New York is passing by, Siegel writes, other scandal States:
American politics, particularly in the big-government, ever-more-insolvent blue states, are increasingly driven by scandal. We are witnessing a meltdown of the political class in states where the growth of government has, even in weakened economies, offered bountiful opportunities for living well off the public purse. Illinois, New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut have all had to force corrupt governors from office in recent years. But now New York is sprinting ahead in the scandal sweepstakes.
And there is more. Paterson's troubles have been piling up:
The state police and the abuse of women play a similarly prominent role in the current scandal involving Spitzer’s successor, David Paterson. One of Paterson’s first acts after his predecessor’s fall from grace was to admit his own extramarital affairs, including with staff members, and past drug use. He also demanded that Attorney General Andrew Cuomo investigate the state police, claiming that it had a special unit to collect information on public figures. Cuomo’s investigation, released last year, unearthed no such unit, but it did find political interference by state police higher-ups, including an attempt to lessen the impact of a domestic-violence report involving a Republican congressman.
Now, in the middle of a budget crisis, Paterson has been caught in a new disgrace in which, like Spitzer, he’s apparently put the state police to personal use. One of his closest aides, David Johnson, had by all accounts physically intimidated a girlfriend who went to court to receive an order of protection against him. But before she was to testify in court, she was visited by state police superintendent Harry Corbitt. She never testified. Key political allies have now called on Paterson to end his reelection campaign. Even more ominously, some political figures, including Congresswoman Nita Lowey, are now saying publicly what they’ve been discussing privately: that it’s time for the inept Paterson, who’s been largely ignored by the state’s spendthrift legislature, to step down from office. A resignation by the floundering Paterson would turn the governorship over to his unelected lieutenant governor, Richard Ravitch, who no longer seems to be in regular contact with Paterson.
Siegel compares New York & Illinois corruption to that of Greece and Spain. It will, he writes, take the bond market to enforce higher governance standards.
The WSJ editors add detail on New York's monumental corruption collapse.
Bottom Line. New York's legislature, terminally dysfunctional for decades, has company in the Governor's Mansion.
Letter from the Capitol, LFTC, Economy, Conservative Politics

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