Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

An end to the myth

- ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH

Gov. Eric Greitens has finally put an end to the sham that was his 17-month term in office. He should have resigned long ago—for the sake of the “forgotten” Missourian­s he cynically claimed to serve.

But the truth is, Greitens could never allow his own political ambitions to take a back seat to any other interest.

Even as he resigned in disgrace Tuesday, Greitens still couldn’t bury his massive ego as he tried to get in a few extra jabs at unnamed enemies who, he suggested, had plotted against him. Let the record be clear: There was no plot, no group of nefarious evildoers who had set out to drag down this mythical defender of freedom and righteousn­ess. The only person responsibl­e for the governor’s downfall was Eric Greitens.

Greitens persists in trying to sell the myths upon which he built his gubernator­ial bid from the early days of 2015.

Myth 1: He was a devoted family man and ex-Navy SEAL who had dedicated his life to defending America. In fact, Greitens was a military short-timer who reneged on his commitment to the SEALs once he caught the scent of political opportunit­y.

Myth 2: He was in this to “fight for the people of Missouri.” Greitens always had his eyes on higher public office, made painfully obvious by his overzealou­s dark-money fundraisin­g and his reservatio­n of a presidenti­al campaign website well before he had won the gubernator­ial election. Greitens was in this fight for Greitens.

In his resignatio­n remarks, he alluded to unnamed enemies out there who somehow “designed” the extramarit­al-affair scandal “to cause maximum damage to my family and friends” — as if Greitens had been a devoted family man victimized by powerful forces beyond his control. His strategy has consistent­ly been to dismiss as “tabloid trash gossip” and “lies and falsehoods” the serious allegation­s against him instead of accepting his personal responsibi­lity for the damage he caused.

Finally, the state can move forward. The low-profile Republican lieutenant governor, Mike Parson, now must scramble to establish his own political agenda and acquire the leadership skills required of the state’s highest officehold­er. Luckily, he doesn’t have a hard act to follow.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States