By The Prowler on 2.7.05 @ 12:09AM
Sen. Kent Conrad isn't safe. Plus: Dean's Labor dues. Also: Bayh buy.
CONRAD SEES RED
It's true that President Bush hit the upper Midwest and the South
in his first big push after the State of the Union Address in order
to target potential Democratic support in the House and the Senate.
But he also was sending Democrats a clear message: 2002 and 2004
were no mistakes. Recall that the President was particularly
aggressive in campaigning for Republicans in the midterms in 2002,
and barring unforeseen political disasters, will be out there
again, pressing for added GOP strength in Congress.
Democrat Sen. Kent Conrad of North Dakota is up
for re-election in 2006, and Bush apparently intends to do to him
what was done to Sen. Tom Daschle in 2004 if
Conrad doesn't fall into line. Conrad was rumored to be mulling
retirement, but indications are now that he will run for
re-election. The White House has targeted North Dakota's Republican
Gov. John Hoeven to run against Conrad. Hoeven
attended the State of the Union, then spent time with the President
on Air Force One back to his home state. According to White House
political sources and a staffer on the National Republican
Senatorial Committee (NRSC), Hoeven's political future was
discussed.
Now Conrad finds himself in a tough spot. In a state that tends
to run heavily red in national campaigns, with a strong rural and
Catholic vote, he will be hard pressed to be a highly visible
obstructionist with the GOP putting a spotlight on just about every
move he makes in Washington. Hoeven is considered a strong
campaigner, and popular in the state. The NRSC expects him to make
a decision in the next couple of months, and he is expected to
oblige the President.
Beyond the White House interest in Hoeven, his recruitment would
be a big boost for Sen. Elizabeth Dole, who took
over control of the NRSC from Sen. George Allen.
"People aren't sure she is up to the job," says a Republican Senate
insider. "She wanted it, and got the support, but there are
lingering questions. This kind of early, aggressive move helps her
quite a bit."
LABOR COSTS
Big Labor's support of apparent new DNC chairman Howie
Dean may have seemed as inevitable as Dean's election to
the top of the Democratic Party's leadership, but it isn't as
strong or as stable as the support may appear to be. This is, in
part, because labor leaders within the AFL-CIO aren't sure
themselves how much support they are going to have in the coming
months.
Last week at an AFL-CIO executive committee meeting, President
John Sweeney was asked about the process by which
the huge union would be accounting for its political spending in
the 2004 election cycle. This is a sore point for Sweeney and his
supporters, because when everything is said and done, labor
expenses on behalf of Democrats nationally may surpass half a
billion dollars, including money funneled to Democratic 527s and
shadow organizations.
"They have virtually nothing to show for that money spent," says
a Democratic fundraiser. "There are some senior people inside the
labor movement who are asking for greater transparency in the area
of campaign expenses. Sweeney is feeling some heat."
Dean is expected to bend over backwards for his labor chums once
he is installed. Labor was an early backer of Dean's presidential
run, pulling out only when it was clear that his chances had
guttered out after the Iowa and New Hampshire debacles. Dean's
assistance will be essential to Sweeney and his team, if only to
ensure that the labor leaders have some breathing room to rebuild
support among their state and local affiliates.
BAYH BUY
Apparently Indiana Sen. Evan Bayh really is
serious about making a presidential run in 2008. After voting
against the nomination of Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice, Bayh had his new pollster Paul
Maslin -- he of the Dean 2004 campaign -- poll for public
reaction to his no vote. No word on the results, but they may must
have been favorable given the numerous TV appearances Bayh made
after the fact.
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