N.Y.'s Next Governor: Black, Blind Paterson Lauded as Consensus Builder
David Paterson, a 53-year-old Democrat who made history as New York's state's first visually impaired and Black lieutenant governor, will replace New York Gov. Elliot Spitzer, who was named in a stunning prostitution scandal that has left his career in ruins. Spitzer announced Wednesday he will resign as governor, effective March 17th. DiversityInc spoke with several people who know Paterson well and a uniform profile emerged--unlike Spitzer, he is a strong consensus builder, a man whose lifelong disability and status as a racial minority have made him sensitive to others' needs and a clear and empathetic communicator. "He's a great listener. He wants to hear how people feel. He's a consensus builder. We've seen that at work on our board meetings. He brings people together," says Carl R. Augusto, president and CEO of the American Foundation for the Blind. Augusto has known him since Lonnie Soury, president of public-relations firm Soury Communications, met "He's engaging, respectful and always has time for people," says Soury. "I think he's inspirational to those with disabilities and it will send a strong message to diverse communities in the city to have an African-American governor." David Bositis, a senior political analyst at the "I generally don't like spending time with politicians, but David is just a normal person," says Bositis. "I certainly don't think he'll have any problem making allies." Bositis believes The New York Times reported Tuesday that Paterson's aides already began laying the groundwork for him to take over as governor should Spitzer resign or be impeached. Paterson will automatically be named governor and complete Spitzer's term, which ends on Dec. 31, 2010, becoming the first legally blind governor in the nation. The transition will happen March 17th. He will also be only the fourth Black governor in the nation's history, following Deval Patrick of Massachusetts, Douglass Wilder of Virginia and P.B.S. Pinchback, who served as governor of Louisiana in 1872. Born in Brooklyn in 1954 with no sight in his left eye and severely limited vision in his right, Augusto thinks the prospect of having the nation's first visually impaired governor could dramatically alter perceptions of the blind and visually impaired. "It will have a tremendously positive impact. We see every day in my organization blind and visually impaired people running different organizations employed in every class of occupation," says Augusto. "We know that people wonder what the capabilities of blind people are and David will challenge positively the public perceptions of what it means to be blind and how a blind person can function." A graduate of Residing in Harlem with his wife and two children, A Staunch Proponent of LGBT Rights, Stem-Cell Research, Alternative Energy Should he assume the governor's mantle, it could be a huge boon to Evan Wolfson, executive director of Freedom to Marry, described Spitzer introduced a same-sex marriage bill, which was passed by the New York State Assembly. But the bill died in the Republican State Senate and was returned to the State Assembly. Some pundits speculated Spitzer's roughshod style, which alienated potential supporters, may have contributed to the bill's demise. |