Paterson Dismisses Obama's Call to Drop Campaign

President tells New York Gov. Paterson he can't recover

By MICHAEL GORMLEY and CAITLIN MILLAT
Updated 7:55 AM CDT, Mon, Sep 21, 2009

TWITTER FACEBOOK

President Obama requested Gov. David Paterson Saturday to drop out of the New York governor's race, marking an unusual and controversial intervention from the federal government into state politics.
Getty Images

Gov. David Paterson isn't scrapping his plans to run for the office he inherited 18 months ago despite growing pressure from Washington and intervention by the Rev. Al Sharpton, who has contacted the governor and the White House over his concern.

A senior Democratic adviser close to Paterson said Sunday that New York's first black governor is still planning to run and is focusing on the state's fiscal crisis. The adviser spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn't authorized to speak for Paterson.
    
The governor's office has refused to comment since reports Saturday night revealed the Washington-based effort to persuade the governor to drop out of the 2010 race. That would pave the way for the far more popular Andrew Cuomo, the state's first-term attorney general.

Cuomo is said to be the preferred choice of high-level Democrats, and beat Paterson among likely voters in a recent Marist poll.
    
The Rev. Al Sharpton said Sunday on his radio show that he has spoken to the White House and Paterson about his concern that Democrats do what is best for the people of New York. He wouldn't say whether he was advising Paterson to drop out.

Obama has not spoken to Paterson about the race, said a senior White House official who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the sensitive political matter. But it's no secret that Democrats -- in New York, in Washington and at the White House, are very concerned about Paterson's re-election bid.

The Obama White House made the request to Paterson's office under instructions from Obama's key political advisers, two senior administration officials and a New York Democratic official told the New York Times Saturday evening.

The Obama administration has reportedly grown wary of Paterson's statewide unpopularity, the officials said, fearing Paterson's status in New York could demoralize other sitting Democrats in Congress.

"Is there concern about the situation in New York? Absolutely," one of the administration officials told the Times. "Has that concern been conveyed to the governor? Yes," the source said.

Queens Representative Gregory W. Meeks, a close friend to the Obama administration, reportedly delivered the news to Paterson's camp Saturday. It wasn't immediately revealed what Meeks had said, but sources confirmed it involved Obama's people asking Paterson to withdraw from the race.

"The message the White House wanted to send -- that it wants Paterson to step aside -- was delivered," the Democratic operative told the Times. "He is resistant."

On Sunday, while at the African American Day Parade in Harlem, Paterson was resolute.

"My plans have not changed," he said. "I am running for office."

First Published: Sep 19, 2009 10:37 PM CDT on NBC New York

TWITTER FACEBOOK

  • 64% furious 7
  • 18% intrigued 2
  • 18% thrilled 2
  • 0% sad 0
  • 0% bored 0
  • 0% laughing 0
processing
      No comments have been posted yet.

      You have 2000 characters left

      processing
      So My City

      You are posting in (change)

      550/550 characters

      (jpg, pngs, or gifs allowed)

      (jpg, pngs, or gifs allowed)
      *Tip: You can also post moments via email or Twitter.

      processing

      View Your Moment in

      Posted by | 1 second ago

      Don't Miss

      transit

      Mar 19, 2010

      The Road to North Texas' Future Is Paved With Tolls

      Love them or hate them, toll roads are definitely here to stay.

      Read It

      sports

      2 hours ago

      Cornell Dominates Another Higher Seed to Join Sweet 16

      Louis Dale scored 26 points, Ryan Wittman added 24 and No. 12 seed Cornell upset fourth-seeded Wisconsin 87-69 on Sunday

      Read It

      sports

      Mar 21, 2010

      Stunning Kansas Loss Busts Everybody's Brackets

      The first giant has fallen.

      Read It
      Loading...
      Birthdate:
      You must be at least 13 to sign up.
      Gender:
      invalid

      By clicking the button below, I accept the terms of use and privacy policy

      Already Signed Up? Login Below.

      processing

      Here's what we're posting:

      *Only used for verification. We do not store your password.
      processing