If Keith is renaming
his
segment "since some of the people did not get that the title was
ironic" we can steal it and use it to announce that,
nothwithstanding Gail Collins' well-
meaning rankings, the State of New York has proudly re-assumed its
rightful place as the most poorly governed sovereignty in the nation, if
not the western world.
The New York Times, whose reporters
managed to uncover
the
latest example of how low our state government has sunk,
editorially
suggested today that all of this might have a silver lining (no pun
intended, though a funny one is suggested). Somebody may need to visit
the editorial board to find out if they have all gone crazy or whether
there is some cloud of intoxicating smoke because it is otherwise
inexplicable that anyone would think that though
[t]he
governor is losing clout by the day... he still has a chance to use the
political levers available to any New York governor. He can threaten to
pluck lawmakers' favorite items out of the budget, for example, and he
still has the power of the veto. Those powers, plus the freedom from
political blocs and their agendas that dropping out of the race
provides, could help him push through a real ethics reform package.
Maybe
they should read their own paper. We are talking about a Governor who
cannot
be found to be told about a plane crash in Buffalo but attributes
that to aides "calling the wrong telephone," who fails to show up at
events he has agreed to attend and then lies about why, and who, most
importantly,
despite the state's crippling crisis,
has seldom engaged with [members of the Legislature] beyond denouncing
them....[and] has virtually no involvement with those he has running
major agencies, only rarely participating in policy meetings.
So, right. Freed from the rigors of running for the job he
said he did not want, and succeeded to under bizarre circumstances,
there is a real good chance he is going to lead a reform movement and
get the state out of its financial crisis. All that from a Governor
who, the Times tell us
often arrive[s] at his office
in Manhattan or Albany after 10 a.m. and depart[s] by 4:30 or 5 p.m.
but,
of course,
"Who cares if he likes to go out and has a
couple of drinks; what's the big deal?" said one friend, the private
investigator Richard Dietl, who enjoys a meal with the governor about
once a month. "He likes to go out. He likes to see people."
And
how did he get to be Governor anyway? Legally blind, he found no need
to learn braille, yet was admitted to Columbia University before he
flunked out. With a well regarded father,
Basil Paterson,
why should he have to read anything, when he can memorize his speeches?
And, elected to the State Senate, he became its minority leader, almost
by appointment of the majority leader, his friend, Joe Bruno.
But
Governor? How did that happen? This guy, Spitzer, then believed to be
the greatest person to ever hold government office,
did
not want to run with the daughter of a Buffalo politician who described
the imprisonment of minorities as "genocide" and settled instead on
Basil Peterson's son without, as the current Governor now tells us, any
"vetting.". Said greatest person got elected with this Paterson,
fought a dysfuntional Legislature
by
getting the State Police to spy on them and
referring to himself as a
"fucking steamroller" thus causing useless legislators to become
somehow sympathetic, before deciding it would be a good idea to
launder money through various bank accounts to hide his payments to a
high priced prostitute.
The Nixon-type revisionist history
about the popular, successful, smart Governor who made a mistake and
suddenly resigned, which dismisses the fact that his brief tenure turned
a completely broken government into something worse and that his
resignation took place after
his unfavorables had considerably surpassed his favorables in polls
taken before the prostitute story was published, no mean feat in a
state that
practically
invented the "party before public" politics that has now drifted down
to Washington.
According to the
unvetted
politician's son he ran withAs lieutenant
governor, I had the busiest schedule any lieutenant governor ever had.
And as governor, I've worked very hard.
so,
presumably,
his
oft repeated comment before becoming Governor that
we
have it in statute... What you do is you wake up in the morning at 6:30
and call the governor's mansion. If he answers, you can go back to
sleep.
was a joke meant to obscure the enormous
amount of work he actually did which, it is fair to say, nobody ever
noticed.
We have gone sixteen years since the brilliant, but
distant, mercurial and often plain mean spirited Governor Cuomo was
turned from office in favor of a Complete Idiot, followed by an Above It
All Egomaniac who resigned in favor of the Governor Who Wanted To Be
Left Alone. We were in dire straits in 1995, and things have gone
rapidly downhill since.
We have descended to the point that the
State Police could try to justify its use of members of the Governor's
security detail who decided it would be a good idea to try to talk to a
woman who said she was a victim of domestic violence at the hand of the
Governor's closest aide to tell her what her "options" were, by
explaining
it this way:
The State Police superintendent,
Harry J. Corbitt, said he was told of the episode within 24 hours after
it occurred. He confirmed that a state police officer had met with the
woman, even though the episode occurred in the jurisdiction of the New
York Police Department....He said that such an inquiry was customary for
the department if an episode involved a high-profile person, and that
it was done in the 24 hours afterward.
"It's typical if it
involves anything that might involve a media event; it doesn't have to
be a senior official to the governor," Mr. Corbitt said. "It could be a
politician or a high-profile physician, anything that might pique
interest in the press, because it's a special circumstance."
That's what the State Police does? They stick their nose in cases
being handled by other agencies if it involves a "media event"?
In
the day after the Times story about this incident was published, the
Governor's acolytes tried to suggest that it was important to find out
whether the Governor called the victim or whether she called him to be
told by said Governor that
If you need me...I'm here
for you
whereupon, with rumors swirling around
that the Governor was about to be exposed for something that would cause
him to resign, the woman decided not to appear at a scheduled court
hearing the next day on the domestic violence case, which then went
away, thus putting the Governor on the offensive (a tact he continued to
employ yesterday, amazingly enough, telling us how difficult it has
been for his family to have to deal with so many rumors).
So for
today we will not dwell on how come that after a woman
tells
the Family Court I'm glad you're doing this,
because I thought it was going to be swept under the table because he,
he's like a government official, and I have problems with even calling
the police because the state troopers kept calling and harassing me to
drop the charges, and I wouldn't....
and that it
might be hard to serve the man who she said had assaulted her
because
he
might be in Albany because sometimes he stays at
the Mansion. I don't know
makes no inquiries about
this possible interference and simply dismisses the proceeding when the
alleged victim misses a single court date.
But this is only one
of the gazillion problems left untended by the need to just "do
politics" every single day. Next January, we will have a new Governor
(and we may have another new one before then). The name of the Governor
next January is likely to be Cuomo, the son of the Governor who left
office sixteen years ago.
He is now proclaimed to be the greatest
person who ever held public office.
Let's hope so.