions intended to protect immigrants. ” … When they focus that energy and they do it in a positive way, it can be a great force for reform. But misdirected, that anger can be destructive. It can scapegoat and it can demonize. It can spread fear of those who are different. And it can destroy the uniquely American values and progressive principles that are the foundation of this society.”

” … We know that the middle class success is not the enemy of our progressive beliefs,” he added.

At the same time, Cuomo has previously said Trump’s New York background could be a boon to the Empire State and the Northeast as a region when it comes to certain policies.

The governor has found himself included in early chatter about who Democrats will nominate to challenge Trump in 2020, though he publicly says he intends to run for re-election in 2018.

“He knows New York,” Cuomo reiterated to reporters Tuesday night during an unrelated event. “I think it would be helpful to him to have a discussion about how these issues affect the practical reality of what these issues mean. What does Medicaid mean to the state of New York? What happens if the Affordable Care Act goes away and there are uninsured people? Housing programs are vitally important to New York state.”

Cuomo said he believes Trump should make fighting homelessness a top priority, given that Trump is aware of New York City’s homeless crisis.

“That’s the conversation I want to have with him: What are his plans? What are his ideas? And let me tell you what that would mean in terms of the state,” he said.