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Chorus Calling for Resignations Adds a Voice

Feb 11
Posted By: editor

John Hood of the John Locke Foundation penned a piece today saying that asking for the resignations of Crime Control & Public Safety Secretary Reuben Young and Correction Secretary Alvin Keller is the only way for Governor Bev Perdue to seperate herself from the Easley administration.

When North Carolina Republican Chairman Tom Fetzer held a press conference a few days ago to urge Gov. Beverly Perdue to fire two controversial members of her Cabinet, you can be sure that he didn’t intend to do the governor any favors.

That’s not Fetzer’s job. His job is to elect Republicans, in 2010 and beyond.

But as he and other conservatives are fond of saying, intentions aren’t the same as results. And as it turns out, Perdue would indeed be well advised to fire Crime Control & Public Safety Secretary Reuben Young and Correction Secretary Alvin Keller without delay, even though Fetzer wasn’t really offering the embattled governor “advice.”

I don’t bear the two officials any personal ill will. I don’t know them. But I do know that by their past actions, they’ve put Gov. Perdue in a difficult situation – or, more accurately, their actions have worsened the governor’s already difficult situation.

Despite recent upticks in statewide polls, Perdue remains one of the most unpopular governors in the United States. Because she’s only been at the job for a year, it’s unlikely that her policy decisions alone, as questionable as some have been, explain the depths of her unpopularity. The other explanation has a name: Mike Easley.

The former governor has been thoroughly disgraced, and facing the very real prospect of a criminal indictment on corruption charges. That’s already happened to one of his closest aides, former legal counsel and political fixer Ruffin Poole. Other former Easley staffers and political supporters have been talking to prosecutors. It’s unlikely they’ve been spending the past several months exonerating the governor.

In the minds of many North Carolina voters, the Perdue administration is a continuation of the Easley administration. …

Still, the governor hasn’t yet taken the additional steps she needs to convert the political equivalent of a separation into a divorce. As recent testimony in an ongoing lawsuit has revealed, the Easley administration had an ongoing policy of stymieing media inquiries and evading state laws mandating open government. As former legal counsel to Easley, Reuben Young was at least complicit if not active in the administration’s misbehavior.

As for Correction Secretary Keller, his contribution to the mess wasn’t years ago, during the Easley administration, but just months ago, while handling one of the Perdue administration’s thorniest issues – a NC Supreme Court decision that may result in the release of dangerous criminals with botched “life” sentences. …

In order to recover her footing and become an asset rather than a liability to a Democratic Party facing big challenges, Perdue should do whatever it takes to put Easley far, far in the rearview mirror. That means getting rid of any major holdovers from the Easley years. It means developing a policy agenda that North Carolinians, nervous about double-digit unemployment and angered by the fiscal recklessness they see in Raleigh and Washington, might actually welcome.

To begin with, it means finding new secretaries at Correction and Crime Control & Public Safety. It’s the right move, even though Tom Fetzer (and now I) said so.

Click here for the full article from the Carolina Journal

Categories: Blog

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