Oregon's top Democrats urged Gov. John Kitzhaber to resign Thursday, saying he cannot lead the state effectively amid a growing ethics scandal involving his fiancee, a green-energy consultant accused of using her relationship with the governor to land contracts for her business.
Senate President Peter Courtney said he and House Speaker Tina Kotek asked Kitzhaber, a Democrat who recently started his fourth term, to step down.
"I finally said, 'This has got to stop,'" Courtney told reporters after he and Kotek met with the governor. "I don't know what else to do right now. It seems to be escalating. It seems to be getting worse and worse."
The state treasurer also joined in the call for Kitzhaber to relinquish his office.
"Unfortunately, the current situation has become untenable, and I cannot imagine any scenario by which things improve," said Treasurer Ted Wheeler, another Democrat. "Oregon deserves a governor who is fully focused on the duties of state."
Their statements came hours after Democratic Secretary of State Kate Brown said she had a "strange" and contradictory conversation with Kitzhaber about succeeding him as governor.
Brown said the governor had asked her to fly back to Oregon from a conference in Washington, D.C., but when she arrived, he asked why she had returned.
"This is clearly a bizarre and unprecedented situation," Brown said in a statement.
She said Kitzhaber told her he's not resigning, but then began a discussion about a transition.
Brown would automatically become governor if Kitzhaber steps aside.
The governor told some of his aides he was resigning and summoned Brown from Washington, then changed his mind while she was traveling, according to three people with direct knowledge of the situation.
They spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk about private discussions.
The governor issued a vague statement Wednesday explaining he was not resigning.
"I was elected to do a job for the people of this great state, and I intend to continue to do so," Kitzhaber said.
The grave doubts about Kitzhaber come just weeks after he was sworn in for a fourth term.
The allegations all arise from his fiancée, Cylvia Hayes, who met Kitzhaber in 2002 after enduring a rough-and-tumble life.
She told The Oregonian in a 2011 profile that she grew up in a ramshackle house near Seattle and left home at 16, staying with friends until she finished high school.
By the time she was 29, she was a twice-divorced graduate student at Evergreen State College. She supported herself in part with the proceeds of an illegal sham marriage to an Ethiopian immigrant in 1997 while plotting with a boyfriend to grow marijuana.
Last year, she acknowledged buying property in rural Washington state for the pot scheme but said the grow effort never materialized.
In 1998, while trying to escape a relationship she described as abusive, she went to her boyfriend's house carrying a stun gun. He beat her with it, according to court records. Hayes packed up her belongings and moved to central Oregon, living in a tent on federal land while finishing her thesis, according to the Oregonian profile.
She set up an environmental nonprofit and got involved in politics, meeting influential people, and in 2002 was the Democratic nominee for a legislative district in Bend. She met Kitzhaber in the waning days of his second term as governor when he campaigned for her.
Hayes lost her race. Kitzhaber left office at the beginning of 2003 and announced days later that he and his wife were divorcing. Later, he and Hayes reconnected, and their relationship became romantic despite a 20-year age difference.
In 2010, after eight years out of office, Kitzhaber made a successful comeback bid and became Oregon's only governor to serve more than two terms. At his side was Hayes, who moved with him to the governor's mansion in Salem. They also split their time between their respective homes in Portland and Bend.
Hayes took an active role in Kitzhaber's administration. She used the title 'first lady,' though the two have never married, and ran public initiatives targeting poverty and hunger. Privately, she was a frequent presence at meetings.
Kitzhaber has denied any wrongdoing, saying he and Hayes took steps to avoid conflicts of interest. Though questions about Hayes have swirled for months, the pressure on Kitzhaber intensified in recent weeks after newspapers raised questions about whether Hayes reported all her income to on her tax returns.
In early February, Oregon Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum said she was launching a criminal investigation.
A fiercely private person, Kitzhaber has been forced to answer embarrassing and personal questions about his relationship. In response to questions at a news conference last month, Kitzhaber told reporters that he's in love with Hayes, but he's not blinded by it.