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Bill Richardson: Peace, Love and an A rating from the NRA?

October 16th, 2007 at 01:32pm Geraldine

Bill Richardson started his campaign as a moderate Democrat who was running based on a rather impressive resume as Governor, Cabinet Member, Diplomat and Congressman. He talked about his experience balancing budgets and opposing gun control. However, Richardson’s campaign has recently changed its tack dramatically. While Richardson still emphasizes his background as a pro-gun moderate in rural areas, he’s now become the peacenik candidate in the rest of Iowa.

Richardson has come out as the only major Presidential candidate to support withdrawing all American troops from Iraq in six months and filmed an ad with bloggers endorsing his policy. He has phased out wearing an American flag lapel pin in favor of the Sensible Priorities pin.

The most extreme sign of Richardson’s tack to the left was his recent hiring of Dave Rogers as his political director. Rogers worked on Dennis Kucinich’s Presidential campaign and was reported by reliable sources to be staffing Kucinich at events as recently as this spring. Rogers has also worked for Western Iowa’s answer to Dennis Kucinich, Joyce Schulte, as well as for the Sensible Priorities campaign.

In contrast, the political directors for 1st tier Presidential campaigns are longtime Iowa political operatives (Chris Hayler for Clinton, Emily Parcell for Obama) or national operatives (Tim Maloney for Edwards). However, they focus on getting the support of legislators, major activists and organized labor. It seems that Rogers will be focusing on the anti-war left (as it is doubtful that someone who operated a salon and day spa is the right person to reach out to the UAW).

Rogers’ hiring further reinforces that Bill Richardson is making a very determined effort to reach out not just anti-war Democrats but, specifically, to the core of peace activists who supported Kucinich in 2004. Although peaceniks are a relatively small bloc, they are very likely caucusgoers. If Richardson is still around 10% then, peace activists could play a decisive role in propping Richardson in up in many precincts and making him viable.

But this is a dangerous balancing game for a candidate who started running as a moderate. Richardson has already lost one key supporter due to his swing to the left and Hotline, among others, finds his policy shift not plausible. Richardson is playing a very delicate balancing game trying to woo both the most conservative caucusgoers and the most liberal over the next ten weeks. If it works, Richardson might become a first tier candidate. But if it doesn’t, Richardson will not only lose but could so in a way that undermines his credibility as a politician in the future.

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5 Comments Add your own

  • 1. Richardson4Senate  |  October 16th, 2007 at 1:37 pm

    “It’s a very risky game. If it works, Richardson might become a first tier candidate.”

    Bold tautology.

  • 2. Dave4Richardson  |  October 16th, 2007 at 1:53 pm

    Interesting post. Getting out of Iraq is not a “tack to the left”, but the desire of an overwhelming majority of Americans. Governor Richardson is functioning like the bold leader he is: Refusing to blur the lines on this most important of issues, speaking with clarity, and from his diplomatic background understands peace and reconciliation can’t even begin in Iraq until our presence is removed from the area.

    As for the hiring of Dave Rogers and whether he has the chops to run Iowa; the fact is he is not running Iowa, that post belongs to Brad Frevert, who was profiled on this blog some months ago:

    Frevert has worked for the Iowa Democratic Party since 2004, when he served as Regional Field Director out of Waterloo. After the 2004 elections, he was hired as the state party’s off-year Field Director, and he served as Deputy Field Director under Jesse Harris during the 2006 election. Before working for the IDP, he worked for Bob Graham’s aborted 2004 Presidential Campaign and then for AFSCME, organizing caucus supporters for Dean.

    That sounds to me like a sound caucus strategy, by addressing the #1 issue on the minds of most Iowans.

  • 3. Slow News Day Roundup &ra&hellip  |  October 16th, 2007 at 3:39 pm

    […] Iowa Progress writes the anti-Richardson hit job of the week. […]

  • 4. Daniel G. Clark  |  October 17th, 2007 at 10:21 pm

    If you like Kucinich but are exploring second choices, please visit http://action.richardsonforpresident.com/page/group/KucinichsupporterswholikeRichardson.

  • 5. Snubbed by Clinton, Iowan&hellip  |  October 23rd, 2007 at 2:48 pm

    […] the Sensible Priorities lapel pin in a debate and in other public appearances. Richardson also (somewhat inexplicably, perhaps) hired a Sensible Priorities person to be his Iowa Political Director. If someone else gets the […]

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