| Gov. Eliot Spitzer is expected to resign his
office after being linked to a prostitution ring, paving way for
Lt.-Gov. David Paterson to take over as governor, the New York
Times reported Tuesday.
Lt.-Gov. Paterson and his staff were already laying the groundwork
for his transition and were reaching members of the Legislature,
Spitzer’s aides told the Times. Paterson would complete
Spitzer's term, which ends Dec. 31, 2010.
The Times report appear to confirm an earlier report by CBS 2
Political Reporter Marcia Kramer, who said Monday that Paterson
could be sworn in as the first black governor in the state’s
history. Paterson would also be only the third black governor
in the nation since Reconstruction. The only other black governors
since Reconstruction were Deval Patrick, currently serving in
Massachusetts who was elected in 2006, and L. Douglas Wilder of
Virginia, who left office in 1994
Paterson, who is 53 years old and is legally blind, also would
join a growing list of new black leaders in their early 50s and
40s who are trying to redefine black leadership in a way that’s
different from their predecessors who started their public lives
from the church.
These new crop of black leaders are notable for their youth,
high education and moderate political philosophy. They have been
described as cross-over politicians in the sense that they have
tried to de-emphasize race in their political lives.
Among them are Sen. Barack Obama of Illinois is currently leading
the race for the Democratic presidential nomination and Gov. Patrick
of Massachusetts. Others are Rep. Artur Davis of Alabama and Mayor
Cory Booker of Newark, New Jersey.
On Monday in New York, the news about Spitzer’s involvement
in a prostitution ring set off one of the largest scandals in
modern state political history. During a news conference Monday
afternoon, Spitzer, 48, apologized to his family and the public,
but did not go as far as to explain why.
"I have acted in a way that violates my obligations to my
family and violates my sense of right and wrong," he said
in a brief statement. "I have disappointed and failed to
live up to the standard I expected of myself. I must now dedicate
some time to regain the trust of my family," he said alongside
his wife, Silda Wall Spitzer, who was visibly upset as he spoke.
The couple has three daughters together.
A law enforcement official told The Associated Press that Spitzer's
involvement in the prostitution ring was caught on a federal wiretap.
The official says Spitzer is identified in court papers as "Client
9," and the wiretap was part of an investigation that opened
in the last few months.
The official says the New York governor met last month with at
least one woman in a Washington hotel. The law enforcement official
spoke on condition of anonymity because of the ongoing investigation.
If Gov. Spitzer resigns, attention will now turn to Lt. Governor
Paterson and what kind of governor he would be. Paterson, a Democrat
from Harlem, is well respected by Republicans and Democrats, the
Associated Press reports.
Former New York City Mayor Edward Koch recently called Paterson
"very capable, not withstanding his near sightlessness. It's
never impeded his public actions or his personal actions, and
he's really overcome it in an extraordinary way."
According to reporter Ben Smith of Politico.com, Paterson, a
former State Senator who evokes mixed feelings in New York political
circles, and particularly in his native Harlem. Spitzer chose
him based on his personal liking for, and confidence in, him --
a move that I wrote at the time demonstrated a "strong stomach
for risk."
Smith, who profiled Paterson in the New York Observer in 2006,
noted at the time that Paterson’s bid to be Eliot Spitzer’s
candidate for Lieutenant Governor and campaign-trail partner was
launched last month in a flurry of confusion and political intrigue.
It stunned his Harlem neighborhood, and left him for a few days
opposed by a candidate who had been endorsed by his wife and father.
And when things settled down, Mr. Paterson unsettled some of Mr.
Spitzer’s supporters with a public promise of a “Paterson-Spitzer
administration.”
Those who follow the Harlem Senator’s career were not surprised.
Mr. Spitzer selected a man described as “a living contradiction”
by one longtime associate. Indeed, Mr. Paterson’s 20 years
in public life have been characterized by an array of contradictions,
some of them openly stated, many irreconcilable. He’s a
maverick champion of the younger generation whose Senate seat
was handed to him, via a special election, by top Harlem Democrats
allied with his powerful father, Basil Paterson. He’s a
self-described reformer who spent nearly two decades in a comfortable
political sinecure before launching a reform campaign as Senate
Minority Leader.
The contradictions extend to his official biography: for years
it stated, falsely, that he had been born and raised in Harlem,
and it offered a shifting description of his legal career. His
stance on a defining issue, the death penalty, is nuanced to the
point of contradiction.
Mr. Paterson’s gifts—penetrating intelligence, an
immediate human connection and an inspiring story of overcoming
near-total blindness—make him a natural running mate for
the stiffer, privileged, decisive Mr. Spitzer. But the chaos that
has followed him through public life makes him a natural choice
in another way. Mr. Spitzer has a strong stomach for risk, and
Mr. Spitzer’s campaign, according to Mr. Paterson, engaged
in no real vetting of its lieutenant-governor candidate—a
man who brings to the campaign a complicated relationship with
the truth and a difficulty in saying no.
The AP said Paterson's disability has never been an issue in
Albany in his 20-year political career. He has memorized lengthy,
impassioned speeches without missing a mark; cited arcane legal
references in fast-paced floor debates; and won more victories
for his party in the Senate than any other leader in the Legislature.
His efforts brought Democrats to within a seat of taking the Senate
majority for the first time in decades.
Critics and supporters alike all point to the intellect, compassion
and humor that Paterson brings to the Statehouse. When Spitzer
picked him to be his running mate in 2006, Paterson deadpanned:
"I told Eliot, `Whenever you are trying to reform a system,
you need a person with vision and a person who is a technician,'
and that's what I am ... because I sure don't have vision."
"He's going to bring love to the executive branch and Legislature,"
said Assemblyman Dov Hikind, a Brooklyn Democrat. "He's a
real mensch, plain and simple."
Source: TNJ
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