'Harlem Clubhouse' Paterson became involved in Democratic politics in Harlem in the 1950s. He was elected head of the NAACP in 1964, which was widely recognized as the prelude to a political career. Along with former Mayor
David Dinkins, Manhattan Borough President
Percy Sutton, and Congressman
Charles Rangel, he was a leader of the influential
Gang of Four (also known as the "Harlem Clubhouse") in the 1960s. Their influence waned in the 1990s, as blacks left Harlem.
New York State Senate Paterson was elected to the
New York State Senate in 1966 and represented the
Upper West Side and
Harlem in the
176th,
177th and
178th New York State Legislatures. While in office, he played a key role in preventing
Columbia University from building a gym in
Morningside Park. In the Senate he supported
special education, reform of the state's
divorce laws and other progressive measures. He also was an early supporter of liberalized
abortion laws despite his Catholic faith. The Goldberg/Paterson ticket ultimately lost to Republican incumbents Gov.
Nelson Rockefeller and Lt. Gov.
Malcolm Wilson. Paterson was passed over for the
1974 governor's race even though he was the highest vote-getter in 1970. His son,
David Paterson, would go on to become lieutenant governor in 2007.
Appointments In 1972, Paterson was the first elected African American Vice Chairman of the Democratic National Committee. In 1978, Paterson was appointed
Deputy Mayor of New York City by
Ed Koch. He stepped down from that post in 1979 to become
Secretary of State of New York in Governor
Hugh Carey's administration. Paterson was the first African-American to hold the post, and he served until 1983. As Koch prepared to seek a third term in 1985, Paterson explored a mayoral candidacy of his own but ultimately chose not to run. He cited "pressing family problems" in declining to run for mayor. Paterson chaired the New York City Mayor's Judiciary Committee for four years and the New York State Governor's Judicial Screening Panel for the Second Department for eight years. He ended his tenure at the Commission on Judicial Nominations after serving for twelve years. Paterson was appointed by Mario Cuomo to the State Committee's and
Michael Bloomberg to the city's Judiciary Committee. == Involvement in son's political career ==