Ads are not an endorsement by the blog author.

Dawn Crawford vs Dirty County Politicians and  Officials

Public Journal
 Back to Journal Archives | Subscribe to Alerts Alerts Subscribe to Alerts | Feeds
< Obama Wins Missis
Monday, March 17, 2008
Obama's Church As >
Monday, March 17, 2008
March 2008
Who Are We? New Dialogue on Mixed Race
Bill Clinton urges superdelegates to be patient
Obama Campaign News
Ex-Terror Detainee Says U.S. Tortured Him
Obama Overstates Kennedys' Role in Helping His Father
Obama Says Clinton Should Keep Running
Iraqi Offensive Revives Debate for Campaigns
Clinton, Obama supporters wrangle over delegates
Obama pastor's words spring from complex tradition
Hasselbeck Steamed Over Pastor
Hillary Clinton Campaign News
Endorsement of Obama Points Up Clinton’s Obstacles
Orange County Supervisor Chris Norby
The Democratic Party News
Student Alert News
Obama Gets Boost; Clinton Urged to Quit
Barack is No Hypocrite: He Correctly Defended Jeremiah Wright and Rightly Castigated Don Imus
Former Patton State Hospital employee charged with raping patient
San Bernardino Mayor Pat Morris tells residents that projects will bear fruit
Rialto, Colton settle with county over contaminated groundwater
Area politicans battle over SCAG seat
Morris lays out vision
Barack Obama on the Veiw
Clinton Says She’s in It for the Long Haul
Sen. Leahy calls for Clinton to drop out
Councilwoman Wendy McCammack and her unprofessional behavior      
Iraq war is about oil
Rev. Jeremiah Wright
Puerto Rican Governor Faces 19 Counts
Democrats Obama, Clinton campaign on economy
Patton employee taken into custody
Making Sense: Hip-Hop Star Common Raps About Rev. Jeremiah Wright
Budget deficit solutions elude San Bernardino City Council
Hillary Clinton backtracks over 'misleading' Bosnia sniper story
Rock on A Roll: Nothing like a loud mouthed comedian to weigh in on the politics of the world.
Blacks Can't Stand Pat Buchanan
Obama Campaign News
Charges Filed in Detroit Mayor Scandal
Did Rialto violate Brown Act?
U.S. toll in Iraq reaches 4,000
Nights cold and noisy in Tent City
What Politicians Say When They Talk About Race
Comment from Woods of Wonder
New Bin Laden message attacks EU over cartoons
John McCain Campaign News
Stop the false religious slurs against Obama  
San Bernardino Public Integrity Unit should be closed down
Region's U.S. attorney's office disbands public integrity unit
Rep. Mary Bono Mack faces challengers in June re-election bid
Endorsement claim sparks controversy in supes race
Richardson Endorses Obama
Passport Files of 3 Candidates Breached, Officials Say
Obama Campaign News
Obama confronts nation's race issues
Obama Campaign News
Democrats
Obama's Church Assails Media Coverage of Pastor
Paterson Is Sworn In as Governor
Obama Wins Mississippi, Deflects More Racist Comments      
Clinton Remarks About Obama are Troubling      
Candidate's address shines light on residency rule for judges
For Democrats, Increased Fears of a Long Fight
A Free-Spirited Wanderer Who Set Obama’s Path
Student Alert News
Obama's Pastor: God Damn America, U.S. to Blame for 9/11
What’s the Real Racial Divide?
Spitzer fall places prostitute onto national stage
Spitzer's Historic Replacement
Spitzer resigns as New York governor
Ferraro quits Clinton campaign after Obama remarks
Obama Campaign News
A MESSAGE OF HOPE FROM DR. JACK VAN IMPE
Obama Hits Clintons on Democratic 'Dream Ticket'
Obama Hits Back on V.P. Chatter
Obama says Clinton is trying to 'hoodwink,' 'bamboozle' Americans
N.Y.'s Spitzer linked to prostitution ring
Sun editor Steve Lambert
Obama Wins Wyoming Caucuses
Obama aide forced out for calling Clinton 'a monster'
Obama Holds Large Delegate Lead      
Bass Elected 1st Black Woman in California to be Speaker of House      
Race Alone Is Never A Good Reason To Seek Public Office      
Obama: “I want to end the mindset that got us into war”  
Hunt On For College Student's Killer
Video Released of Times Square Explosion
Explosive Devices Found at UC Davis
Detroit Delays Mayor's Departure
Clinton Hints at Joint Democratic Ticket
Obama Moves to Sharpen His Critique of Clinton
Obama Campaign News
Going negative proved positive in Clinton's comeback
Obama Slams Clinton on Homestrech
Clinton Trails in Texas, Tied in Ohio
Obama Backers Urge Clinton to Exit if She Loses
Campus News Update
Clinton May Challenge Texas Vote Rules
Obama Spends Heavily to Seek Knockout Blow
Obama Campaign News
Open Letter: Star Jones Checks Bill O'Reilly's Racist Remark
« March 2008 Archive
Monday, March 17, 2008
Subject: Paterson Is Sworn In as Governor
Time: 10:47:00 PM EDT
Author:  ddawncrawford71
Mood:  Chillin'


   Dawn E. Crawford

Help Support Students Against Corruption 

  • Donations


  • Paterson Is Sworn In as Governor

    Published: March 17, 2008

    ALBANY — Lt. Gov. David A. Paterson ascended to New York’s highest office on Monday, pledging civility and unity in government to an ecstatic and palpably relieved gathering of state lawmakers and officials.

    Nathaniel Brooks for The New York Times

    David A. Paterson at the State Capitol in Albany, where he was sworn in as the 55th governor of New York. More Photos »

    Mr. Paterson was sworn in as the state’s 55th governor almost exactly a week after revelations emerged that his predecessor, Gov. Eliot Spitzer, had patronized a prostitute and faced federal investigation.

    In a relatively brief speech lasting about half an hour, Mr. Paterson offered soothing rhetoric to an audience that clearly ached to move beyond what has been an unusually sordid ordeal even for Albany, a capital well-acquainted with political scandal.

    Speaking to a joint session of the state Assembly and Senate, with senior officials from at least three states in attendance, Mr. Paterson alluded briefly to the Mr. Spitzer’s difficulties over the past year in working with the Democratic-controlled Assembly and Republican-controlled state Senate.

    “What we are going to do from now on is what we always should have done: We are going to work together, Mr. Paterson said. “With conviction in our brains and compassion in our hearts and the love for New York on our sleeves, we will dedicate ourselves to principle but always maintain the ability to listen.”

    But Mr. Paterson’s inaugural remarks were most striking for what was absent from them.

    In a speech with so many nods to other elected officials that even a former lieutenant governor made the cut, Mr. Paterson made no mention of Mr. Spitzer, who plucked him from virtual obscurity to join the ticket for statewide office in 2006, and whose powerful and at times overbearing personality were the central fact of political life here for nearly a year and a half.

    Mr. Paterson alluded only vaguely to Mr. Spitzer’s resignation, noting that New York had experienced “a very difficult week.” And though he and his staff have sent signals in recent years that continuity would be a key theme of the transition between administrations, Mr. Paterson made no suggestion that the Mr. Spitzer’s core agenda items deserved to survive even if the former governor’s career did not.

    Indeed, Mr. Paterson offered almost no specific policy proposals or promises, though an aide said that the new governor would lay out a more a specific agenda in the days ahead. He hewed closely to the theme of partnership, describing himself as Brooklyn-born, Long-Island-educated, and Harlem-residing, to rousing cheers from elected officials who hailed from each of those areas.

    Unlike Mr. Spitzer, who in his inaugural address fifteen months ago fired shot after shot across the bow of Albany’s political establishment, Mr. Paterson warmly embraced the capital’s two other major powers, Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver and Senate Majority Leader Joseph L. Bruno.

    “Let us grab the unusual opportunities that circumstance has handed us today and put personal politics, party advantage and power struggles aside, in favor of service, in the interests of the people,” Mr. Paterson said.

    Only when his speech turned to the worsening economic downturn and its likely effect on the state budget gap did Mr. Paterson offer a hint of challenge.

    “We are looking at an economy that is reeling and I must say to all of you in government and all of you in business that you must meet with me in the next couple of weeks and adjust our budget accordingly,” Mr. Paterson said, suggesting that budget austerity may be needed.

    Mr. Paterson, the state’s first blind governor as well as the first black one, also nodded to the historic nature of his swearing-in.

    “I have confronted the prejudice of race, and challenged the issues of my own disability,” he said. “I have served in government for over two decades. I stand willing and able to lead this state to a brighter future and a better tomorrow.”

    In a news conference following the address, Mr. Bruno seemed open to a détente.

    “I think it’s great relief,” said Mr. Bruno, the state’s top Republican. “It’s like a new day. The sun is shining.”

    At times, the event felt more like something of a coronation for Mr. Paterson, the scion of a Harlem political fraternity that remains powerful and well-connected in New York politics. His father, Basil A. Paterson, a former state senator and secretary of state, stood behind Mr. Paterson when he first ascended the dais, as did his mother, his wife, and his two children. They remained there as Mr. Paterson, a well-liked veteran of Albany, was greeted by exultant cheers and whistles, and a lengthy standing ovation.

    “It’s a great day for New York, and for those of us from Harlem, it’s an even greater day,” said Senator Bill Perkins, a Democratic senator from Manhattan, who replaced Mr. Paterson when he was elected lieutenant governor.

    New York’s United States senators, Charles E. Schumer and Hillary Rodham Clinton, were in attendance, along with Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg, former New York governors Hugh L. Carey and George E. Pataki, and the current governors of New Jersey, Connecticut, and Massachusetts.

    An initial draft of Mr. Paterson’s speech was prepared by aides, his advisers said, and he spent significant time editing, memorizing, and practicing the final speech.

    Sewell Chan, Danny Hakim, Trymaine Lee, Steven Lee Myers and Jeremy W. Peters contributed reporting.



    Written by ddawncrawford71 Blog about this entry
    This entry has 0 comments: (Add your own)