In two dramatic moves curiously timed for Thanksgiving week Gov. John Kitzhaber has firmly established the pecking order in Oregon politics. Declaring the death penalty a perversion of justice and suspending all executions in Oregon, Kitzhaber reminds us that he feels empowered to overrule the vote of the people and the opinion of the Oregon Supreme Court.
In shrugging off the dismissal of University of Oregon President Richard Lariviere, Kitzhaber asks us to believe, however, that he is powerless to second guess the State Board of Higher Education.
Over the course of a lengthy political career, Kitzhaber has frequently displayed his preference for policy decisions made in hipwader solitude or with a small cabal of trusted advisers.
That propensity was on full display last week. Kitzhaber had every opportunity to make his fervent opposition to the death penalty clear in his 2010 campaign, yet waited until he was safely in office to reveal a mind that long ago decided there would be no lethal injections on his watch.
And while the ouster of Lariviere is not surprising the OUS board only granted him a one-year extension last summer Kitzhaber either quietly approved the firing or the boards flamboyant disregard for public process.
Lariviere was informed last Monday, he confided in an email to the UO community, that my contract as president of the University of Oregon will not be renewed. I was told I could resign or accept the termination of my contract, which runs through July 1, 2012.
It took another 50 hours for the Board to frantically convene a special meeting on Nov. 28 at the Portland State Rec Center to vote on Larivieres tenure. Small wonder, then, that the president's supporters shook off their tryptophan blues Friday to draft an ethics complaint that argues the Board decided to cut Lariviere loose without public notice or public meeting.
The circus around Larivieres dismissal is arming the lame duck with a level of support he failed to generate in 29 months on the job.
The prez had his detractors. Many students and faculty deplored the decision to turn public safety officers into an armed police force.
The salary bumps for 1,300 UO professors and admin workers were more popular in Eugene than Portland or Corvallis. As UO has become increasingly popular among out-of-state students, its balance sheet has been increasingly dependent on out-of-state tuition, leaving less room in the freshman class for Oregons best students.
Yet as I wrote in September, it was increasingly difficult to root against Larivieres vision for the University of Oregon, given how few institutions in this timid state have similar ambition.
And given last weeks summary execution, its hard to believe that anyone with the mans independence or imagination will pop out of the woodwork or Kitzhabers Facebook group to take the universitys reins.
That may help to frame the enduring lesson of the past week:
Theres only one sheriff in town. John Kitzhaber took last Novembers election, for good reason, as the only vote he needed to act decisively on his prescription for what ails us.
Hes not asking for second opinions. His morality is law. And 1,142 days remain in his four-year term.
-- Steve Duin