03:25pm, 03/17/10
Get our latest news links




What:

Where:

Enter city & state,
or zip code



Local Line: 716.803.0930Toll Free: 800.616.WBENCell Phone: *930
Barack Obama, David Paterson
President Barack Obama greets New York Gov. David Paterson before speaking about the economy, Monday, Sept. 21, 2009, at Hudson Valley Community College in Troy, N.Y. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

Posted: Tuesday, 22 September 2009 5:36AM

Obama to Paterson: "A Wonderful Man".....But....



TROY, N.Y. (WBEN/AP) -- Gov. David Paterson had weathered a weekend in which veiled messages were sent to him from Washington Democrats to drop out of the gubernatorial race and make room for the more popular Andrew Cuomo to lead a critical 2010 ticket.

Then, on Monday, some of the veils appeared to be pulled away, but that only threw Paterson into even more uncertainty.

At an event just a short drive from the governor's mansion, President Barack Obama gave Paterson a cordial, almost perfunctory introduction, calling his Democratic colleague, the state's first black and legally blind governor, a "wonderful man." Nothing about leadership or accomplishment in the job Paterson inherited just 18 months ago when former Gov. Eliot Spitzer resigned amid a prostitution scandal and a continuing fiscal crisis.

Then came Obama's near high-fiving of Cuomo, the state attorney general who has long eyed the office once held by his father, Mario Cuomo.

Obama joked with the hard-charging, headline-grabbing Andrew Cuomo, calling him "your shy and retiring attorney general."

"Andrew's doing great work enforcing the laws that need to be enforced," Obama said as he cast a warm smile toward Cuomo and the two made eye contact.

Obama didn't look at Paterson in his introduction.

Paterson has declined to comment. He was expected to talk to reporters on Tuesday following an unrelated economic development announcement.

 

READ:  Political Analysis of the Obama-Paterson Rift

WBEN's Barbara Burns with Rep. Brian Higgins and Mayor Byron Brown
The White House has sent a message to David Paterson, bow out of the 2010 race for governor. But Paterson insists he is still in it. Local elected democrats including Congressman Brian Higgins and Mayor Byron Brown are tight lipped on the recommendation.
 
Higgins says "that's between the president and the governor" adding his focus is on Buffalo. Mayor Brown also staying out of it. He says the decision to run or not to run is one best left up to Paterson.
 
But Brown's name has surfaced as a possible runningmate alongside Attorney General Andrew Cuomo who is expected to challenge Paterson in a democratic primary. Brown says he speaks often with Cuomo but has not talked with him about the position adding he too is focused on the city of Buffalo. Brown expects to serve a full four year term but when asked if he pledged to do so, he said "I'm not making any pledges right now."

Politics professor Doug Muzzio, from New York
City's Baruch College, viewed video of the Obama event afterward and said he thought "that you would have to be pretty dense not to get the message."

There were other perceived slights, the lack of private meetings, the limited face time in public, even the separate limo rides to the event at Hudson Valley Community College. But on television footage broadcast statewide, Obama fueled reports and rumors that he wanted Paterson and his historic low polling numbers to go away and not threaten the first all-Democratic control of the blue state's government.

It's an unusual move in politics in New York, where presidents often visit but usually to stock their campaign accounts or to pay respects to ground zero or speak at the United Nations.

On Monday, just before Obama's event, Obama's aides insisted he wasn't interfering with New York politics. However, before Obama landed, spokesman Robert Gibbs wouldn't say whether the president ordered that word be sent to Paterson that he does not want him to seek re-election.

"Well, look, I think everybody understands the tough jobs that every elected official has right now in addressing many of the problems that we have, and I think people are aware of the tough situation that the governor of New York is in," Gibbs told reporters aboard the president's plane. "And I wouldn't add a lot to what you've read, except this is a decision that he's going to make."

Gibbs said it wasn't unusual for the White House to be involved in state races. Asked whether there were any risks to such involvement, Gibbs answered: "The hazards of the job."

It would be the first time Obama would act to remove a Democrat in power. That would be a new and potentially risky step among the massive egos in New York, even for a president raised in rough-and-tumble Chicago politics.

But Obama has already dipped into New York politics, throwing his support to Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, a former congresswoman whom Paterson appointed to succeed Hillary Rodham Clinton. A call from Obama was enough to take one possible primary opponent, U.S. Rep. Steve Israel, out of Gillibrand's path.

Democrats need to hold every Senate seat next year to keep a filibuster-proof margin in the chamber.

Obama also endorsed Scott Murphy during a close special election to fill Gillibrand's upstate seat and lent his image to campaign mailers. Vice President Joe Biden did advertising spots for Murphy, who eventually won.

Former Republican Gov. George Pataki, speaking for the national GOP, said Obama shouldn't get involved.

"I just think it's wrong," Pataki said. "To weaken and undermine the governor beyond the weakness that already exists ... to me just doesn't serve the interests of the state, doesn't serve the interests of our country."

Also Monday, Paterson got support from a Long Island branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, which said it and other groups were planning a rally to support him, and from the Rev. Al Sharpton, a New York City civil rights leader, who warned against allowing "reactionary forces" to return to power.


Sandy Beach
Weekdays, 3pm - 6pm
Are you in a March Madness brackets pool?
  Yes
  No, but I know someone who is!
  No
 
View Results

To view this site, you need to have Flash Player 8.0 or later installed. Click here to get the latest Flash player.

WWW WBEN
Copyright 2009 Entercom Buffalo, LLC and InterTech Media, LLC : All Rights Reserved
Privacy Policy : EEO Public File : Jobs : Contact Us : Contest Rules : Advertise With Us