ALBANY - With just six days left in the left in the legislative session, Gov. Andrew Cuomo ramped up his pressure on Democratic lawmakers Tuesday, saying they should all face primaries next year if they fail to pass his broad, progressive-leaning agenda.

Cuomo has laid out a 10-point plan for the end of the session that includes legalizing marijuana, making paid surrogacy legal, allowing undocumented immigrants to apply for driver's licenses and strengthening women's rights.

But Democrats in control of the state Legislature have yet to agree on a number of their priorities as well as the ones proposed by the governor, leaving the end of session in flux.

Cuomo reiterated Tuesday that he's not actively negotiating with leaders of the Senate and Assembly, urging them to pass the bills and vowing he would sign them.

"It’s all between them and their own colleagues. It is whatever they can work out amongst themselves," Cuomo told reporters after a news conference at the Capitol with Bravo's Andy Cohen to push for the paid-surrogacy law, which the Senate was scheduled to pass Tuesday.

Pressuring Democrats

Cuomo said Democrats won control of the Senate last year on a progressive platform. If they, along with the Democratic majority in the Assembly, don't follow through, they should face primaries next year when all 213 seats in the Legislature, he said.

"You were elected because you were progressives," Cuomo said. "You end the session: no marijuana, no driver’s license, half a loaf on tenant protection, no surrogacy, no ERA, no pay equity. Now, I believe they should all be primaried, because that is a failure of a basic progressive agenda."

Later, Cuomo said he believes the Legislature will pass many of the issues on his agenda. "I believe at the end of the day it’s going to be a very successful legislative session," he said.

The Legislature's annual session at the Capitol is scheduled to end June 19.

Democrats won control of the state Senate last year riding a wave of progressivism that carried them to victory in swing areas of the state, particularly the Hudson Valley and on Long Island.

Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins, D-Yonkers, dismissed the Democratic governor's comments, saying, "I'm asked all the time to analysis these things and I really can't."

She said Democrats are focused on "doing what's best for New Yorkers lives" and that it would be too soon to say where some thorny issues might end up before lawmakers leave the Capitol for the year.

More:5 major issues to watch as New York lawmakers ready for end-of-session push

More:Sports betting: How New York casinos just got closer to allowing wagers

More:Marijuana in New York: Legalization a few votes short in Senate; hung up on NYC suburbs

Issues at stake

Cuomo has faced criticism from lawmakers for not using his influence to help them get some issues, like legalizing marijuana and a rent-control law that expires Saturday, over the finish line with some reluctant legislators.

But Cuomo, who has often used the power of his office to cajole lawmakers to act, said the Legislature faces political choices when it comes to legalizing marijuana or allowing undocumented immigrants to get driver's licenses.

He has doubted whether the Senate has the votes to pass the marijuana bill.

A review by the USA Today Network's Albany Bureau last week showed that some suburban senators are either opposed or leaning that way on whether they would vote to legalize marijuana.

And while a Siena College poll Monday showed a majority of New Yorkers support legalizing pot, a majority also don't want a law that would let the immigrants be able to get driver's licenses.

“I think there is political trepidation,” Cuomo said.

The Assembly is set to pass the driver's license measure Wednesday, but it too faces uncertainty in the Senate.

A bill to legalize paid surrogacy for LGBT or infertile couples, meanwhile, has support in the Senate but isn't a done deal in the Assembly.

Cuomo took one issue off the table Tuesday. He said he didn't believe there would be enough time to consider a bill that would expand sport betting to mobile devices.

The state Gaming Commission on Monday approved regulations to allow four upstate casinos and seven Native American casinos to add on-site sports betting, likely this summer.

"Until we study it more and understand it better," Cuomo said of mobile betting on WAMC radio in Albany, "the fact that we're channeling that work to the upstate casinos and that business, I think that's a good thing for the state."

Cuomo himself has faced primary challenges from the left, defeating Zephyr Teachout in 2014 and Cynthia Nixon in 2018.

More:New York farmers: Legalize marijuana so we can grow it

More:Some lawmakers want to decriminalize prostitution in New York