| It's been a busy few days, but I figured someone else would get to this piece on the 'detente' between Bruno and Paterson:
It is a shift that is turning Albany upside down and making some of Mr. Paterson's fellow Democrats privately uneasy. Mr. Paterson has quietly declared a political truce with Mr. Bruno and his party, and though he is committed to raising money for the state's Democrats, he has been reluctant to recruit candidates to run against incumbent Republicans at a time when the Democrats appear tantalizingly close to taking over the Senate for the first time in more than 40 years....
Still, despite their affection, the two men are politicians, and making peace has potential political benefits as they pursue their respective agendas. Mr. Paterson, who admits that he was unprepared to be thrust suddenly into the role of governor, is trying to define himself to the public as someone who can get things done, so he can buttress his chances of being elected in 2010 on his own merits. An amenable Legislature will help, though he may need to reassure some Democrats.
I've liked Paterson pretty well thus far, but this sounds to me like we're heading back to the world in which there are (at least) three Democratic Parties operating at the state level in New York:
A Democratic Party pushing to retain and expand its control of the Assembly, but with little fondness for anything that might diminish the party's power within the body, whether redistricting, rules or any of those other annoying "goo-goo reforms".
A Democratic Party pushing to finally take the State Senate back, whose members have suffered for decades under the thumb of an autocratic Republican majority, and who are - at least for now - very fond of those "goo-goo reforms".
A Democratic Party that's all about keeping the Governor's mansion. Reform? Well, if it helps us win...
One of the things I liked about Spitzer was that he let at least #2 and #3 come together, and deprived #1 of the "but there's an evil Republican Governor..." excuse.
Perhaps that, like many things, is now over. |