Jim McGreevey
| Jim McGreevey | |
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| In office January 15, 2002 – November 15, 2004 (resigned) |
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| Preceded by | Richard Codey (acting) |
| Succeeded by | Richard Codey |
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| Born | August 6 1957 Jersey City, New Jersey |
| Political party | Democratic |
| Spouse | 1. Kari Schutz, divorced; 2. Dina Matos, separated |
| Profession | Politician |
| Religion | Episcopalian |
James Edward "Jim" McGreevey (born August 6, 1957) is an American Democratic politician. He served as the 52nd Governor of New Jersey from January 15, 2002, until November 15, 2004, when he left office three months after admitting that he had had an extramarital affair with a male employee. Upon publicly revealing his homosexuality on August 12, 2004, McGreevey became the first and, to date, the only openly gay state governor in United States history.
Career
McGreevey was born in Jersey City, New Jersey, grew up in nearby
Carteret, and attended St.
Joseph High School in Metuchen. He attended Middlesex County (NJ) College,
The Catholic University of America before graduating from
Columbia University in 1978. He later earned a law
degree from the Georgetown University Law Center in 1981 and a
master's degree in education from Harvard
University in 1982. He also attended a diploma program in law at the London
School of Economics.
McGreevey was a member of the New Jersey General Assembly from 1990 to 1992, when he became Mayor of Woodbridge Township, New Jersey. He was re-elected mayor in 1995 and 1999. He was elected to the New Jersey Senate in 1993, simultaneously serving as mayor during the four-year Senate term. He first ran for governor in 1997, but was defeated in a close race (47%-46%) by the incumbent Republican, Christine Todd Whitman, with Libertarian candidate Murray Sabrin taking slightly over 5% of the vote. McGreevey ran for the governorship again in 2001 and won with 56% of the vote -- the first majority elected governor since James Florio. His Republican opponent in that race was Bret Schundler. His other political party opponents were Jerry Coleman - Green, Mark Edgerton - Libertarian, Michael Koontz - Conservative, Costantino Rozzo - Socialist and Kari Sachs - Socialist Workers.
After being elected to the governorship on his second try (on November 6, 2001), McGreevey inherited a $5 billion budget deficit. During his term, McGreevey raised the tax on cigarettes and increased the state tax rate for the higher incomes.
McGreevey, who is of Irish descent, was raised as a Roman Catholic. Due to his pro-choice stance on abortion, he stated as governor that he would not receive Communion at public church services. McGreevey implemented a stem cell research plan for New Jersey, and heavily lobbied for the state's first domestic partnership law for same-sex couples, which he signed into law in early 2004. He has since been received into the Episcopal Church. Governor McGreevey has entered the discernment process to determine whether he may become an Episcopal priest. [1]
Decision to resign
McGreevey's term was controversial, from questions about the credentials of several of his appointments to Pay to Play and extortion scandals involving many of his backers and key New Jersey Democratic fundraisers. Moreover, after only eight months in office, his homeland security advisor Golan Cipel resigned from his post amid persistent complaints about his lack of qualifying experience for the position. In the assessments of most observers, Cipel lacked the relevant prior experience that would warrant such an appointment. He also could not gain a security clearance from the federal government, given that he was not a U.S. citizen, but rather an Israeli citizen whom McGreevey met during a trip to Israel in 2000.
According to McGreevey in his book The Confession (ISBN 0-06-089862-3) published in 2006, The Record was the first newspaper to break the news of a relationship between McGreevey and Cipel that was to lead to McGreevey's resignation. McGreevey brought up Cipel's name six weeks into his administration in a February 14, 2002, interview with The Record's editorial board at its offices saying:
We will not skimp on security. We actually brought on a security advisor from the Israel Defense Forces, probably the best in the world.
The interview prompted news investigation into Cipel's background and, on February 21, The Record published a profile of Cipel, calling him a "sailor" and a "poet". The article said:
Democrats close to the administration say McGreevey and Cipel have struck up a close friendship and frequently travel together.
The article prompted McGreevey's own mother to ask him if he was gay and stirred various media organizations to send reporters to Israel to ask questions about Cipel and his background and childhood friends.[citation needed]
In August 2002, Cipel resigned at McGreevey's request and then asked for his job back.
On August 12, 2004, faced with threats from Cipel's lawyer Allen Lowy that Cipel would file a sexual harassment suit against him in Mercer County Court (McGreevey in his book says Lowy told him "...although we think we will get $50 million, we'll take five"), McGreevey announced at a press conference: "My truth is that I am a gay American." He also said that he "engaged in an adult consensual affair with another man" (whom his aides immediately named as Cipel), and that he would resign effective November 15, 2004. Even though McGreevey's sexual orientation had been speculated about in New Jersey political circles and questions about the nature of his relationship with Cipel had been alluded to in the media even before August 2004, McGreevey's announcement made him the first openly gay state governor in American history. The Star-Ledger won the 2005 Pulitzer Prize for Breaking News Reporting for its "coverage of the resignation of New Jersey’s governor after he announced he was gay and confessed to adultery with a male lover".
The timing of McGreevey's announcement enabled him to be the first to present news of the upcoming lawsuit to the media, and the decision to delay the effective date of his resignation until after September 3, 2004 avoided a special election in November to replace the governor. Doing so allowed the Democratic Party to retain control of the governor's office for at least another year, and avoided the prospect of a Republican candidate for governor running in tandem with George W. Bush, which could have helped Bush capture New Jersey's electoral votes. (Bush did not win New Jersey's electoral votes in the 2004 presidential election, but captured 46% of the statewide vote, compared to 40% in the 2000 race.)
Almost immediately after McGreevey's announcement, Republicans and others in New Jersey called upon the governor not to wait until November to resign and instead to do so at once.[2] An editorial in the New York Times read, "Mr. McGreevey's strategy [to delay resignation] doesn't serve New Jersey residents well. The state will be led by an embattled governor mired in personal and legal problems for three months."[3] An online petition paid for by the "Scott Garrett for Congress" campaign was claimed to have drawn 10,000 signatures by Garrett's campaign manager on August 27, 2004, although it wasn't clear how many of the signatures were those of New Jersey residents.
On September 15, U.S. District Judge Garrett E. Brown, Jr. dismissed Afran v. McGreevey, filed by Green Party lawyers Bruce Afran and Carl Mayers, dismissing their claim that the postponement of McGreevey's resignation had left a vacancy, thereby violating New Jersey residents' voting rights. Brown stated that McGreevey "clearly intends to hold office until November 15, 2004. The requirement of holding a special election does not arise. The rights of registered voters are not being violated." Afran re-filed the same suit in Mercer County Superior Court and Judge Linda R. Feinberg heard arguments on October 4, 2004.
Fellow Democrat and New Jersey Senate President Richard Codey took office upon McGreevey's resignation and served the remainder of the term until January 17, 2006. At the time of McGreevey's resignation, the New Jersey State Constitution stipulated that the Senate president retains that position while serving as acting governor.
Personal life
McGreevey has one daughter, Morag, from his first marriage to Canadian Kari Schutz, which ended in divorce. He has another daughter, Jacqueline, from his second marriage to Portuguese-born Dina Matos McGreevey. McGreevey is now separated and in the process of divorcing Matos McGreevey. On March 14, 2007, the Associated Press reported that McGreevey was seeking custody of Jacqueline from Matos McGreevey, and filing for child support.[1]
In his memoir The Confession, McGreevey describes the duality of his personal life before he came out as gay: "As glorious and meaningful as it would have been to have a loving and sound sexual experience with another man, I knew I'd have to undo my happiness step by step as I began chasing my dream of a public career and the kind of 'acceptable' life that went with it. So, instead, I settled for the detached anonymity of bookstores and rest stops — a compromise, but one that was wholly unfulfilling and morally unsatisfactory."[4]
McGreevey has been dating an Australian-American executive, Mark O'Donnell, since late 2005.[5] The two live in Plainfield, New Jersey.[6]
McGreevey and O'Donnell regularly attend Saint Bartholomew's Episcopal Church,[7], where McGreevey was received into the ECUSA on Sunday, April 29, 2007. He has been accepted to General Theological Seminary, where he will pursue a Master of Divinity degree, the degree required to become an Episcopal priest.[8] [9] Although a person with an M.Div. degree may become a priest in the Episcopal Church, they must go through discernment and be sponsored by a diocese.
McGreevey is teaching ethics, law and leadership at
Trivia
- In 2005, television writer Dena Higley cited McGreevey's story as inspiration for her storyline on the ABC soap opera One Life to Live, in which District Attorney Daniel Colson (Mark Dobies) murders Paul Cramer (David Tom) and Jennifer Rappaport (Jessica Morris), and marries Nora Buchanan (Hillary Bailey Smith), to hide his homosexuality and advance his political career.
- McGreevey wrote a memoir, with assistance from ghostwriter David France, entitled The Confession, which was published by ReganBooks, an imprint of
HarperCollins , in mid-September 2006. McGreevey appeared on The Oprah Winfrey Show on September 19 to discuss and promote the book. It was the start of a two month promotion of his memoir.[11] - After Donald DiFrancesco's title was elevated from acting governor to governor retroactively in 2006, McGreevey became New Jersey's 52nd governor instead of the 51st.
References
- ^ http://blog.nj.com/ledgerupdates/2007/05/mcgreevey_mulling_episcopal_pr.html
- ^ Ex-Aide Says He Was Victim of McGreevey, The New York Times, August 13, 2004
- ^ The Governor's Secret, The New York Times, August 13, 2004
- ^ Tales of Torment: First Look at McGreevey Book The Star-Ledger, May 21, 2006
- ^ The Oprah Winfrey Show website, September 2006
- ^ "About the Author" section on Amazon.com page for McGreevey's book The Confession
- ^ McGreevey Explores Homosexuality in Memoir 1010-WINS, April 28, 2006
- ^ McGreevey applies for priesthood? 7Online.com, May 2, 2007.
- ^ McGreevey mulling Episcopal priesthood, The Star-Ledger blog, May 2, 2007
- ^ McGreevey's first course as Kean instructor? Ethics The Star-Ledger, April 19, 2007
- ^ Two years after declaration, McGreevey finds stride as 'gay American' Associated Press, August 12, 2006
External links
- Authenticated Text and Audio of McGreevey's Resignation Address
- Text of McGreevey's Resignation Speech
- New Jersey Governor James E. McGreevey, National Governors Association
- A year after coming out, McGreevey still trying to find his niche, August 2005 article
- Two years after declaration, McGreevey finds stride as "gay American", Associated Press article from August 2006
- McGreevey discusses his book, The Confession at the San Francisco Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender Community Center, New York Times' Times Talks Series, ForaTV, October 14, 2006 (Video)
- Video of speech at cornerstone laying ceremony for the Freedom Tower on July 4, 2004
| Preceded by Richard Codey (acting) |
Governor of New
Jersey January 15, 2002–November 15, 2004 |
Succeeded by Richard Codey |
| Governors of New Jersey | |
|---|---|
| Livingston • Paterson • Howell • Bloomfield • Ogden • W.S. Pennington • M. Dickerson • Williamson • Vroom • Southard • Seeley • P. Dickerson • W. Pennington • Haines • Stratton • Fort • Price • Newell • Olden • Parker • Ward • Randolph • Bedle • McClellan • Ludlow • Abbett • Green • Werts • Griggs • Voorhees • Murphy • Stokes • Fort • Wilson • Fielder • Edge • Edwards • Silzer • Moore • Larson • Hoffman • Edison • Driscoll • Meyner • Hughes • Cahill • Byrne • Kean • Florio • Whitman • DiFrancesco • McGreevey • Codey • Corzine | |
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