Keyword:
Mentioned On Air >>
Alcohol and HIV
Cafeteria Inspections
Top Photos of 2008
Bargains!
City Life
ADVERTISEMENT
 
 
Text Size:   A   A   A
Posted: Monday, 10 March 2008 7:10PM

Governor Eliot Spitzer: What's Next?

ALBANY, N.Y. (AP)  -- Less than two years after he reluctantly ran for lieutenant governor, David Paterson is suddenly in line to be only the third black governor since Reconstruction, and the first in New York.
   
``He's the next governor and probably quite soon,'' said Maurice Carroll, director of Quinnipiac University's Polling Institute and a longtime New York political reporter.

LISTEN: Maurice Carroll on WCBS 880 today
   
Attention turned to Paterson immediately after word surfaced Monday that Gov. Eliot Spitzer had been linked to a high-priced prostitution ring. In a brief appearance in front of reporters, Spitzer issued a vague apology and did not mention resignation.
   
If Spitzer quits, Paterson automatically becomes governor and would complete Spitzer's term, which ends Dec. 31, 2010.
   
There was no immediate comment from Paterson.
   
Paterson, a 53-year-old Democrat from Harlem who is mostly blind, is well respected by Republicans and Democrats.
   
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.''
   
Paterson, who does not use a cane or a guide dog, can make out shapes and even people up close. He lost most of his sight as an infant when an infection damaged his optic nerve. He still talks of his fragile self-esteem in childhood and recalls not being invited to parties because ``people thought I would fall and hurt myself.''
   
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.
   
``He's knowledgeable about New York state government and politics, and he's a guy who likes to get along with people,'' Carroll said.
   
The only other black governors since Reconstruction were Deval Patrick, currently serving in Massachusetts and L. Douglas Wilder of Virginia, who left office in 1994.
   
As for what a Gov. Paterson would face, Carroll sees a ``fairly placid, amiable time for a while.''
   
Paterson has enjoyed a good relationship with Spitzer's chief nemesis, Republican Majority Leader Joseph Bruno, despite being the architect of a plan that got Democrats to within one seat of controlling the Senate. In pointed yet humorous floor debates, a kind of father-son relationship was evident between the younger Harlem Democrat and the rural, upstate Republican, who is 78.
   
Two years ago, Paterson was so focused on taking control of the Senate and becoming majority leader that he was surprised by Spitzer's offer to be lieutenant governor.
   
Carroll described Bruno as ``scrappy,'' but said ``he doesn't go looking for fights.''
   
Paterson would also have an advantage in that he would ascend to the governor's office with most of three years remaining in the term he would fill. That spares him the challenge of being a a lame-duck.
   
``If he becomes governor, he can move forward with what he wants to do as governor and start to set a tone,'' said Lee Miringoff of the Marist College Institute for Public Opinion. ``The state will have been shaken by all these revelations. And I think he's someone who is widely respected, and he has a lot of experience in the corridors of Albany.''

Copyright MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Print Page Email This Page
ADVERTISEMENT
 
 
Audio
Craig Allen's Weather To Go
     
Keeping the Love Alive
     
Morning News To Go
     
NEWS TO-GO | YANKEES | MORE AUDIO >>
 
 
WCBS Events
WCBS Capital One Small Biz Breakfast
March 19th, 2009
@ The Bethwood, Totowa, NJ