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  • The Tillamook Headlight Herald

    Gov. Kotek nixes plans to expand first lady’s role after pushback

    By Julia Shumway Oregon Capital Chronicle Sentinel Guest Article,

    16 days ago

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1nLbVd_0slsjzDS00

    After weeks of criticism from within and outside her office and the departure of key staff, Gov. Tina Kotek is abandoning plans to expand first lady Aimee Kotek Wilson’s role in the office.

    Kotek announced her change of heart in a statement Wednesday and planned to take more questions from reporters during an afternoon news conference. In the statement, she apologized for how she approached giving Kotek Wilson a larger role in policy decisions than first spouses in Oregon have historically had.

    “I take responsibility for not being more thoughtful in my approach to exploring the role of the first spouse,” Kotek said. “I am sorry for the way this conversation between my office and you has started.”

    She promised that Kotek Wilson will not receive an office or have any staff report to her, though she said her wife will continue to accompany her and attend ceremonial events representing the governor’s office.

    “After listening to and reflecting on the concerns of Oregonians who have contacted my office, as well as the advice of staff, I want to be clear about next steps: There will not be an Office of the First Spouse,” she said. “There will not be a position of chief of staff to the first spouse. Other than staff that is assigned to support the first lady in her official duties, no state staff will report to her or be supervised by her.”

    Oregonians first learned about Kotek Wilson’s involvement in the office in late March, after Kotek announced that her chief of staff, Andrea Cooper, was leaving the office and later confirmed that two other top aides, Abby Tibbs and Lindsey O’Brien, were departing or taking leave. And more recently, news reports said Kotek’s chief of communications, An Do, is leaving along with Kotek’s deputy general counsel, Lindsey Burrows.

    Kotek has declined to comment on the circumstances that led to the departures of most of her executive team, saying during a testy April 3 press conference that reports that clashes with Kotek Wilson caused them to leave were “assumptions.”

    But that was not the picture painted by a trove of more than 6,000 emails and text messages the governor’s office released Friday in response to records requests from the Capital Chronicle and other outlets. Those documents showed that Cooper, Tibbs and O’Brien had been raising concerns internally since at least January over Kotek Wilson’s role in the office.

    Tibbs, an attorney, was particularly blunt in a March email to O’Brien, Cooper, new Chief of Staff Chris Warner and Shelby Campos, the office’s operations director.

    “(T)he office should take meaningful steps to address the appearance/perception related to a governor and spouse and staff re conflicts of interest, favoritism, bias, nepotism issues, complicated power dynamics, conflict resolution, retaliation – the things that can really impact (governor’s office) staff morale and sense of stability and the confidence in a (governor’s office) overall,” she wrote.

    A February email from Tibbs to Juliana Wallace, Kotek’s director of behavioral health initiatives, described concerns that Kotek put Wallace in the “awkward” position of calling Cascadia Behavioral Health, Kotek Wilson’s former workplace, on behalf of an employee and friend of Kotek Wilson’s who was having issues with her supervisor.

    Tibbs said she didn’t want a new employee in the governor’s office to be put in a similarly awkward position.

    “Requests and actions by the FL and/or governor like the ones above are indeed highly inappropriate at best, and you flagging this and anything else that doesn’t feel right for me and (Cooper) is totally the right thing to do. The governor has been reminded several times now of the power she and the FL hold in this office and the appropriate use of their power.”

    Staff also expressed concern about the toll that Kotek Wilson’s growing number of public appearances would have on state employees who were hired to support the governor, not her wife. Among them: Cooper repeatedly questioned why Oregon State Police were providing security and rides for Kotek Wilson to attend events without the governor, and whether communications staff were being asked to help Kotek Wilson with comments and messaging.

    The emails showed that Kotek Wilson, a trained social worker and former case manager for Cascadia Behavioral Health, which mainly serves Medicaid patients, was deeply involved in policy discussions around mental health care, which along with housing and homelessness and education and early learning makes up the triumvirate of Kotek’s policy priorities.

    Office for first lady

    On March 25, three days after confirming that Cooper, Tibbs and O’Brien had left the office, Kotek announced that she was considering creating a new “Office of the First Spouse” and had hired Meliah Masiba, the then-legislative director for the Department of Administrative Services, for a six-month rotation to explore creating the new office. .

    The following day, the Oregon Government Ethics Commission confirmed it had received an ethics complaint against Kotek, though details of that complaint and several duplicate complaints won’t be public until commission staff complete a 60-day preliminary review and the commission, a nine-member board appointed by the governor and legislative leaders from both parties, decides whether to continue investigating or dismiss the complaints.

    Kotek sent the ethics commission questions about expanding her wife’s role in early April, several days after the complaints were filed. The commission can’t answer those questions until after resolving complaints, according to commission Executive Director Susan Myers.

    An updated job description Kotek shared Wednesday describes Masiba’s role as “explor(ing) formalized guidelines and protocols for the fFirst sSpouse of Oregon as a public official” and “assist(ing) and advis(ing) the current first spouse in her official capacity in support of the administration.”

    Kotek said in her statement Wednesday that she remains committed to defining the role of the first spouse in Oregon, and that she has sought guidance from the National Governors Association as well as the state ethics commission.

    With the exception of Cylvia Hayes, former Gov. John Kitzhaber’s fianceé, governors’ partners in Oregon have largely stayed out of the limelight. Kitzhaber resigned shortly into his fourth term because of an influence-peddling scandal involving Hayes. Gov. Kate Brown’s husband, Dan Little, led an initiative to increase access to outdoor recreation but otherwise kept away from official work, and Gov. Ted Kulongoski’s wife, Mary Oberst, continued her work with the Oregon State Bar during her husband’s eight years in office.

    Spouses have taken on broader responsibilities in other states. In California, for instance, First Partner Jennifer Seibel Newsom leads campaigns focused on children’s mental and physical health and women’s equality. Casey DeSantis, wife of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, is known as his closest policy adviser and has no qualms lobbying lawmakers directly on administration goals.

    At the federal level, Hillary Clinton tried to take the lead when her husband was president on reforming health care, a doomed attempt that Republicans used as ammunition to retake the House in 1994. Clinton took on a less active policy role in the remaining years of her husband’s presidency, and subsequent first ladies have championed platforms based around issues important to parents and children, including reading (Laura Bush) and school nutrition (Michelle Obama), while keeping their distance from the policy and politics of the West Wing.

    Oregon Capital Chronicle is part of States Newsroom, a network of news bureaus supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Oregon Capital Chronicle maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Lynne Terry for questions: info@oregoncapitalchronicle.com.

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