The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Oregon governor announces his resignatio­n

Questions about fiancee’s ties to state doomed him.

- By Jonathan J. Cooper AP

Oregon Gov. John Kitzhaber resigned Friday, giving in to pressure to abandon his office amid suspicions that his fiancee used her relationsh­ip with him to land contracts for her green-energy consulting business,

SALEM, ORE. — Oregon Gov. John Kitzhaber resigned Friday, giving in to mounting pressure to abandon his office amid suspicions that his fiancee used her relationsh­ip with him to land contracts for her green-energy consulting business.

In a lengthy statement, the state’s longest-serving chief executive insisted he had broken no laws.

“Nonetheles­s, I understand that I have become a liability to the very institutio­ns and policies to which I have dedicated my career and, indeed, my entire adult life,” the Democrat said.

He said the resignatio­n would be effective Wednesday.

The decision capped Oregon Gov. John Kitzhaber said Friday that he had broken no laws, but the four-term Democrat admitted that “the right thing to do is to step aside” because he had become “a liability.” His resignatio­n is effective Wednesday. a wild week in which Kitzhaber seemed poised to step down, then changed his mind, but ultimately bowed to calls from legislativ­e leaders that he quit the state’s top elected position.

The announceme­nt is a stunning fall from grace for a politician who left the governor’s office in 2003 and then mounted a comeback in 2010 and won back his old job.

Secretary of State Kate Brown, also a Democrat, was expected to assume the office. Unlike most states, Oregon does not have a lieutenant governor, and the state constituti­on puts the secretary of state next in line.

In addition to the written statement, Kitzhaber released a recording of himself reading it. At the end, his voice trembled, and he seemed to be choking back tears.

His statement was defiant, saying it was “troubling” that “so many of my former allies” had chosen to “simply accept” that he had done something wrong, referring to Democrats who had abandoned him.

“I am confident that I have not broken any laws nor taken any actions that were dishonest or dishonorab­le in their intent or outcome,” he said. “I have always tried to do the right thing, and now the right thing to do is to step aside.”

Kitzhaber called Brown back to Oregon from a conference in Washington, D.C., earlier this week. People close to Kitzhaber say he asked her to return after deciding to resign but then changed his mind.

By Thursday, the leaders of the state House and Senate said he had to go.

“I finally said, ‘This has got to stop,’” Senate President Peter Courtney said after he met with Kitzhaber.

Kitzhaber handily won re-election in November to a fourth term after surviving the botched rollout of Oregon’s online health care exchange, which turned into a national embarrassm­ent.

But the allegation­s surroundin­g the work of his fiancee, Cylvia Hayes, were more harmful, dominating headlines in the state following his win.

A series of newspaper reports since October have chronicled Hayes’ work for organizati­ons with an interest in Oregon public policy. At the same time, she was paid by advocacy groups and played an active role in Kitzhaber’s administra­tion, a potential conflict of interest.

The spotlight on Hayes led her to reveal that she accepted about $5,000 to illegally marry a man seeking immigratio­n benefits in the 1990s. Later, she admitted she had bought a remote property with the intent to grow marijuana.

Though questions about Hayes have swirled for months, the pressure on Kitzhaber intensifie­d in recent weeks after newspapers raised questions about whether Hayes had reported all her income on her tax returns. She has not publicly addressed the allegation.

 ??  ??
 ?? AP ?? Oregon Secretary of State Kate Brown is expected to replace Kitzhaber shortly. The state does not have a lieutenant governor.
AP Oregon Secretary of State Kate Brown is expected to replace Kitzhaber shortly. The state does not have a lieutenant governor.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States