Paterson to become first black, blind New York governor
Michael Hill
ALBANY, N.Y. — The man poised to succeed the disgraced Eliot Spitzer will not only become the first black governor of New York. He will also be the state’s first legally blind governor, and its first disabled governor since Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Though his sight is limited, Lt. Gov. David Paterson walks the halls of the Capitol unaided. He recognizes people at conversational distance and can memorize whole speeches.
He has played basketball, run a marathon, and survived 22 years in the backbiting culture of the state Capitol with a reputation as a man more apt to reach for an olive branch than a baseball bat.
And now, Paterson will take the reins of a state shaken by a prostitution scandal that shattered Spitzer’s tough image as a straight arrow reformer and forced him to resign.
“I cannot allow my private failings to disrupt the people’s work,” Spitzer said Wednesday at a Manhattan press conference, announcing his resignation with his wife, Silda, at his side.
The scandal erupted Monday when allegations surfaced that Spitzer, a 48-year-old father of three daughters, spent thousands of dollars on a call girl at a swanky Washington, D.C., hotel on the night before Valentine’s Day.
A first-term Democrat, Spitzer built his political reputation on rooting out government corruption. As state attorney general, he made a name for himself as a crusader against shady practices and overly generous compensation. He also cracked down on prostitution.
Heralded as the “Sheriff of Wall Street” and “Eliot Ness,” the square-jawed graduate of Princeton University and Harvard Law School rode into the governor’s office with a historic margin of victory on Jan. 1, 2007, vowing to stamp out corruption in New York government in the same way that he took on Wall Street executives with a vengeance.
“Over the course of my public life, I’ve insisted, I think correctly, that people regardless of their position or power take responsibility for their conduct,” he said. “I can and will ask no less of myself.”
He left without answering questions.
Spitzer will be replaced on Monday by Paterson. In a statement, the lieutenant governor said he was saddened, but would move forward.
“It is now time for Albany to get back to work as the people of this state expect from us,” he said.
Little known outside of his Harlem political base, Paterson, 53, has been in New York government since his election to the state Senate in 1985. While Spitzer is renowned for his abrasive style, Paterson has built a reputation as a conciliator.
“We are going to partner with the lieutenant governor when he becomes governor,” said Senate Majority Leader Joseph Bruno, a Republican that had been Spitzer’s chief rival. “David has always been very open with me, very forthright … I look forward to a positive, productive relationship.”
According to some observers, the biggest changes in the forthcoming Paterson administration will probably revolve around style.
“He’s a guy who had two handicaps: his blindness and his race. And he never made excuses for it,” said civil rights leader Al Sharpton, a longtime friend. “He’s the guy who has said, ‘I have been in a minority group and a minority within a minority group. And I can make it, so don’t give me no excuses.’”
Paterson, 53, is the son of former state Sen. Basil Paterson, a member of the storied “Harlem Clubhouse” that includes fellow Democrats U.S. Rep. Charles Rangel and former New York City Mayor David Dinkins. The elder Paterson was the first in the family to run for lieutenant governor in 1970. He lost, but later became New York’s first black secretary of state.
David Paterson lost sight in his left eye and much of the sight in his right eye after an infection as an infant. Refusal to bow to his handicap came early. When New York City schools refused to let him attend mainstream classes, his parents established residency on Long Island, where they found a school that would let him go to regular classes.
“He was in the plays and on the stage, and required no assistance in maneuvering around stage and on the playground,” said Dr. Casmiro Liotta, Paterson’s former principal at the Fulton School.
Assemblyman Keith Wright, an old Harlem friend, remembers Paterson playing basketball and generally acting just like the other kids in the neighborhood. In 1999, Paterson completed the New York City Marathon.
After earning degrees from Columbia University and Hofstra Law School, he worked for the Queens district attorney’s office and was elected to the state Senate in 1985 at the age of 31. He built a reputation for working hard in a place where not everyone does.
Though he can read for brief periods, Paterson usually has aides read to him. He also has developed the ability to remember entire speeches and policy arcana. State Sen. Neil Breslin recalled that he told Paterson his cell phone number once and he memorized it.
“He has one of the finest memories of anyone I’ve known,” Breslin said.
In sharp contrast to Spitzer, who can sound like a legal brief, Paterson is known for dry wit and speaking off the cuff. Sharpton recalled Paterson’s arrest with his father at a New York City protest over the 1999 police killing of Amadou Diallo, an unarmed African immigrant.
Paterson quipped: “I’m going to tell the judge that I didn’t see where I was going.”
That easy demeanor belies Paterson’s record as a savvy political operator. He seized control of the Senate Democratic caucus from another senator in 2002. He then worked to build the caucus, chipping away at the Republican majority to the point where it’s now down to one seat. And he bucked his own father by accepting Spitzer’s offer to become his running mate. Basil Paterson and others in the Harlem Clubhouse had already thrown their support to someone else.
Paterson reportedly took a couple of weeks to decide whether to give up his legislative career for New York’s notoriously anonymous No. 2 spot. And sure enough, as Spitzer picked fights with lawmakers and became embroiled in a scandal over aides’ efforts to embarrass a Republican rival, Paterson stuck to an agenda that was substantial, but hardly flashy: Medicaid, stem cell research, renewable energy.
When he is sworn in, Paterson will become only the third black governor in the nation since Reconstruction, joining L. Douglas Wilder, elected in Virginia in 1990, and Deval Patrick, elected in 2006 and the sitting governor of Massachusetts.
Paterson will also be the first blind governor — at least as far as the National Federation of the Blind is aware.
But he will not be the first New York governor with a disability. Franklin Delano Roosevelt, who governed from 1928 to 1932, was paralyzed by polio in 1921.
In the wake of Spitzer’s ignominious exit, Paterson is expected to have to lean heavily on his ability to smooth ruffled feathers. Even before Spitzer was snagged in a prostitution scandal, the Capitol has been an acrimonious place.
Paterson already has a warm relationship with Bruno from their days in the state Senate, and Assembly Republican Leader James Tedisco said Tuesday he had already received a call from Paterson talking about the future.
“He will be able to turn the temperature down a little bit,” Wright said.
Associated Press writers Jessica M. Pasko in Albany, and Verena Dobnik and Michael Gormley in New York contributed to this report.
(Associated Press)
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New York Lt. Gov. David Paterson (left) is applauded by Russell Simmons (center) and New York state Attorney General Andrew Cuomo during the annual Martin Luther King Day observance at the Rev. Al Sharpton’s National Action Network House of Justice in New York on Jan. 15. Following New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer’s resignation as a result of his involvement in a prostitution scandal, Paterson will Monday become both the state’s first black and first blind governor. (AP photo/Richard Drew)
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