By The Prowler on 11.13.02 @ 12:04AM
Indiana will have to wait. Plus: Thune in? Also: James Carville seeks Broderick Crawford.
AGAIN IN INDIANA
A year ago, White House budget director Mitch
Daniels seemed like a dream GOP candidate for the Indiana
governor's race in 2004: a native son with business and political
successes under his belt. But as reported in the Prowler (click
here
and here),
Daniels had been hedging on returning home for politics. And with
the successes in the 2002 election cycle, any number of prospective
Republicans are making noises about wanting to be part of a Bush
Bandwagon in 2004. No reason why Daniels, as director of the Office
of Management and Budget, shouldn't want to either.
Daniels was viewed by many in Indiana and in Washington as the
natural candidate to run for governor. "It was just assumed that
he'd be going home," says a Washington lobbyist who is a Daniels
backer. "His family is back there, he still commutes back and
forth."
But Daniels made clear in several interviews and in private
conversations with White House staff that he isn't sure he can --
or wants to -- remove himself from what has become a challenging
job of waging budget battles.
"He walked into a mess, and he'd like to see it through," says
the lobbyist. "The state party is pressuring him for an answer and
it's just not the right time."
That Daniels is interested in staying on has surprised a number
of people, many of whom didn't think the former Eli Lilly executive
was up to the task at OMB. A better time to leave would probably be
six months to a year from now. By then, fiscal analysts believe the
economy will more clearly be in growth mode, and Daniels can
perhaps walk away knowing the budget-balancing mess will be on its
way, too, toward being repaired.
But back home in Indiana, the state party is anxious to get
Daniels on board, and is asking White House political guru
Karl Rove to impress upon Daniels the need to step
up and run. That wouldn't make things in the White House any
easier, but it would make the state party's life easier, because it
could then say no to former Rep. David McIntosh.
He ran for governor in 2000 and was buried by more than 15
percentage points, and it's not clear that he's done anything that
would narrow that gap in a 2004 repeat. Even McIntosh seems to
realize he's not wanted. According to U.S. News and World
Report, he has told party officials that he won't get a
campaign up and running until after Daniels has made a decision on
his own future.
THUNE IN NEXT TIME
Don't look for former Rep. John Thune to make too
much hay should the Senate election in South Dakota not go his way.
Thune and Republican National Committee political staffers are
already eyeing the 2004 Senate race for Thune. The outgoing House
member was favored early in his Senate race against Democrat
Tim Johnson and many believe he lost due to, at
the very least, unethical get-out-the-vote practices by Democrats
and, at the most, illegal voter registration activity.
"He was a rising star in the party before the Senate campaign,
and he's still a star," says an RNC staffer. "We're committed to
getting him back to Washington in a high profile position." And
what better position than the currently held by Sen. Tom
Daschle? Capitol Hill insiders believe that regardless of
whether the current Senate Majority Leader makes a run for the
presidency, this will probably be his last term on the Hill.
ALL THE KID'S MEN
Democratic mudslinger James Carville has more
money than he knows what to do with. And just to prove how little
he knows, he's said by Hollywood insiders to have tentatively
agreed to serve as executive producer for a remake of the 1949 film
All the King's Men, based on the Robert Penn Warren's
famous novel. Columbia Pictures is slated to pay most of the bills,
but generally producers of films either put up money or have some
other financial stake in the said picture. Other times a producer
or associate producer credit is handed out to actors or actors'
business or talent managers as a way of gaining a big name for a
film.
In the case of Carville, though, his expertise probably is
needed for other reasons. After all, All the King's Men is
a fictional account of the rise and fall of a colorful backwoods
governor and abuser of power loosely modeled on Louisiana governor
and U.S. Senator Huey Long. No word yet if
Louisianan Carville will have a speaking part. Or if his friend
Bill Clinton will get a crack at the casting
couch.
topics:
Bill Clinton, Business, Hollywood, NATO