Scandal hits another governor in tri-state region
A dynamic young governor near the New
York media spotlight is suddenly derailed by scandal. In 2004, it
was Connecticut's John Rowland, followed quickly by New Jersey's
Jim McGreevey.
On Monday, prostitution allegations against New York Gov. Eliot
Spitzer threatened to make him the third governor in the tri-state
area to lose his job in shocking, humiliating fashion in less than
four years.
"It's troubling," said Gary Rose, politics professor at Sacred
Heart University in Fairfield. "They were all rising stars -- all
three of them. I think it could cause some voters to really look
below the surface. You wonder what lies beneath a lot of the
imagery."
JOHN ROWLAND
Rowland was the boy wonder of Connecticut politics: At 27 a
congressman and at 37 the youngest governor in Connecticut history
when he took office in 1995.
Though a Republican in a heavily Democratic state, the
charismatic Rowland enjoyed high approval ratings. But in his third
term, a federal investigation against members of his administration
brought new and damaging information each week.
He was forced to admit that contractors paid for home
improvements at his lakeside cottage and that state employees
bought him a hot tub. Memos revealed that he had accepted Cuban
cigars from a state contractor.
Amid impeachment hearings and the federal probe, Rowland finally
resigned. He later served 10 months in prison.
Now 50, Rowland recently landed a job as the economic
development coordinator for his hometown of Waterbury.
JAMES McGREEVEY
McGreevey's sudden and spectacular downfall came after an
alleged affair with a male aide who McGreevey said tried to
blackmail him.
In a nationally televised speech, McGreevey, now 50,
acknowledged being "a gay American." He said he would resign
because of his sexual indiscretions, which included putting his
lover on the government payroll in a job -- homeland security
adviser -- for which he had no qualifications.
The aide, Golan Cipel, denied being gay and said the governor
sexually harassed him.
McGreevey, 50, and his estranged wife, Dina Matos, are embroiled
in a bitter divorce and even have competing tell-all books. They
share custody of their only child, 6-year-old Jacqueline.
McGreevey is enrolled in an Episcopal seminary in New York City
and lives in Plainfield, N.J., with a male partner.
ELIOT SPITZER
Spitzer, 48, built his career on fighting corruption. Formerly
an assistant district attorney in Manhattan, Spitzer was New York's
attorney general for two terms before overwhelmingly being elected
governor in 2006.
Spitzer's hard-charging ways quickly put him at odds with the
powerful Republican leader of the state Senate, Joseph Bruno, and
his agenda stalled amid political scandal and polls that showed
most New Yorkers would not vote for him again as governor. Two
aides were disciplined for using the state police to track the
movements of Bruno, Spitzer's chief political rival.
Spitzer's involvement in a prostitution ring was caught on a
federal wiretap as part of an investigation opened in recent
months, according to a law enforcement official who spoke to The
Associated Press on condition of anonymity because of the ongoing
inquiry.
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