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Most of Paterson's fellow top Democrats were silent as the governor sought to snuff out the rumors. Cuomo refused to comment on the unsubstantiated tales, and his office wouldn't comment on whether he supports Paterson in his battle. "We don't comment on rumors," Cuomo spokesman Richard Bamberger said. "There are serious problems facing our state and the attorney general is busy doing the job he was elected to do." Many Democrats have voiced wishes that Cuomo run for governor instead of Paterson, a former lieutenant governor who took the post in 2008 upon the resignation of Eliot Spitzer, named in a prostitution investigation 23 months ago. A day after taking office, Paterson told a news conference that he had not been faithful to his wife around 1999 when they informally separated. A week later he told a television interviewer that he had tried cocaine and marijuana when he was in his early 20s
-- hardly the first few story lines a new governor would seek. The White House last year, recognizing the challenges of helping an accidental governor keep his office, urged him to withdraw from the race in favor of Cuomo, part of a Democratic dynasty in New York who could defend the office. A Republican candidate for governor sided with Paterson on Tuesday. "The Capitol is paralyzed by rumor and innuendo, and somehow we need to get past that and focus on the basic problems that people care about," Rick Lazio said. "I don't think anyone trying to get their job done deserves this kind of phantom threat." Paterson Chief of Staff Lawrence Schwartz released a letter late Tuesday to the public editor of the Times seeking an inquiry. "At any point, the Times' editors could have easily issued a public statement clarifying that the profile neither contained nor supported the salacious stories being sourced to it," Schwartz wrote. "Common decency, if not journalistic ethics, demanded as much." Democratic state leaders wouldn't comment on Paterson or the rumors as he confronts the Legislature over the state budget, an ethics bill he vetoed and the awarding of a contract for video slot machines at Aqueduct race track. Senate Conference Leader John Sampson, a Brooklyn Democrat at odds with Paterson in legislative fights, declined to comment. Democratic Sen. Charles Schumer also wouldn't comment, and Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver, a Manhattan Democrat, didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.
[Associated
Press;
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