Good Riddance To Eric Schneiderman
/The whole thing took about three hours. Some time around five o'clock yesterday afternoon, the New Yorker magazine put up the latest piece by Ronan Farrow, this time detailing accusations of physical abuse of several women committed by Democrat New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman. By 7:30 or so, Governor Andrew Cuomo had called on Schneiderman to resign. And by about 8, Schneiderman had announced he would quit. That was quick!
And good riddance! Frankly, I wish I had a stronger term than that to use. This guy was just about as bad as an Attorney General could be.
And that comment has nothing to do with the recent allegations of sexual misconduct. I haven't independently investigated those allegations, and have no knowledge of whether they are true or false. But Schneiderman's departure is an appropriate time to comment on his conduct of the high office that he held, which was reprehensible. Schneiderman took abuse of power and politicization of the office to whole new levels -- and that's saying a lot, given that one of his recent predecessors was Eliot Spitzer. In a post about a year ago titled "Good Riddance To Preet Bharara," commenting on the firing of New York's then federal prosecutor, I had this to say:
On a scale of 1 to 10, where 1 is "politicized, overreaching, and consumed with personal ambition" and 10 is "completely honest and independent," Eliot Spitzer was a 1 and Bharara about a 3.
On the same scale, Schneiderman would get about a negative 5.
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