Is Obama meddling in the governor's race with Patterson?

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Gov. David A. Paterson defiantly vowed to run for election next year despite the White House‘s urging that he withdraw from the New York governor’s race.
Appearing tired and agitated at a parade in Harlem on Sunday, the governor told a crowd of reporters that he would not abandon his campaign to seek a full term.

“I have said time and time again that I am running for governor next year,” he said at the 40th annual African-American Day Parade.

Mr. Paterson would not characterize what he was told by the White House, saying that he would not “discuss confidential conversations.”

“I’m not talking about any specific conversations,” he said. “As I said, I am running for office.”

President Obama had sent a request to Mr. Paterson that he withdraw from the New York governor’s race, fearing that Mr. Paterson cannot recover from his dismal political standing, according to two senior administration officials and a New York Democratic operative with direct knowledge of the situation.

The decision to ask Mr. Paterson to step aside was proposed by political advisers to Mr. Obama, but approved by the president himself, one of the administration officials said.

“Is there concern about the situation in New York? Absolutely,” the second administration official said Saturday evening. “Has that concern been conveyed to the governor? Yes.”

The administration officials and the Democratic operative spoke on condition of anonymity because the discussions with the governor were intended to be confidential.

The president’s request was conveyed to the Mr. Paterson by Representative Gregory W. Meeks, a Queens Democrat, who has developed a strong relationship with the Obama administration, they said.

The move against a sitting Democratic governor represents an extraordinary intervention into a state political race by the president, and is a delicate one, given that Mr. Paterson is one of only two African-American governors in the nation.

But Mr. Obama’s political team and other party leaders have grown increasingly worried that the governor’s unpopularity could drag down Democratic members of Congress in New York, as well as the Democratic-controlled Legislature, in next fall’s election.

An aide to Mr. Meeks said the congressman could not be reached Saturday.

“The message the White House wanted to send — that it wants Paterson to step aside — was delivered,” said the Democratic operative, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the discussions were intended to be confidential. “He is resistant.”

The general election is more than a year away, but Mr. Obama and his political team are moving now in part because of signals from Rudolph W. Giuliani, the former New York City mayor, that he may run for governor, according to Democrats who have spoken with White House officials. Many Democratic leaders believe that Mr. Giuliani’s presence at the top of the Republican ticket could spark enthusiasm among his party’s voters, who might otherwise have little desire to go to the polls.

Leading Democrats in the state have expressed deep concern about Mr. Paterson’s ability to hold on to the office. But most have been wary of openly suggesting he step aside.

The White House move could give them cover to abandon Mr. Paterson and endorse another candidate, most likely Attorney General Andrew M. Cuomo, who has been debating for months whether to take on Mr. Paterson in a primary.

Mr. Paterson, who was elevated to governor from lieutenant governor in March 2008, in the wake of Gov. Eliot Spitzer’s resignation after a prostitution scandal, announced in October that he would seek a full term.

But in the intervening months, White House officials have watched the deteriorating political fortunes of Mr. Paterson with growing alarm, as his popularity plunged and he committed a series of missteps that raised questions about his ability to govern.

In addition, the relationship between Mr. Obama and Mr. Paterson has been shaky, dating to the governor’s selection of a replacement for Hillary Rodham Clinton, who resigned from the Senate to become secretary of state. White House officials had received assurances from Mr. Paterson that he would not pick Kirsten E. Gillibrand, then a little-known Democratic congresswoman from a heavily Republican district outside of Albany, according to a prominent Democrat who discussed the matter with a senior White House official.

The White House and Democratic House leaders were concerned that her sudden departure from the House would give Republicans a prime opportunity to reclaim the seat. Aides to the president conveyed those concerns to the governor, according to Democrats who have discussed the matter with Mr. Obama’s aides.

In the end, Mr. Paterson selected Ms. Gillibrand anyway, infuriating White House officials and Democratic leaders in Washington. Making matters worse, the governor also publicly snubbed Caroline Kennedy, a close personal friend and ally of Mr. Obama’s, who announced in December her wish to be chosen as Mrs. Clinton’s replacement, but then withdrew her name from consideration in January, citing personal reasons.

The concerns of Obama aides deepened last month, when the governor, speaking on a radio talk show in New York, suggested that criticism of him was racially motivated and that Mr. Obama would soon suffer similar attacks. Mr. Obama’s advisers, who have long sought to defuse the issue of race, found the comments inflammatory and expressed their displeasure directly to the Paterson camp.

The move by the White House will probably bring new attention to Mr. Cuomo, now the most popular Democratic figure in the state. While only 30 percent of voters in a Quinnipiac poll last month approved of the job that Mr. Paterson was doing, 74 percent approved of Mr. Cuomo’s job performance.

The situation between Mr. Cuomo and Mr. Paterson has been a complicated one. Mr. Cuomo is still haunted by the fierce backlash he stirred in 2002 when he decided to run in the Democratic primary for governor against H. Carl McCall, the first serious black candidate for governor.

Now, Mr. Cuomo effectively has the blessing of the nation’s first black president to run against New York’s first black governor. That will probably neutralize any criticism he may face among the governor’s prominent black allies, including Representative Charles B. Rangel of Harlem, who warned this year that the party would become racially polarized if Mr. Cuomo took on Mr. Paterson.



http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/20/nyregion/20paterson.html?_r=2&hp

What do you think? :shock: I am stunned that Obama said that. I don't remember if any other former presidents have done it before?
 
Interesting. There are two first black governors in the United States. Both Gov. Patterson and Gov. Jon Corzine of New Jersey, according to Steele, their approval ratings are nearly the same and yet Obama is meddling into the affairs of a governor asking only Patterson not to run? I don't think I ever saw any presidents ever do that and frankly it isn't the president's business to do so. And it's rather obnoxious if not bullying.

MICHAEL STEELE: I-- I-- I found that to be stunning that the White House would send word to one of only two black governors in the country not to run for re- election. And it just raised a curious point for me. I think Paterson-- Governor Paterson's numbers are about the same as Governor Corzine's numbers, yet the President was with Governor Corzine, and I don’t know if there’s been a request made of Governor Corzine to step down in New Jersey. So I-- I just find it to be stunning and also rather bold.

The Save Jersey Blog: Steele to Obama: "If Paterson Should Drop Out, Then Why Not Corzine Too?"
 
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sorry but Paterson sucks. He will drown NY. GET SPITZER BACK! :mad2:
 
sorry but Paterson sucks. He will drown NY. GET SPITZER BACK! :mad2:

I have to admit that i agree. I saw paterson in person couple of times. Paterson's attitude/vibe showed more of plain. =?
 
Let Patterson run if he feels he can win.

Already Obama just sent a signal to the MSM and bloggers, his minions, to do something about Patterson and get them to somehow pressure him and have him change his mind about running for governor. Just watch....

Heel!
Sit!
Fetch!
Good doggy!!
 
wondering if this was something to do with Obama's lunch with clinton in NYC last week :hmm:
 
It should be ENTIRELY up to Patterson to decide whether or not he will run. Of course he will need to consult with his family and advisers before making a final decision without being meddled by outsiders like Obama.
 
Interesting. There are two first black governors in the United States both Gov. Patterson and Gov. Jon Corzine of New Jersey. According to Steele both of their approval ratings are nearly the same and yet Obama is meddling into the affairs of a governor asking only Patterson not to run? I don't think I ever saw any presidents ever do that and frankly it isn't the president's business to do so. And it's rather obnoxious if not bullying.



The Save Jersey Blog: Steele to Obama: "If Paterson Should Drop Out, Then Why Not Corzine Too?"



Umm, Jon Corzine is not black. He is WHITE. Please get facts first before you post it. tyvm
 
Umm, Jon Corzine is not black. He is WHITE. Please get facts first before you post it. tyvm

oh wow! good job catching that error! I thought the comment said only 2 black governors in USA.

here's what Corzine looks like

Jon-Corzine.jpg


he's surely white as a ghost! :lol: I wonder what he looks like now since he had a horrible car accident (with torn scalp) on Garden State Parkway SB
 
Umm, Jon Corzine is not black. He is WHITE. Please get facts first before you post it. tyvm

LOL I haven't read kok's post yet. Oh no wonder you knew since you live in NJ. shame on JIRO! lol
 
oh wow! good job catching that error! I thought the comment said only 2 black governors in USA.

here's what Corzine looks like

Jon-Corzine.jpg


he's surely white as a ghost! :lol: I wonder what he looks like now since he had a horrible car accident (with torn scalp) on Garden State Parkway SB

I think Kokonut prolly meant a black governor from Massachusetts named Deval Patrick.

Deval Patrick - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 
Umm, Jon Corzine is not black. He is WHITE. Please get facts first before you post it. tyvm

That was my error. I know he's not black.

The point is that why not go after Corzine whose approval rating is just as low as Patterson? Hence, which is why I posted about what Steele said about Corzine.
 
That was my error. I know he's not black.

The point is that why not go after Corzine whose approval rating is just as low as Patterson? Hence, which is why I posted about what Steele said about Corzine.

If you bothered to read and comprehend the article, that question has already been answered.:roll:
 
That was my error. I know he's not black.

The point is that why not go after Corzine whose approval rating is just as low as Patterson? Hence, which is why I posted about what Steele said about Corzine.

Why don't you create a thread about Corzine then?
 
I have. But the point is being overlooked here, obviously.

No it isn't. At least, not the point of the article. The point you are attempting to make is being overlooked. Or to be more accurrate, ignored.:cool2:
 
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