I'm typically a few weeks behind on my magazine reading. This makes the political magazines often as not seem more like long-buried time capsules than recent news stories. Take, for instance, these excerpts from a New York magazine piece entitled, "How Eliot Spitzer Finally Got Joe Bruno On the Ropes."
Bruno is the most powerful Republican in New
York. He has been the majority leader of the State Senate for
twelve years, one of the so-called "three men in a room" who
decided what, if anything, got done in Albany. The other two are
State Assembly Leader Shelly Silver, a Democrat, and the governor,
who was get-along Republican George Pataki until Eliot Spitzer came
in, determined to change the way business was done in the
statehouse. For the zealous governor, Bruno represents everything
sclerotic and unprincipled in Albany. Spitzer's been determined to
get rid of him. Now, it may not be long before that
happens.
***
The way Spitzer sees it, his survival rests with
ousting Bruno. His destiny, even. "You've got a governor who came
into office on the wings of angels," says the Spitzer source. "He
was the man. And his first year was defined by a scandal and an
error. What he wants in years two, three, and four are results. He
will not stand for this obstructionist Senate majority leader
getting in the way of his results."
This piece ran in the March 10-17 issue. Spitzer announced his resignation on March 12.
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