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Disgraced ‘Sheriff of Wall Street’ joins CNN

Former New York Governor Eliot Spitzer, who resigned in disgrace two years ago after admitting to using a prostitute, will co-host a new show on CNN
Image: Former New York governor Eliot Spitzer
Former New York Governor Eliot Spitzer, who resigned in disgrace two years ago after admitting to using a prostitute, will co-host a new show on CNN, the cable network said Wednesday.Brendan Mcdermid / Reuters file
/ Source: Reuters

Former New York Governor Eliot Spitzer, who resigned in disgrace two years ago after admitting to using a prostitute, will co-host a new show on CNN, the cable news network said on Wednesday.

CNN said the man who rose to political prominence as New York's attorney general, earning the nickname "Sheriff of Wall Street" for his relentless efforts prosecuting financial malfeasance, will co-host a show with 2010 Pulitzer Prize winning columnist Kathleen Parker of the Washington Post.

Parker, a self-professed conservative whose columns are syndicated nationally, said in a statement from CNN: "With Eliot Spitzer as my co-host, Wall Street and Main Street will finally meet. It can't possibly be boring."

Spitzer promised the program would "inform, challenge, and entertain" in the same CNN statement. He did not return a call seeking comment.

Spitzer has gradually been returning to the public spotlight, writing for online magazine Slate and appearing as a commentator on HBO's "Real Time With Bill Maher." In May, he was a guest anchor on MSNBC's Dylan Ratigan show.

(Msnbc.com is a joint venture of Microsoft and NBC Universal.)

Parker made headlines during the 2008 presidential campaign when she said Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin should step down as Senator John McCain's running mate because she was out of her league.

Spitzer, who was not charged in the prostitution scandal, recently told Fortune magazine he was "incredibly frustrated" at no longer being governor and would not rule out another run for office.

"I love politics," he told Fortune.

But memories of the scandal that waylaid the political ascent of a man once seen as a leading Democrat with potential for national office have been kept in the public's mind, most recently by a new biography and documentary.

The biography by Peter Elkind, an editor-at-large at Fortune, said Spitzer spent as much as $100,000 on high-priced prostitutes before he resigned. "Rough Justice: The Rise and Fall of Eliot Spitzer" also says he paid to have a prostitute flown to Puerto Rico where he was attending a meeting.

The hit CBS television show "The Good Wife" is loosely based on the Spitzer marriage, with actress Julianna Margulies portraying the wife of a politician who is forced to resign after it is revealed he paid for escorts.

Ashley Dupre, the real-life escort at the center of the Spitzer case, has bared all in Playboy and writes a sex advice column for the New York Post.

Despite all the attention, in April nearly half of New York voters in a Marist College Institute for Public Opinion poll said Spitzer should run for office again someday. However a majority said they did not want to see him run this year.

Lee Miringoff, director of Marist, said the CNN job will give Spitzer a home in the spotlight as he waits to see if voters' opinion of his misdeeds soften.

"It makes sense for him to stay visible while he figures out what he wants to do in the long run politically, and whether voters will soften on him," Miringoff told Reuters.

CNN, which is owned by Time Warner, has struggled with slumping prime-time ratings since the 2008 election and is seeking to reinvigorate its lineup amid stiff competition from rivals such as MSNBC and Fox News.

CNN said the new hour-long program will be shown at 8 p.m. EST and will start in the fall in the run-up to the 2010 midterm elections. The yet-to-be-named discussion program replaces Campbell Brown, CNN said.